Zygaena anthyllidis

Zygaena anthyllidis is a species of moth in the Zygaenidae family. It is found in France and Spain.[1]

Zygaena anthyllidis
Zygaena anthyllidis Gavarnie
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Zygaena
Species:
Z. anthyllidis
Binomial name
Zygaena anthyllidis
Boisduval, 1828
Synonyms
  • Zygaena erebus Meigen, 1829
  • Zygaena anthillidis Freyer, [1842]

Technical description and variation (Seitz)

Z. anthyllidis Boisd. (= erebus Meig.) . With pale collar and light-red belt. The wings strongly widened, and especially the 6 spots of forewing enlarged, being more or less quadrangular. Pyrenees. — ab. flava Oberth. is the yellow aberration. — In caucasica Stgr.-Reb.[now Zygaena armena ssp. caucasica Rebel, 1901 ] the pale collar is missing and the two distal spots touch each other or are confluent; from the Caucasus. — Larva yellow, with the head, thoracical legs and transverse bands black; on Trefoil. Pupa in a white ovate cocoon of which the frontal end is directed downwards (Oberthur). [2] The wingspan is 30–38 mm.

Biology

Adults are on wing in July and August. The larvae feed on Lotus (including Lotus alpinus), Coronilla, Trifolium, Anthyllis and other Fabaceae species.[3] The larvae usually overwinter twice.[4]

gollark: You could easily make it so that some tiny community runs it on their toasters, but if there's ever an actual financial incentive someone *will* fix it.
gollark: Someone could just fix that, and I don't know *how* you would manage to introduce those in a mining algorithm.
gollark: Interesting. Toasters aren't fast, though. So anyone doing it seriously would just port the code to an actual high power computer.
gollark: Only mineable *fast* on some hardware, sure, but I don't think the PS1 has any sort of unique dedicated hardware acceleration features.
gollark: Any Turing machine can emulate any other Turing machine, sort of thing.

References

  1. Fauna Europaea
  2. Jordan, 1913, in Seitz, Gross-Schmett. Erde 6: 22.,The Macrolepidoptera of the Palearctic Fauna 2. Volume: The Palearctic Bombyces & Sphinges. pdf This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  3. Moths and Butterflies of Europe and North Africa
  4. Schmetterlinge und ihre Ökologie


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