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Your Weekly Attenborough: Euptychia attenboroughi

Waxing, and waning, poetic.

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Euptychia attenboroughi.Credit: Andrew Neild, Trustees of the Natural History Museum, London

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Small, spotted and dun

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flash of wings in the Amazon sun.

Cloaked in mystery until 2015

Euptychia attenboroughi does not mean to be seen.

Plucked from tangles of jungle undergrowth

to a pin-speckled board, the lepidopterist's oath.

Attenborough's black-eyed satyr,

a forest god, a butterfly, it doesn't really matter.

Black spots spark fear when danger's near

or just sow confusion, it's not quite clear.

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Its range is limited, the numbers may be low

so keep an eye out wherever you go.

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Stumble across a satyr, either today or tomorrow

and you've got yourself a real-life Attenborough.

Find out more in ZooKeys.

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Bonus Attenborough Fact of the Week: A young Sir David supplied newts to his father's university for three pence. The source? A pond right behind the zoology building.

Last week's Attenborough: Microleo attenboroughi

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