Cosmopterosis jasonhalli

Cosmopterosis jasonhalli is a moth in the family Crambidae. It was described by Maria Alma Solis in 2009.[1] It is found from Sinaloa, Mexico, south to Paraguay, Peru and Venezuela. It is also found Trinidad and Tobago. It is found at elevations between 50 and 900 meters.

Cosmopterosis jasonhalli
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
C. jasonhalli
Binomial name
Cosmopterosis jasonhalli
Solis in Solis, Metz & Janzen, 2009

The costa and apical one third of the forewings is golden yellow, while the basal one fourth is ocherous to very pale brown. The basal, subbasal and antemedial lines consist of brown-tipped scales. The hindwings are fuscous up to the hindmargin, but the area between the antemedial and medial lines is rufous. Adults are on wing year round.

The larvae feed on Capparis frondosa and Capparis flexuosa.

Etymology

The species is named for Dr. Jason P. W. Hall, the spouse of the first author.[2]

gollark: > With extern isolation, calling into C cannot cause Vale code to crash. Is this a challenge?
gollark: Thus advertising bad.
gollark: > 1) same on youtube for the same qualityIt can pick a quality depending on connection quality and such. You can also do this but it's hard.> 2) you are overly optimistic about the bloat of modern websites. I just loaded a random ad-loaded heavy website and the two biggest scripts along are already 1 MBOh dear.
gollark: Which they pay for traffic on, yes.
gollark: That's a few pence on certain mobile network plans, equivalent to about four books, and basically the maximum size of accursed JS in the wild.

References


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