Prochoerodes lineola

Prochoerodes lineola, the large maple spanworm, is a moth of the family Geometridae. It is found from Nova Scotia to Florida, west to Texas and north to Alberta.[2]

Prochoerodes lineola
Scientific classification
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P. lineola
Binomial name
Prochoerodes lineola
(Goeze, 1781)[1]
Synonyms
  • Phalaena lineola Goeze, 1781
  • Prochoerodes transversata (Drury, 1770)
  • Prochoerodes goniata (Guenée, 1857)
  • Prochoerodes contingens (Walker, 1860)
  • Prochoerodes transposita (Walker, 1860)
  • Prochoerodes transfindens (Walker, 1860)
  • Prochoerodes transvertens (Walker, 1860)
  • Prochoerodes transmutans (Walker, 1860)

The wingspan is 35–50 mm. Adults have a wing colour which varies from yellowish to light brown or even dark brown, with or without blackish shading. They are on wing from April to October in the south and from July to September in the north.

The larvae feed on the leaves of a wide range of plants, including apple, birch, blueberry, cherry, currant, geranium, grass, maple, oak, poplar, soybean, sweetfern, walnut and willow.

Subspecies

  • Prochoerodes lineola lineola
  • Prochoerodes lineola incurvata (Guenée, 1857)
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gollark: Scenario 1107-ζ.
gollark: You do not have access to any of our soul management facilities...
gollark: We have soulless chocolate too!
gollark: Oh, *that*. Synthetic soul generation was managed a few years back.

References


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