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Brahmaea wallichii, also known as the owl moth, is a moth from the family Brahmaeidae, the Brahmin moths, and one of its largest species. It is found in the north of India, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, China, Taiwan, and Japan. The owl moth is nocturnal. [3] The wingspan is about 90–160 millimetres (3 + 1 ⁄ 2 – 6 + 1 ⁄ 4 inches). [4]
Brahmaea certhia, the Sino-Korean owl moth, is a moth from the family Brahmaeidae, the Brahmin moths. It is found in the Korean Peninsula and China. The wingspan is 100 mm (3.9 in) to 120 mm (4.7 in). The larvae feed on privet, Fraxinus mandshurica and Syringa amurensis.
Brahmaea (Acanthobrahmaea) europaea, the European owl moth, is a lepidopteran from the family Brahmaeidae, in the subgenus Acanthobrahmaea. [1] Taxonomy.
Brahmaea japonica, the Japanese owl moth; Brahmaea tancrei, the Siberian owl moth; Brahmaea wallichii; Other moth species. Anticarsia irrorata;
Brahmaea is a genus of moths of the family Brahmaeidae. [1] Acanthobrahmaea , Brahmidia , and Brachygnatha are synonyms. [ 2 ] Acanthobrahmaea has sometimes been considered a subgenus, [ 3 ] describing an endemic relict species that only occurs in the vicinity of the Monte Vulture in Italy.
Brahmaea japonica, the Japanese owl moth, is a species of moth of the Brahmaeidae family native to Japan. Description. The wingspan is 80–115 mm. ...
Brahmaea tancrei, the Siberian owl moth, is a moth in the family Brahmaeidae. It was described by Jules Léon Austaut in 1896. It is found from Russia (Amur, Siberia and in the Russian Far East [1]) to Korea and China and south to Indonesia. Adults are on wing in April, probably in one generation per year.
Brahmaea wallichii (Gray, 1831) Genus Brahmidia. Brahmidia hearseyi (White, 1862) [1] Listed in Hampson (Fauna of British India: Moths vol.1) as Brahmaea hearseyi;