Africa Wild Insect Book: Moths (Lepidoptera)

Discussions and information on all Southern African Invertebrates

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Re: AW Insect Book: Moths (Lepidoptera) Crambidae

Post by Klipspringer »

European Pepper Moth Duponchelia fovealis
Family Crambidae. Subfamily Spilomelinae

Image
Male, Nelspruit © Richprins

Description
Adults have wing spans of 19 to 21 mm, and are 9 to 12 mm long. Long antennae, usually folded back. Abdomen long slender usually upturned.
The forewings are grayish brown or gray with two yellowish-white transverse lines, the outer line with a finger-like projection directed towards the apex of the wing, and in the male moth, the line nearest the body ends in a cream coloured wedge shaped fovea/triangular marking.
The hindwings are pale olive-brown, each with a cream coloured central wavy line and cream-coloured wing fringe.
The head, antennae and body are olive brown with each body segment having cream-coloured rings. The legs are pale brown.
The male is distinguished from the female by the evident fovea (= scaleless windows) present on the forweings and the slightly longer taped body.

Distribution
Native to Southern Europe and the eastern Mediterranean region, but is now established in many countries in Europe, the Middle East, Africa and North America through the nursery trade, often in greenhouses.

Biology
A common pest on various plants, a citrus nursery pest in South Africa. Larvae are polyphagous, with hosts recorded from 38 plant families. The hosts include a wide range of commercially-grown field crops and ornamental plants, and they can be pests of aquatic plants in greenhouses. The most reported host species is pepper (Capsicum annuum, Solanaceae).

Links:
African Moths
https://www.citrusresourcewarehouse.org ... -2017/file


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Re: AW Insect Book: Moths (Lepidoptera) Saturniidae

Post by Klipspringer »

Pine Tree Emperor Nudaurelia cytherea
Family: Saturnidae. Subfamily: Saturniinae. Tribe: Bunaeini

Image
Male © All-Nature

Image
Cape Agulhas, Western Cape © All-Nature

Description
Adult moths show considerable variation in size, but on average have a 125-150 mm wingspan, the body being about 50 mm long and densely covered in silky hair. Antennae of the male are broadly comb-like (pectinate), while those of the female are almost linear and only slightly serrate.
Very variable in markings. Large eyespot on forewing and on hindwing with black broad ring. The medial area is not shaded with grey or brown. The lines are thick, the inner one irregular, the outer slightly curved in near the forward edge (costa) of the forewing.

Distribution
Lesotho, South Africa (Gauteng, Eastern Cape, Western Cape, Mpumalanga, KwaZulu-Natal, Limpopo), Eswatini, Zimbabwe.

Biology
In South Africa it is a well-known pest on pine trees; the caterpillar also feeds on Acacia, Searsia and Euclea.

Life cycle
Caterpillars are especially impressive. Reaching some 10-12cm in length and almost 2cm in diameter, they are covered with a myriad of colourful spots that look like lights on a Christmas decoration. On account of this they are sometimes referred to as Christmas Caterpillars.
Like the Mopane Worm (Gonimbrasia belina), the Pine Emperor Moth caterpillar can also be eaten, though its popularity has never reached that of the Mopane Worm.


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Re: AW Insect Book: Moths (Lepidoptera) Pyralidae Pyralinae

Post by Klipspringer »

Phoenicean Pyrausta Pyrausta phoenicealis
Family: Pyralidae. Subfamily: Pyralinae. Tribe: Pyralini

Pyrausta phoenicealis.jpg
Pyrausta phoenicealis.jpg (178.99 KiB) Viewed 1442 times
Grietjie Private Reserve, Limpopo © Sprocky


Description
8–9 mm. Brick red forewing has golden yellow patches in median area and beyond sinuous postmedial line. Reddish hindwing has a single yellow subterminal band.

Distribution
It is found worldwide.

Biology
The larvae of Pyrausta spp. web and often roll leaves, shoots, and flower heads of a variety of herbaceous plants.
Larvae feed on Lamiaceae mint plants, such as Hyptis pectina, Coleus species and rosemary.

Links: African Moths


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Re: AW Insect Book: Moths (Lepidoptera) Noctuidae Catocalinae

Post by Klipspringer »

Small Moth Rhesala moestalis
Family: Noctuidae. Subfamily: Catocalinae
or: Family: Erebidae. Subfamiy: Calpinae

Rhesala moestalis.jpg
Rhesala moestalis.jpg (108.46 KiB) Viewed 1427 times
Nelspruit © Richprins

Description (by George Hampson in 1894)
Dark fuscous brown with a greyish tinge; the head and collar dark red-brown. Fore wing with some dark specks on costa; waved ante- and postmedial lines, the latter excurved round cell; the orbicular and reniform large and indistinct and more or less prominently defined by hyaline lines; a dark spot at apex; a marginal series of black specks. Hind wing with a cell-spot with hyaline specks on its edges; a sinuous medial line with dark specks on it; traces of a pale submarginal lunulate line; an indistinct lunulate red-brown marginal band. Some specimens have a dark patch on disk of fore wing; others have the black-speckled medial line of hind wing double towards inner margin.

