Hello everyone, meet me again @setia.budi on this occasion I took part in the super macrophotography contest held in the WORLD OF XPILAR community organized by @sultan-aceh as a moderator in this community and supported directly by @xpilar as the head of this community.
I accidentally found a wasp moth that was perched on the leaves, I immediately tried to photograph it from various angles, I will post the results here.
Amata huebneri, the wasp moth, is a moth in the genus Amata of the family Erebidae (subfamily Arctiinae - "woolly bears" or "tiger moths"). The species was first described by Jean Baptiste Boisduval in 1829. It is found from the Indo Australian tropics to northern Australia. Adults are black with yellow bands across the abdomen, and transparent windows in the wings. It is a wasp mimic. The larvae have been recorded feeding on Oryza sativa and Mikania micrantha
The size of butterfly and moth means wingspan, the length from the leftmost end to the rightmost end when the wings are fully expanded.
But my luck was not so lucky, just got some photos of this wasp moth flying away from me.
Amata huebneri, the wasp moth, is a moth in the genus Amata of the family Erebidae (subfamily Arctiinae - "woolly bears" or "tiger moths"). The species was first described by Jean Baptiste Boisduval in 1829.[2] It is found from the Indo Australian tropics to northern Australia.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amata_huebneri
https://a-z-animals.com/animals/tiger-moth/.
📷 Picture | Smartphone |
---|---|
Capture Using | POCO X3 Pro + Macrolens |
Category | Animal Photography |
Location | Pidie Jaya-Aceh |
Editing | Photoshop Express |
Don't forget #promosteem #steemit .com and #trx in your country.
So many posts today hope you like my photos, thank you for visiting my page, see you in the next post, greetings from me @setia.budi.
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