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Olivia C

Butterflies of the Andes - Calogo oileus - 0 views

  • A few decades ago the Owl butterflies were considered to be members of a now defunct family, the Brassolidae. Following the revisions of Erlich ( 1958 ) and Ackery ( 1984 ), all of the butterflies with only two pairs of walking legs were placed within the Nymphalidae. The Brassolidae were reduced in rank to a subfamily Brassolinae, and then relegated further to become the Brassolini - a tribe within the Morphinae.
  • The 21 Caligo species are known colloquially as Owl butterflies, due to the owl-like false eyes, and the feathery appearance of the underside wings.
  • Various theories have been proposed to explain the presence of the huge eyespots that adorn the underside hindwings of all species. The butterflies rest for very long periods on tree trunks and can be quite difficult to spot, but if accidentally disturbed by a bird they take immediate flight and if seen from below with wings fully open could feasibly be mistaken for an owl. When at rest however, only one side of the wings can be seen at a time and the appearance then is not owl-like. Another theory states that the eyespot and surrounding dark areas are mimetic of a species of tree frog that is said to rest on tree trunks where Owl butterflies are seen. It is however difficult to imagine what possible advantage a butterfly might have in resembling a tree frog !
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  • A more rational likelihood is that the eyespot functions as a decoy. Caligo butterflies have a slow flapping flight, so a bird could easily follow one to it's resting place. Once it has settled however the mottled patterning provides the butterfly with superb camouflage against the bark of a tree trunk, with only the eyespot remaining prominent. Birds don't direct their beaks aimlessly - they normally aim for the head or body of a butterfly, but when the butterfly is well camouflaged they would aim instead at the most obvious and prominent feature, which in this case is the eyespot.
  • The underside markings of most Caligo species are prone to variation, which often causes confusion in identification. C. oileus can be confused with oedipus, but the upperside forewings of the former have broad suffused yellowish median bands, and the upperside hindwings are flushed with deep blue. In oedipus the bands are much narrower and whiter, and the whole upperside is flushed with
  • Habitats
  • This species inhabits cloudforest habitats at altitudes between about 600-1600m.
  • Owl butterfly eggs are parasitised by tiny Trichogrammatid wasps that ride from place to place on the hindwings of the butterflies. They only leave the female's wings when she lays eggs, and then return, to be transported to the next egg laying site. The eggs laid by any individual female may be laid either singly, or in groups of 20 or more, on Heliconia leaves ( Heliconiaceae ).
  • The larvae are gregarious. Cannibalism does not apparently occur despite the fact that aggregations may include small and vulnerable 1st and 2nd instar larvae alongside fully grown specimens. When full grown they are dull brown, marked with darker longitudinal stripes. They have prominent forked tails, and a crown of horns on their heads. The larvae are nocturnal, and rest during daylight hours on dead leaves at the base of the foodplants, where they are superbly camouflaged. They appear to have some form of chemical defence, as they are ignored by marauding Eciton soldier ants. 
  • The large stocky pupa is pale brown with darker streaks and closely resembles a bit of dead foliage. It is formed hanging by the cremaster from woody stems or amongst clumps of dead leaves.
  • Caligo butterflies are usually encountered as singletons, flying just before dusk along narrow trails. They are strongly attracted to rotting plantain and other fruit on the forest floor. If alarmed they fly off in an ungainly fashion, with the flapping of their wings clearly audible. Normally they fly only a few metres at a time, and settle on tree trunks, but if they attempt to land on foliage they usually often fail to maintain their grip, and are forced to fly off again and settle elsewhere.
  • They continue flying throughout the night, and are often attracted into buildings by artificial lighting. Just before dawn they seek out narrow tree trunks, on which they roost during daylight hours at a height of between 1-2 metres above ground level. On particularly dull and damp mornings they will continue flying, sometimes in quite open areas along the edge of forest roads.
  • I once observed a Caligo nectaring at flowers in mid-elevation rainforest in Ecuador, but they more usually feed at fallen fruit on the forest floor, and can be baited with rotting bananas or plantain. Owl butterflies are known to live for up to 3 months in captivity but it is not known how long they live in the wild.
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    all owl butterfly infomation
Michael M

