Chrysoglossa fumosa

Chrysoglossa fumosa is a moth of the family Notodontidae first described by James S. Miller in 2008. It is found in Panama.

Chrysoglossa fumosa
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Subfamily:
Tribe:
Genus:
Species:
C. fumosa
Binomial name
Chrysoglossa fumosa
Miller, 2008

The length of the forewings is 18 mm for males. The ground color of the forewings is uneven olive brown to dark brown, without obvious markings. The hindwings are uniformly light brown to gray brown, also without markings.

Etymology

The name fumosa was coined by Warren in 1905 and is apparently derived from the Latin word fumidus (meaning smoked or full of smoke) and probably refers to the smoky brown forewing and hindwing color.

gollark: Maybe try and get rootaccess™ using hackerization™ and run haskell properly?
gollark: To some extent, the internet's culture of free expression is going away, and being replaced with "please pick from this list of acceptable political views to use [any large platform]".
gollark: "Remember the internet before Facebook bought TCP/IP?"
gollark: Ah yes, HTML hackerman?
gollark: Did you know: some jellyfish and 0.43% of osmarks.tk users are immortal?

References

  • Miller, James S. (2009). "Generic revision of the Dioptinae (Lepidoptera: Noctuoidea: Notodontidae) Part 1: Dioptini". Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 321 (2): 1–676. hdl:2246/5978.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.