Chestnut-fronted Macaw vs clouded brindle
Ara severus compared with Apamea epomidion
Taxonomic Classification
| Rank | Chestnut-fronted Macaw | clouded brindle |
|---|---|---|
| Kingdom same | Animalia (Animals) | Animalia (Animals) |
| Phylum | Chordata (Chordates) | Arthropoda (Arthropods) |
| Class | Aves (Birds) | Insecta (Insects) |
| Order | Psittaciformes (Parrots) | Lepidoptera (Butterflies & Moths) |
| Family | Psittacidae (True Parrots) | Noctuidae |
| Genus | Ara (Macaws) | Apamea |
| Species | Ara severus | Apamea epomidion |
Evolutionary Relationship
Chestnut-fronted Macaw and clouded brindle share a common ancestor at the Kingdom level: Animalia. (Animals)
Conservation Status
Chestnut-fronted Macaw
LC — Least Concernclouded brindle
LC — Least ConcernPhysical Characteristics
| Attribute | Chestnut-fronted Macaw | clouded brindle |
|---|---|---|
| Diet | — | — |
| Average Lifespan | — | — |
| Average Length | — | — |
| Average Weight | — | — |
Habitat & Geographic Range
Chestnut-fronted Macaw
Typically found in various aerial, terrestrial, and aquatic environments.
Widely distributed across Europe (Belgium, Norway), North America (United States), and South America (Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela).
clouded brindle
Typically found in virtually all terrestrial and freshwater habitats.
Distributed across Belgium, Denmark, Norway, and Sweden.
Chestnut-fronted Macaw
A medium-sized macaw of Central and South American tropical forests from southern Mexico to Bolivia and Brazil, chestnut-fronted macaws have predominantly green plumage with a chestnut forehead, red shoulder patches, and blue flight feathers. The smallest of the true macaws, they inhabit forest edges, savannas, and secondary woodland and often raid crops, making them locally unpopular with farmers. They are popular aviary birds, but wild populations face pressure from trapping and deforestation.
clouded brindle
The clouded brindle (Apamea epomidion) is a noctuid moth in the family Noctuidae found across temperate Europe and extending into western Asia. The adult wingspan measures approximately 35–45 mm with typical brindle-patterned forewings in grey-brown and buff tones with subtle cross-lines and stigmata characteristic of the Apamea genus. The term 'clouded' refers to diffuse cloud-like darker shading areas across the forewing surface. Adults fly in one generation from June to August, attracted to light and flowers at night. The larvae are internal feeders within grass stems and roots, feeding on coarse grass species such as Brachypodium sylvaticum and Deschampsia in woodland rides, scrub margins, and rough grassland habitats. The pupal stage overwinters in soil or within plant debris. The clouded brindle inhabits structurally diverse woodland edge habitats with a mixture of tall grasses, scrub, and open canopy woodland rides that provide both larval foodplants and adult resting sites. Changes in woodland management, particularly reduction of coppicing and shading of woodland rides, may affect this and related grass-feeding brindle moth species.
Related Comparisons
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