BBC Nature - Snow leopard videos, news and facts - 0 views

  • Snow leopards are exceptional athletes capable of making huge leaps over ravines. They are highly adapted to their harsh environment in the mountainous areas of central Asia, with long, thick body hair, a woolly belly and enlarged nasal cavities which heat inhaled cold air. Snow leopards are critically endangered since their fur was once highly prized and their natural prey has declined. They can bring down prey three times their own size, but on average only kill one large animal twice a month.
  • The snow leopard (Panthera uncia or Uncia uncia) is a moderately large cat native to the mountain ranges of Central Asia. The classification of this species has been subject to change and as of 2000 it is still classified as Uncia uncia by MSW3. and CITES Appendix I. However with more recent genetic studies, the snow leopard is now generally considered as Panthera uncia and classified as such by IUCN. Classically, two subspecies have been attributed but genetic differences between the two have not been settled. The snow leopard is listed on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species as globally Endangered (EN). Snow leopards occupy alpine and subalpine areas generally 3,350 and 6,700 metres (10,990 and 22,000 ft) above sea level in Central Asia. The Snow Leopard Survival Strategy (McCarthy et al. 2003, Table II) compiled national snow leopard population estimates, updating the work of Fox (1994). Many of the estimates are acknowledged to be rough and out of date, but the total estimated population is 4,080–6,590. However, the global snow leopard effective population size (those likely to reproduce) is suspected to be fewer than 2,500 (50% of the total population, or 2,040–3,295).
  • as of 2000 it is still classified as Uncia uncia by MSW3. and CI
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  • Snow leopards occupy alpine and subalpine areas generally 3,350 and 6,700 metres (10,990 and 22,000 ft) above sea level in Central Asia. The Snow Leopard Survival Strategy (McCarthy et al. 2003, Table II) compiled national snow leopard population estimates, updating the work of Fox (1994). Many of the estimates are acknowledged to be rough and out of date, but the total estimated population is 4,080–6,590. However, the global snow leopard effective population size (those likely to reproduce) is suspected to be fewer than 2,500 (50% of the total population, or 2,040–3,295).
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    this a very good site because it has lots of facts and it tells about  Wildlife,Mammals,and Prehistoric life
Charlie R

Great Barrier Reef - Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • It is difficult to work out the age of the Great Barrier Reef. This is because of the way a reef can grow and shrink as the sea level changes. A coral reef can grow in diameter, that is how wide they are, from 1 to 2 cm per year. They can also grow upwards from 1 to 15 cm per year. Coral can not grow if the water is too deep (150 metres or more) because it needs light from the sun. They cannot grow out of the water (above sea level).[5]
  • n not grow if the water is too deep (150 metres or more) because it needs light from the sun. They cannot grow out of the water (above sea leve
  • The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority and Australian Institute of Marine Science say the current, living reef started growing about 20,000 years ago. It started to grow on an older reef.[4] This makes the beginning of the reef during the Last Glacial Maximum. At that time,
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  • Six species of sea turtles come to the reef to breed. These are the green sea turtle, leatherback sea turtle, hawksbill turtle, loggerhead sea turtle, flatback turtle, and the olive ridley. There are two different groups of green sea turtles on the Great Barrier Reef. One group lives in the northern part of the reef and the other in the south.[15] Fifteen species of seagrass attract the dugongs and turtles.[13] They also provide a food and shelter for fish.[16] The most common kinds of seagrasses are Halophila and Halodule.[17]
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    this is a good website with tons of info!
Charlie R

Great Barrier Reef (reef, Australia) -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Forms of life include at least 300 species of hard coral as well as anemones, sponges, worms, gastropods, lobsters, crayfish, prawns, crabs, and a great variety of fishes and birds. The most destructive reef animal is the crown-of-thorns starfish (Acanthaster planci), which has reduced the colour and attraction of many of the central reefs by eating much of the living coral. Encrusting red algae Lithothamnion and Porolithon form the fortifying purplish red algal rim that is one of the Great Barrier Reef’s most characteristic features, while the green alga Halimeda flourishes almost everywhere. Above the surface, the plant life of the cays is very restricted, consisting of only some 30 to 40 species. Some varieties of mangrove occur in the northern cays.
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    this site has tons of info about the great barrier reef's formation, and what lives in it! 
Charlie R

How Was the Great Barrier Reef Formed? - 0 views

  • Four hundred species of coral have been found there, as well as 4,000 species of mollusk and 2,000 different kinds of fish.The Great Barrier Reef acts as a buffer between the strong waves of the Pacific and the shores of Australia.Many parts of the Great Barrier Reef have islands made of piled up coral sand.
  • Coral Bleaching - Coral reefs are fragile ecosystems and are extremely sensitive to water temperature; so, any changes can have an effect. When the ocean water temperature rises, it causes coral bleaching. That means that the symbiotic alga inside the coral polyps dies, which causes the polyps to turn white and eventually die. The reefs can recover from only a limited amount of bleaching before they are no longer able to recover.Shelter - Barrier reefs play an important role of sheltering the coastline from the full effect of the ocean’s waves. If the reef crumbles, the coastlines are exposed to damaging waves and the people there would have to deal with erosion and wave action, and low-lying structures could be at risk.
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    this page has cool information!
Charlie R

