Subfamily Spilomelinae

Latin NameObservation dateLocation
Subfamily SpilomelinaeMarch 20 2026Central Aceh Regency,Aceh, Indonesia

This moth has a very stable population in my area, but to be honest I rarely find it, it turns out the reason is that this moth is very clever at hiding. In my plantation, precisely around the wild grass area, I often see lots of flying insects such as butterflies, moths, dragonflies and grasshoppers, until there is one insect that is very small in size, this insect flies not too far maybe only about from one leaf to another, but I don't know what insect it is, my curiosity can no longer be held back so I decided to see what was flying, the insect flew and landed behind the leaves and was very wild, after seeing it, it turned out that this was a moth and I just knew that, I was curious to try to photograph it but this was not an easy thing, until finally this moth flew and landed on the bark and that's where I managed to photograph this moth.

Okay friends, here are some pictures of this moth here.



Camera Usedpoco c65
LensMM
F-stop
Iso speedISO
Focal lengthMM
PhotographySubfamily Spilomelinae
Photographer@maxmarvin


Link to originalcommunity
Linkhttps://www.inaturalist.org/observations/343952079
LatitudeLongitudeMap
5.157246696.6285239https://www.openstreetmap.org/?mlat=5.1572466984&mlon=96.6285239884#map=12/5.1572/96.6285



0
0
0.000
0 comments