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Similarly, female Banded Killifish tend to be larger when compare to the male.
The female White Banded Awl has small spots on the upper forewing while the male has no brand above.
In India, the Common Banded Awl is the commonest of the Awls or Coeliadinae subfamily of skippers.
Common Awl Hasora badra Moore - It resembles the Common Banded Awl but lacks the white band.
The Banded Peak Challenge was created in 2000 and raises money for The Easter Seals Camp Horizon in Bragg Creek, AB, Canada.
Hasora khoda, commonly known as the Large Banded Awl, is a butterfly belonging to the family Hesperiidae which is found in India, parts of Southeast Asia and Australia.
The butterfly is a plain dark brown above and resembles the Common Banded Awl Hasora chromus, except that it has a broad yellow central band on the upper and under of the hindwings.
The Large Banded Awl is found in India in Assam (Cachar) and the Andaman islands eastwards to Myanmar, Thailand, Philippines, Sulawesi, New Caledonia and Australia.
It resembles the Common Banded Awl Hasora chromus, except in the case of having a broad white band on the under hindwing which is outwardly diffused; also, its wings are more prominently glossed.
The butterfly, resembles the Common Banded Awl Hasora chromus, except that it has no white band below; and the apex of the forewing and the disc of the hindwing below are purple-washed.
The Common Banded Awl is found throughout the Indian subcontinent, Southeast Asia (including the Malay peninsula and the Indonesian archipelago), South China, Okinawa, Japan, Papua New Guinea and Australia.
Plain Banded Awl Hasora vitta Butler - The white band is broader, diffused at the outer margin and has more glossy sheen than the Common Banded Awl.
The Yellow Banded Awl is found in India from Assam and Nagaland eastwards to Southeast Asia, namely, Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, the Malay peninsula, Singapore and the Indonesian archipelago (specifically recorded at Borneo, Sumatra, Palawan).
During a population explosion, like those of the Common Banded Awl, the caterpillars of the Brown Awl may strip away all their food supply forcing the butterflies to migrate to other places where fresh supply of host-plants are available and even into other habitats such as shrubs, grasslands and gardens.