Ethmia hagenella

Ethmia hagenella is a moth in the family Depressariidae. It is found in the United States in Texas and New Mexico.[2]

Ethmia hagenella
Scientific classification
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E. hagenella
Binomial name
Ethmia hagenella
(Chambers, 1878)[1]
Synonyms
  • Anesychia hagenella Chambers, 1878
  • Ethmia josephinella Dyar, 1902

The length of the forewings is 9.1–11.9 mm (0.36–0.47 in). The ground color of the forewings is white, although the costal area is broadly pale brown. The ground color of the hindwings is white, but pale brownish toward the distal margins, concentrated into darker spots between the veins. Adults of subspecies hagenella are on wing in January, March, April and October in multiple generations per year, while adults of subspecies josephinella are on wing from late March to May and in September, probably also in multiple generations.[3]

Subspecies

  • Ethmia hagenella hagenella (central Texas)
  • Ethtnia hagenella josephinella (Dyar, 1902) (extreme western Texas and southern New Mexico)
gollark: You don't have an accurate map, though, and you have devices which might randomly be moving around, or ones which drop out unexpectedly, or ones which can't hold much of a routing table due to limited RAM, or ones which are doing evil things.
gollark: It's not *just* a graph thing. If you had an accurate map of all the network connections it would be a relatively easy thing to route between nodes.
gollark: I heard that general mesh-network routing was extremely hard, so I ignored it and implemented something really stupid instead.
gollark: Without the ID thing, though.
gollark: I mean, my networking thing is effectively a port of rednet, and thus really inefficient and bad, which is probably why it uses so much power?

References

  1. mothphotographersgroup
  2. Bug Guide
  3. Powell, Jerry (1973). "A Systematic Monograph of New World Ethmiid Moths (Lepidoptera: Gelechioidea)". Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology. Retrieved 12 June 2020.


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