How Was The Great Barrier Reef Formed? - 0 views

  • The marine geoscientists have discovered that a reef range of the size of Great Barrier Reef took somewhere between 50,000 and 100,000 years to form. A series of 3000 individual reefs and 1000 islands together form the Great Barrier Reef. Approximately 400 species of corals are found here. The reef supports around 2000 different
  • varieties of fish.To this date around 4000 species of mollusk have been identified.
  • Global warming is a threat to coral reefs. When the ocean temperature increases coral bleaching occurs; that is the symbiotic alga inside the polyps die, which causes the polyps to turn white and eventually die. In 1998, coral bleaching affected approximately 90% of the Great Barrier Reef. The coral reefs are endangered by the unprecedented climatic change. The coral ecosystem is bound to get physically damaged if there is an increase in the sea levels and also in the frequency of the tropical storms. Only curbing global warming can prevent the destruction of the coral reef. Australian government and the concerned organizations around the world are trying to reduce the emission of greenhouse gases.
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    this site has the coolest info ever!
Paige Z

What Is the Habitat for an Owl Butterfly? | eHow.com - 0 views

  • Habitat According to Reiman Gardens at Iowa State University, the owl butterfly's habitat is primarily dense rainforest areas of Central and South America, from southern Mexico to the Amazon Basin. They are often found near banana plantations, as owl butterfly larvae have hearty appetites for banana plant leaves (as well as heliconia). They are considered pests in banana-producing countries. Adults have strong probosces (mouths that are long, coiled straw-like tubes) for piercing fruit skins and feed mainly on rotting fruit, such as bananas, pineapples and mangoes.
  • Eye Spots The butterfly owl's eye spots may not just confuse predators, they may also "divert attacks away from the vulnerable abdomen of this very palatable butterfly," notes the Canadian Organization for Tropical Education and Rainforest Conservation (COTERC). According to COTERC, butterflies are often seen with wing damage near their eye spots, which shows that the markings give the butterfly a greater chance for losing part of a wing rather than its life. Owl butterflies are active primarily at dawn and dusk, where their main predators are often small lizards. When the owl butterfly's wings are closed it resembles the head of a mammal or lizard.
  • The owl butterfly's existence is threatened by the destruction of its habitat, the rain forest, as well as heavy use of harmful pesticides at the banana plantations they visit. But the owl butterfly is still considered enough of a pest that experiments are being done to control its larvae in organic banana fields with parasitic wasps, according to Reiman Gardens at Iowa State University. Tiny Xenufens (Trichogrammatid ) wasps like to use owl butterfly eggs for their own young. Once the female owl butterfly lays her eggs, the wasp pricks tiny holes in the eggs and lays her own. The wasp's larvae feed on the developing butterfly larvae. Xenufens wasps can destroy large numbers of owl butterfly larvae easily when no pesticides are used.
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  • Other Physical Characteristics Owl butterflies are large--their wingspans can reach eight inches. Some owl butterflies are brown in color and others are blue, and some varieties show some gray or yellow. COTERC reports that new visitors to its station in Costa Rica frequently mistake owl butterflies for bats.
  • Mating During mating season, males gather along roadsides and edges of their habitats at dawn and dusk "to competitively engage other males in aerial encounters and display to attract females," according to COTERC. This practice of gathering in the same place to mate is known as "lekking." COTERC also reports that the displays can last for about 30 minutes and that males shiver in order to increase their thoracic temperature for mating. Males also produce pheromones that give many species a characteristic odor; some males smell strongly like vanilla.
    • Paige Z
       
      good info for paige and group
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    tels about a lot
Charlie R

Reef Facts - Plants and Animals - 0 views

  • Corals are colonies of made up of tiny animals called polyps. Hard corals have polyps with 6 tentacles, or multiples of 6 tentacles. Soft coral polyps have 8 tentacles. The oldest coral on the Great Barrier Reef would be a Porites sp. and is probably about 1,000 years old. Old colonies of this species are the size of a small room. These corals grow at about 1 cm in height per year and their skeleton reflects the weather conditions at the time of the growth. Hence large corals which are hundreds of years old can provide information about water temperature and rainfall patterns that pre-date European settlement. Tiny algae called zooxanthellae live in the flesh of most corals. The algae photosynthesise and transfer energy to the coral. Therefore, coral reefs (which are built mostly by these corals) are generally confined to shallow waters because like other plants, the algae require light to survive.
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    this site has lots of algae and fish!
Charlie R

