Jump to content

User:AshleyHurst/Automeris io/Bibliography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Potential Sources to use for Automeris io:

[edit]

Morphology -

[edit]

Eyespots:

Sourakov, A. 2017. Giving eyespots a shiner: Pharmacologic manipulation of the Io moth wing pattern. PMC. doi: 10.12688/f1000research.12258.2

Defenses:

[edit]

Sourakov, A. 2018. Size, Spines, and Crochets: Defenses of luna moth caterpillars against predation by brown anoles. Journal of Natural History. 52(7-8) 483-490 doi: 10.1080/00222933.2018.1439540


Diaz, J. H. 2005. The evolving global epidemiology, syndromic classification, management, and prevention of caterpillar envenoming. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. 72(3) 347-357

Conservation -

[edit]

Wagner, D. L. 2012. Moth Declines in the Northeastern United States. News of the Lepidopterists' Society. 54(2) 52-56

Development and Pathology -

[edit]

Hossler, E. W., D. M. Elston, and D. L. Wagner. 2008. What's eating you? (Automeris io). Close Encounters with the Environment. 82: 21-24.

Newton, W. H. 1914. Stinging Caterpillars. House and Landscape Pests. Texas A&M University.

Hybridization -

[edit]

Sourakov, A., C. Doll, A. M. Quinn, L. Xiao, and E. Anderson. 2020. On speciation and hybridization among closely related species: establishing an experimental breeding lineage between two species of Automeris Hübner moths (Lepidoptera: Saturniidae) and implications for taxonomy. Insecta Mundi. 0797:1-16

Gynandromorphism -

[edit]

Sourakov, A. 2015. Gynandromorphism in Automeris io (Lepidoptera: Saturniidae). News of the Lepidopterists' Society. 57(3): 118 - 129

Potential Sources for the genus Automeris:

[edit]

Description -

[edit]

New species:

Decaëns, T., F. Bénéluz, L. Ballesteros-Mejia, D. Bonilla, and R. Rougerie. 2021. Description of three new species of Automeris Hübner, 1819 from Columbia and Brazil (Lepidoptera, Saturniidae, Hemileucinae). Zookeys. 1031: 183-204

Defenses -

[edit]

Caterpillar Sting Reactions:

Ellis, C. R., D. M. Elston, E. W. Hossler, S. E. Cowper, and R. P. Rapini. 2021. What's Eating You? Caterpillars. Close Encounters with the Environment. 108: 346-351