If you’ve spent any time on social media lately, you might have come across a startling image: a large, fuzzy moth with eerie, eye-like spots, seemingly clinging flat to a wall like a sticker. The posts introduce it as the “Kamitetep moth” (sometimes Tetrablemma kamitetep), hailing from the remote “Shaw Forest” or “Shaw Jungle,” and warn of its painful sting. It’s a perfectly crafted piece of internet weirdness—creepy, plausible, and highly shareable.
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But before you double-check your walls, let’s unravel the truth. This is a fascinating case of how folklore spreads in the digital age.
The Verdict: It’s a Masterful Hoax
The “Kamitetep moth” is not real. It does not exist in any entomological record. The image is a highly realistic digital creation—a piece of speculative biology art.
Here’s how we know:
The Name Gives It Away: The purported Latin name, Tetrablemma kamitetep, is a mash-up. “Tetrablemma” is a real genus of tiny, armored spiders (not moths). “Kamitetep” seems invented, adding to the exotic flair.
An Unlikely Anatomy: The moth is depicted with a bizarre, almost geometric flatness and an adhesive posture more akin to a spider or a frog than any known Lepidoptera. Its “fuzz” resembles plush fabric, and its markings are perfectly symmetrical in an unnatural way.
The Phantom Location: The “Shaw Forest” or “Shaw Jungle” cannot be found on any map. It’s a fictional setting for a fictional creature.
No Primary Evidence: There are no specimen photos in museums, no research papers, no credible sightings by lepidopterists—only the same few strikingly clear digital images circulating online.
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