Great Barrier Reef loses more than half its coral cover | Environment | guardian.co.uk - 0 views

  • Two-thirds of the coral loss has occurred since 1998 and the rate of decline has increased in recent years, averaging around 1.45% a year since 2006. "If the trend continued, coral cover could halve again by 2022," said Peter Doherty, a research fellow at the institute.Tropical cyclones, predation by Cots, and bleaching accounted for 48%, 42%,and 10% of the respective estimated losses. In the past seven years the reef has been affected by six major cyclones. Cyclone Hamish, for example, ran along the reef, parallel to the coast for almost 930 miles (1,500km), leaving a trail of destruction much greater than the average cyclone, which usually crosses the reef on a path perpendicular to the coast.The starfish problem was first recorded in 1962 at Green Island off Cairns. "When we say outbreaks, we mean explosions of Cots populations to a level where the numbers are so large that they end up eating upwards of 90% of a reef's coral," Gunn said. "Since 1962 there have been major outbreaks every 13-14 years."
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    this site has tons of info about coral!
Destiny H

Great Barrier Reef Animals - Animals of the Great Barrier Reef - 0 views

  • There are 23 species of marine reptiles that inhabit the Great Barrier Reef including 6 species of sea turtles and 17 species of sea snakes. Occasionally, the saltwater crocodile also ventures out to forage on the reef, although such visits are quite rare. The sea turtles that inhabit the Great Barrier Reef include the green turtle, loggerhead turtle, hawksbill turtle, flatback turtle, leatherback turtle and the Pacific ridley turtle. Some sea turtle species, such as the green turtle, loggerhead turtle and hawksbill turtle, nest on coral cays. The flatback turtle nests on continental islands and the green and leatherback turtles nest on mainland Australia. When not nesting, these sea turtle species use the waters of the Great Barrier Reef as foraging grounds. Among the sea snakes of the Great Barrier Reef are the olive sea snake, the turtle-headed sea snake and the sea krait. All sea snakes are venomous.
    • Destiny H
       
      pictures and imfomation about great barrier reef.
  • There are more than 1500
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  • species of fish that inhabit the Great Barrier Reef. They range in size from the tiny gobies, some of which weigh l
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    lots of animals!
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    Tells you alout about what lives in the great barrier reef.
Charlie R

Great Barrier Reef Fish - Species, Pictures, Information & more - 0 views

  • Known for their distinctive shape and often strikingly colourful markings, Angelfish are one of the more numerous species of fish in the Great Barrier Reef, with over 80 different species in the family in total. Typical characteristics of the Angelfish include their beauty, inquisitive nature, and tendency to be found in all levels of the upper reef, from the surface to the base of the area’s coral formations. Patterns which can be found on Angelfish range from thin, vivid stripes to multi-coloured speckled patterns that make no two fish of the families look exactly alike, and they form
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    lots of cool fish!
Amelia P

Chameleon Facts For Kids | Chameleon Habitat & Diet - 0 views

  • The length of the chameleon measures at 15 mm (0.6 inches) in males however certain males are 68.5 cm (30 inches) long which makes them the smallest reptiles on the planet earth.
  • The chameleon’s tongue is almost 2 times the length of its body (not including tail).
  • The average lifespan of these reptiles is about 3 – 5 years.
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  • These reptiles are predominantly found in the sub-Sahara Africa as well as on the Madagascar, with certain species reside in the southern Europe, northern Europe, southern India, Sri Lanka, and Middle East. Some population also lives in the islands of western Indian Ocean. In some parts chameleons have also been introduced especially Jackson’s and veiled chameleons; these types are introduced in Hawaii from Florida and California. They are known to survive in all types of tropical and mountain rainforests and for a while deserts and steppes. On the negative side, the chameleon’s population is facing sudden decline due to the excessive pollution and deforestation.
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    has lots of info about chameleons l
Liam C

Storms, Starfish and Warmer Waters Wiped out Half of Great Barrier Reef Coral | PBS New... - 0 views

  • Researchers at the Australian Institute of Marine Science say the reef has lost half of its coral cover over the past 27 years. There are multiple causes, including a destructive kind of starfish, shown here.
  • The starfish is about 42 percent. Typhoons, big strong storms another 48 percent, and then coral bleaching is the remaining 10 percent which is caused whenever the water gets too hot.
  • GWEN IFILL: So when you say it's human-caused, do you mean what we do with our waters, what we do with our fishing, what we do with our runoff from agricultural causes?
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    Storms, Starfish and Warmer Waters Wiped out Half of Great Barrier Reef Coral.
Andreas M

