If you’ve been on social media lately, you may have seen a viral image of a large, fuzzy moth pressed flat against a wall, marked with dramatic eye-like patterns and paired with warnings about a painful sting. Often called the “Kamitetep moth” and given the scientific name *Tetrablemma kamitetep*, it’s said to live in a remote “Shaw Forest” or “Shaw Jungle.”
The story feels believable—but the creature doesn’t exist.
The Kamitetep moth is a digital fabrication, a piece of speculative biology art designed to blur reality and imagination. One major clue is its scientific name: *Tetrablemma* is actually a real genus of spiders, not moths, making its classification immediately suspicious. The mismatch exposes the illusion for those who look closely.
Its anatomy raises further doubts. The moth’s flattened posture, geometric symmetry, and plush-like texture resemble stylized digital artwork more than natural evolution. The perfectly balanced eye-spots and polished presentation suggest careful design rather than organic variation found in real species.
The supposed habitat is another red flag. “Shaw Forest” or “Shaw Jungle” cannot be found on recognized maps, and there are no museum specimens, field studies, or peer-reviewed records confirming the insect’s existence. Only the same curated images circulate online, reinforcing the myth without evidence.
The hoax works because it taps into familiar fascinations: oversized insects, eye-spot mimicry, and hints of danger. By presenting the image as a hidden discovery, the creator leverages our curiosity about unexplored biodiversity. The added suggestion of a sting heightens emotion and encourages sharing.
Ironically, real moths are just as astonishing. The Venezuelan Poodle Moth looks like a tiny plush toy, the Atlas Moth displays snake-head wing patterns and massive wingspans, the Madagascan Sunset Moth shimmers with metallic color, and Clearwing Moths mimic wasps with transparent wings. Nature, it turns out, needs no digital embellishment.