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Top 20 Most Common Insects in Shishi
Insects, recognized for their segmented bodies and hard exoskeletons, play varying roles in Shishi's rich ecosystem. From mountainous landscapes to fertile plains, the diversity in this region's topography significantly affects the variety of insects seen in Shishi. Highlighting the top 20 most common insects, we'll delve into the fascinating world of these creatures - their role as pollinators, decomposers, and pests, aiding both to biodiversity and challenges within the environment.
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Most Common Insects
![Asota heliconia](/wiki-image/1080/154016788542128147.jpeg)
1. Asota heliconia
The wingspan is 5 cm.
![](/wiki-static/name/47529d33e25eb081ab9c06de98e8aac2/website/img/icon/icon_detail_info@2x.png)
![Chrysaeglia magnifica](/wiki-image/1080/152520658159403009.jpeg)
2. Chrysaeglia magnifica
Chrysaeglia magnifica is a Chrysaeglia magnifica butterfly from the spider Chrysaeglia magnifica family (Erebidae). The scientific name of the species was first validly published in 1862 by Walker.
![Black inch worm](/wiki-image/1080/153992530566840326.jpeg)
3. Black inch worm
The wingspan is about 3 cm. Female with outer margin of hindwings hardly crenulate. Male with outer margin of neither wing excised. Antennae pectinated. Hindwings with outer margin angled at vein 4. Body dark olive fuscous, more or less irrorated and suffused with grey. Both wings faint traces of medial and crenulate postmedial lines. The cilia dark. Forewings with traces of antemedial line and more or less distinct sub-apical patch in male. Underside with crenulate postmedial line to both wings. Larva is a looper, with body pinkish olive green, irrorated with black, and with dark patches on 4th and 6th somites. Later instars are uniform brown.
![](/wiki-static/name/47529d33e25eb081ab9c06de98e8aac2/website/img/icon/icon_detail_info@2x.png)
![Cocoa tussock moth](/wiki-image/1080/153989214852087831.jpeg)
4. Cocoa tussock moth
The cocoa tussock moth (Orgyia postica) are not picky eaters. Their preferred host plants are too long to list, and the larva has a wider diet than the adults. They are identified by resembling the color of cocoa, explaining the name. Some can also have bluish-grey lines across the wings.
![Timandra stueningi](/wiki-image/1080/152347863035150339.jpeg)
5. Timandra stueningi
![Gnamptoloma aventiaria](/wiki-image/1080/152630532012769280.jpeg)
6. Gnamptoloma aventiaria
![Yellow tail tussock moth](/wiki-image/1080/153896091371175974.jpeg)
7. Yellow tail tussock moth
Head yellow. Thorax brownish. Abdomen black or yellow with orange anal tuft. Forewing vinous brown, irrorated (sprinkled) with dark scales, which colour extends as two spurs across the yellow marginal area below the apex and to center of margin, but sometimes not reaching the margin. Costa often yellowish. Hindwings yellow, or in some specimens fuscous brown with a broad yellow margin. Larva dark brown with a series of crimson lateral tubercles on a yellow line bearing tufts of grey hair. The third somite banded with yellow. Dorsal tufts of short brown hair on fourth, fifth and eleventh somites. Fifth to tenth somites with a broad, dorsal yellow stripe. There is a yellow spot on the anal somite.
![](/wiki-static/name/47529d33e25eb081ab9c06de98e8aac2/website/img/icon/icon_detail_info@2x.png)
![Tiracola aureata](/wiki-image/1080/153907022062944303.jpeg)
8. Tiracola aureata
Tiracola aureata is a moth of the family Noctuidae first described by Jeremy Daniel Holloway in 1989. It is found from India and from China to Sundaland.
![](/wiki-static/name/47529d33e25eb081ab9c06de98e8aac2/website/img/icon/icon_detail_info@2x.png)
![Cyana hamata](/wiki-image/1080/154008860032499729.jpeg)
9. Cyana hamata
Cyana hamata is a moth of the family Erebidae first described by Francis Walker in 1854. It is found in Japan, China, Taiwan, Korea and Thailand. The wingspan is 26–34 mm. Adults are on wing in February and September.
![](/wiki-static/name/47529d33e25eb081ab9c06de98e8aac2/website/img/icon/icon_detail_info@2x.png)
![Clearwing tussock moth](/wiki-image/1080/154005956634607635.jpeg)
10. Clearwing tussock moth
The clearwing tussock moth (Perina nuda) is a minor pest to mangoes and some species of ficus. As a larva, it has a white body with a dark stripe and blue spots on its back. As an adult, the males and females can be easily distinguished from each other because the males have transparent wings while the females have solid white wings.
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