Black hole - Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • According to the general theory of relativity, a black hole is a region of space from which nothing, including light, can escape
  • It is called "black" because it absorbs all the light that hits it, reflecting nothing, just like a perfect black body
  • Despite its undetectable interior, a black hole
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  • can be observed through its interaction with matter. A black hole can be inferred by tracking the movement of a group of stars that orbit a region in space. Al
  • ternatively, when gas falls into a stellar black hole from a companion star or nebula, the gas spirals inward, heating to very high temperatures and emitting large amounts of radiation that can be detected from earthbound and Earth-orbiting telescopes
    • Andreas M
       
      read the high lighted stuff first
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    this sight has lots of info and is a good reasorce
Charlie R

Coral reef - Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Most present-day coral reefs were formed after the last ice age when melting ice caused the sea level to rise and flood the continental shelves. This means they are less than 10,000 years old. As coral reef communities were established on the shelves, they built reefs that grew upwards, keeping pace with the rise in sea level. Reefs that did not keep pace became drowned reefs, covered by so much water that there was insufficient light for further survival.[2] Coral reefs are also found in the deep sea away from the continental shelves, around oceanic islands and as atolls. The vast majority of these ocean coral islands are volcanic in origin. The few exceptions have tectonic origins where plate movements have lifted the deep ocean floor on the surface.[3] [change]
  • Coral reefs are fragile ecosystems. Because corals need warm, sunlit water to live, they often grow close to the top of the water. Sadly, being so close to land makes them often be damaged by poisons and dirt that can come from boats and the land nearby. Dirt makes the water more cloudy, which makes the sunlight less. Poisons can bleach and kill corals. Also, they are hard for ships to see, but easy to hit, which makes ships often run into the coral, damaging both the boats and coral. Because of this, many countries are trying to lessen the kinds of building that usually happen near beaches that have coral reefs nearby, and be more careful about the boats that go around reefs.[4]
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    great site with tons of info!
Charlie R

How Does a Coral Reef Form? | Great Barrier Reef | Cairns, Australia - 0 views

  • The coral reef builds upwards, growing towards the light much like trees in a rainforest, competing for space and light. Once the coral reef reaches sea level it cannot survive the harsh surface conditions so begins to grow outwards. Creating spectacular formations of coral that spawn further growth and spreading of the reef ecosystem. Through time, animals grow and the sand, rubble and debris of life is broken down by waves and eroding animals, such as worms and sponges. A complex reef ecosystem is built over time. Today’s underwater gullies and caves were formed because of that erosion. These are the same formations scuba divers enjoy exploring today because they are shelters for an abundance of marine life. Coral reefs tend to grow where there is a lot of water movement, bringing nutrients, oxygen and new species. Most reef-building corals cannot grow in waters shallow enough to expose them at high tide or deeper than 50 metres, making them highly sensitive to changing sea levels. The Reef is continually evolving and changing as climate and sea levels change. Healthy, diverse reef ecosystems are more resilient, that is, they are able to adapt to change. The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority is concentrating on maximising reef resilience through research and management.
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    cool site with cool coral facts!
Charlie R

Coral reefs | ARKive - 0 views

  • Corals are actually tiny, soft-bodied animals that belong to the same group as jellyfish and sea anemones, the Cnidarians. An individual coral animal is called a polyp. Coral polyps can live alone, but typically polyps live in colonies that may consist of hundreds to hundreds of thousands of individuals. Corals are split into two main groups: soft corals and hard corals. Hard corals, also known as reef building corals, are the best-known type of coral, forming the large, colourful reefs found in clear, tropical seas. There are over 800 known species of reef-building coral.
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    cool site with coral!
Ruby N

Three kilometres of Great Barrier Reef damage, 20 years to mend - 0 views

  • IT COULD take 20 years or more for the Great Barrier Reef to recover from three kilometres of destruction caused by the grounding of a Chinese coal ship, authorities have revealed.
Piper M

Space Academy - 0 views

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    a lot of info it even tells you how a black hole is out of sight
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    nice, specific description, piper!
Olivia C

Owl Butterfly - 0 views

  • Currently Viewing: Home Butterfly Center Our Residents Owl Butterfly dramatic eyespots fool predators The Owl Butterflies from the rainforests of Central and South America are named for the dramatic eyespots on the underside of the lower wing, which look much like the large staring eyes of an owl.
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    talks about eye spots
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