Evergestis caesialis
Evergestis caesialis is a species of moth in the family Crambidae. It is found in Italy, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Romania, Bulgaria, the Republic of Macedonia, Greece,[2] Iran and North Africa, including Morocco.[1]
Evergestis caesialis | |
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Species: | E. caesialis |
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Evergestis caesialis (Herrich-Schaffer, 1849) | |
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The wingspan is 19–24 mm. In Europe, adults are on wing in August and in Morocco from mid-June to the end of July.
Subspecies
- Evergestis caesialis caesialis
- Evergestis caesialis comealis Amsel, 1961 (Iran)
- Evergestis caesialis mellealis Zerny, 1936 (North Africa)
gollark: It's one thing to go "the universe is complicated, therefore an intelligent being of some sort created it" (not that I think you demonstrated this!) but it's quite another to go "therefore all the ridiculous and complicated lore of [SOME RELIGION] is also true".
gollark: That sounds like one of those things where they test a ridiculous amount of ways to extract information/random noise from the Bible and, amazingly, find that sometimes random noise seems like an interesting thing.
gollark: They weren't very *good* steam engines; they were missing steel or something.
gollark: No, I mean what do they interact with and what's the evidence of it.
gollark: > without a creation there is no world staying aliveAgain, please actually explain this?
References
- "GlobIZ search". Global Information System on Pyraloidea. Retrieved 2012-03-21.
- Fauna Europaea
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