Distribution
It is found throughout subtropical Africa, on most of the African Indian Ocean islands and in South and South-East Asia. In the subregion recorded from Botswana, Namibia, South Africa (Gauteng, Eastern Cape, Northern Cape, North-West, Limpopo, Mpumalanga), Zimbabwe, Mozambique.

Biology
The larva has been recorded feeding on Acacia mellifera, Acacia tortilis, Albiza lebbeck, Coffea, Mangifera indica

Links:
African Moths


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Re: AW Insect Book: Moths (Lepidoptera) Geometridae Geometrinae

Post by Klipspringer »

Natal Dingy Shell Disclisioprocta natalata
Superfamily Geometroidea. Family Geometridae. Subfamily Larentiinae. Tribe Xanthorhoini

Image © Richprins
Nelspruit

Links:
https://www.africanmoths.com/pages/GEOM ... alata.html
http://www.afromoths.net/species/show/19182


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Re: AW Insect Book: Moths (Lepidoptera) Pyralidae Pyralinae

Post by Klipspringer »

Pod Borer, Zincken's Knothorn Etiella zinckenella
Family: Pyralidae. Subfamily: Phycitinae. Tribe Phycitini

Etiella zinckenella.jpg
Etiella zinckenella.jpg (42.85 KiB) Viewed 1319 times
Kruger National Park, Napi Road (in the car) © Richprins


The adult moth has brown forewings with a pale yellow line along the costa and a transverse orange band.
A cosmopolitan moth which flies nocturnally and larvae feed on several genus of Fabaceae.


https://www.africanmoths.com/pages/z%20 ... nella.html


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Re: AW Insect Book: Moths (Lepidoptera) Crambidae Crambinae

Post by Klipspringer »

Red Veined Pearl, Sesame Leafroller Antigastra catalaunalis
Family Crambidae. Subfamily Spilomelinae. Tribe Margaroniini

Antigastra catalaunalis.jpg
Nelspruit © Richprins

Crambrid snout moths have a characteristic triangular shape, with the wings usually folded over the abdomen, the forewings covering the hindwings.

Forewing length is 8-11.5, but usually 10-11.5 mm. Forewing pale yellow with veins and margins suffused ferruginous, this suffusion sometimes so heavy as to obscure pale ground-colour; cross-lines fine, faint, ferruginous. Hindwing yellowish white. Antenna about four-fifth length costa forewing.

Widespread in tropical and subtropical regions of the world.

The caterpillars make shelter by rolling up young leaves and webbing them together with silk.
A pest of sesame crop, Sesamum indicum.


Links:
https://www.africanmoths.com/pages/CRAM ... nalis.html


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Re: AW Insect Book: Moths (Lepidoptera) Noctuidae Catocalinae

Post by Klipspringer »

Triangles Trigonodes hyppasia
Family Erebidae. Subfamily Erebinae. Tribe Euclidiini

Trigonodes hyppasia.jpg
Trigonodes hyppasia.jpg (122.86 KiB) Viewed 1326 times
Nelspruit © Richprins

Image © BluTuna
Garden in Johannesburg


Description
Wingspan 35-45mm. Body and hindwings are plain brownish grey, forewings grey, each with two large brown triangles, outlined in white. Antennae of male ciliated.
Larvae cream, with longitudinal brown bands.


Distribution
Widespread in tropical and South Africa.

Biology
Larval foodplants: Indigofera spp, Medicago sativa (Lucerne ).


Links: African Moths


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Re: AW Insect Book: Moths (Lepidoptera) Noctuidae Catocalinae

Post by Klipspringer »

Pallid Drab Ctenusa pallida
Family Erebidae. Subfamily Erebinae.


Image
Marakele National Park, Bontle Campsite © Super Mongoose


Description
Body ochreous with a dark brown collar on the prothorax. Forewings creamy pale with indistinct dark spots and a pale band.


Links: African Moths


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Re: AW Insect Book: Moths (Lepidoptera) Erebridae Lymantriinae

Post by Klipspringer »

Tussock Moth cf Euproctis sp.
Family: Erebridae. Subfamily: Lymantriinae

q1.jpg
Marloth park, Mpumalanga © Richprins


Tussock moths of the subfamily Lymantriinae are hairy moths.
Antennae one-third body length, comb-like or feathery in male, simple in female. Forewings broad, hindwings rounded. Abdomen of female ends in thick, blunt tuft. Adults do not feed, mouthparts poorly developed.
Larvae have tuft of hair on back, hence common name. They are predominantly arboreal defoliators, with high levels of polyphagy.


Euproctis sp have strongly hairy legs and are pale yellow or cream.


http://www.afromoths.net/genus/show/710520


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