Aroga websteri

Aroga websteri is a moth of the family Gelechiidae. It is found in North America, where it has been recorded from Washington.[1][2]

Aroga websteri
Scientific classification
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A. websteri
Binomial name
Aroga websteri
Clarke, 1942

The wingspan is 14–16 mm. The forewings are sordid white, heavily stuffed with greyish-fuscous and overlying greyish-fuscous scales. The extreme base and two or three short, ill-defined, oblique costal dashes are blackish fuscous. There is a blackish-fuscous longitudinal dash on the lower fold, nearly to the middle of the wing, with a few ochreous scales mixed. A shorter dash is found in the cell at the middle, followed by an ill-defined small spot of the same colour. The hindwings are light smoky fuscous.

Etymology

The species is named for Dr. R. L. Webster, former head of the Department of Zoology, Washington State College.[3]

gollark: X E N OP H O B I A
gollark: What does that have to do with Hitler?
gollark: How is it capitalism?
gollark: ***why must language/culture be this way***
gollark: 2045: is that somehow racist?

References


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