Prodoxus gypsicolor

Prodoxus gypsicolor is a moth of the family Prodoxidae. It is found in the United States in the Kingston Range of the north-eastern Mojave Desert and possibly the Grand Canyon National Park in central-northern Arizona.

Prodoxus gypsicolor
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
P. gypsicolor
Binomial name
Prodoxus gypsicolor
Pellmyr, 2005

The wingspan is 11.2-16.2 mm for males and 12-19.1 mm for females. The forewings are calcareous white and the hindwings are brownish gray.[1] Adults are on wing from late March to early April.

The larvae feed on Agave utahensis.

Etymology

The species name refers to the chalk white color of the forewings.

gollark: I was considering normalizing it or something, but didn't want to.
gollark: mondecitronne.com's is quite dim because the latency to America is bad.
gollark: Green is "OK", with brightness representing latency, black is timeout, orange is HTTP error, red is fetch error of some sort, purple is server failure.
gollark: The full image is 12 weeks of historical data.
gollark: They are status monitoring. Each pixel represents a ping. Pings occur once per 30 seconds.

References

  1. Pellmyr, O, 2006: Phylogeny and life history evolution of Prodoxus yucca moths (Lepidoptera: Prodoxidae). Systematic Entomology 31: 1-20.


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