Macronoctua onusta

Macronoctua onusta, the iris borer, is a species of cutworm or dart moth in the family Noctuidae. It is found in North America.[1][2][3]

Macronoctua onusta
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Superfamily: Noctuoidea
Family: Noctuidae
Genus: Macronoctua
Species:
M. onusta
Binomial name
Macronoctua onusta
Grote, 1874

The MONA or Hodges number for Macronoctua onusta is 9452.[4]

Description

Macronoctua onusta is a large brown and smoky dark gray moth (FW length 18–21 mm). It has a forewing that is broad with a scalloped outer margin and a black streak along the reniform spot. It is dull brown with broad smoky dark gray suffusion on the costa and in the cell as well as in the terminal area and fringe. The antemedial and postmedial lines are thin, dark gray. The antemedial line is drawn far lateral above the posterior margin. The median line is dark brown, strongly arched toward across the brown median area below the cell. The postmedial line is jaggedly zigzagged on the anterior wing and straight from Anterior cubitus vein to the posterior margin. The subterminal line is only evident as the transition from the brown subterminal area to the black terminal area. The terminal area is a black line. The three spots are outlined in thin black. The orbicular spot is a small oval. The reniform spot has a darker posterior outline which forms a straight black line below the cubital vein. It is large and asymmetrically kidney-shaped with the lower end curved toward the outer margin touching the postmedial line. A spike-like process extends toward the base from the posteromedial end. The claviform spot is small and elongate with a rounded end. The hindwing is dirty brown-gray with slightly darker discal spot and veins, and scalloped terminal line. The hindwing fringe is light gray with a brown base. The head and thorax are even smoky dark gray. The male antenna is broad and bead-like.

This species is easily identified by its large size, dark gray anterior and lateral margins, and the distinctively shaped reniform spot and postmedial line. Similar dark brown moths lack the dark posterior outline and spike from the medial reniform spot and the postmedial line with serrate anterior and straight posterior segments.[5]

Life History

  • Larvae - This species is a foodplant specialist that bores into the rhizomes of irises (Iris spp.) in the Iridaceae.
  • Adults - Adults fly in the fall, usually in September and October. It comes to lights, although not particularly well. Forbes (1954) comments that the moth is best obtained by rearing.[5] It also lays its eggs in the fall, a single female can lay between 150 to 200 eggs over a period of several days.[6]
gollark: In any case, I can neither confirm nor deny that there wouldn't be much stopping me from just sending backdoored copies into your signing process.
gollark: Well, the program can't usefully verify *itself*.
gollark: I see.
gollark: With what?
gollark: If I had, hypothetically, backdoored your program, then *purely* theoretically it would be possible to just ship a certificate with it in addition to the ones it loads from the ROM.

References

  1. "Macronoctua onusta Report". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 2019-09-23.
  2. "Macronoctua onusta". GBIF. Retrieved 2019-09-23.
  3. "North American Moth Photographers Group, Macronoctua onusta". Retrieved 2019-09-23.
  4. "Macronoctua onusta Grote, 1874". pnwmoths.biol.wwu.edu. Pacific Northwest Moths. Retrieved 3 May 2020.
  5. Griswold, Grace H. (1 December 1934). "Oviposition in the Columbine Borer, Papaipema Purpurifascia (G. & R.) and the Iris Borer, Macronoctua Onusta Grt". Annals of the Entomological Society of America. 27 (4): 545–549. doi:10.1093/aesa/27.4.545.

Further reading


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