Acanthoclita acrocroca

Acanthoclita acrocroca is a moth of the family Tortricidae first described by Alexey Diakonoff in 1982.[1] It is found in Sri Lanka.[2][3]

Acanthoclita acrocroca
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Tortricidae
Genus: Acanthoclita
Species:
A. acrocroca
Binomial name
Acanthoclita acrocroca
Diakonoff, 1982

The specific epithet acrocroca is derived from Greek, meaning "yellow edged".[4]

Description

Adult A. acrocroca moths have a wingspan of 8–9 mm (0.31–0.35 in). Males have a tufted vertex and typically have thick antennae. The grey-brown antennae are finely ringed on males and simple on females. The smooth pedipalps are heavily flattened laterally in males. The median segment is fan like and dilates towards the apex. Females have a pointed terminal segment. The thorax is smooth, the metathorax is whitish, and the abdomen is greyish brown. The deeply grey-brown forewings are oblong and nearly ovate. The grey-brown costa is gradually curved with an obtuse apex. Ten to twelve stringulae are present in pairs, forming barely visible chestnut brown marks. There is a triangular spot on the base of the dorsum that is followed by an inwardly oblique wedge-shaped mark. A very faint postmedian transverse band runs to the end of the dorsum. An irregular transverse series of small quadrate dots is present on the posterior third of the wing. The apex of the wings is orange with orange to ochreous cilia. The tornus and the costa before the apex are brownish. An interrupted subapical dark band is present. The hindwings are greyish brown. The wings become dark grey brown to purplish towards the margin. The cilia are pale greyish brown with pale-grey tips. A dark subbasal band and a pale basal line are present on the hindwings.[4]

gollark: That's back to just sounding weird and arbitrary.
gollark: I see.
gollark: It seems vaguely like complaining about food having chemicals in it, which would be very stupid, except there is apparently decent evidence of "processed" things being bad, whatever that means.
gollark: It kind of annoys me when people complain about "processed" foods because they never seem to actually explain what "processing" does which is so bad or what even counts as "processed".
gollark: Also, you apparently didn't hide anyone else's faces. That's probably impressive, though? I mean, I don't have context for such numbers, but they seem big.

References

  1. "Species Details: Acanthoclita acrocroca Diakonoff, 1982". Catalogue of Life. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  2. Koçak, Ahmet Ömer; Kemal, Muhabbet (20 February 2012). "Preliminary list of the Lepidoptera of Sri Lanka". Cesa News. Centre for Entomological Studies Ankara (79): 1–57. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  3. "Acanthoclita". Tortricid.net. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  4. Diakonoff, Alexey (1982). "On a collection of some families of Microlepidoptera from Sri Lanka (Ceylon)". Zoologische Verhandelingen (193). ISBN 978-90-04-06896-4. Retrieved 28 June 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.