Scoliopterygini Herrich-Schaffer 1852

Scoliopterygini 1680 * R H Scoliopteryx libatrix (Linnaeus, 1758) L May – Jun; L M B G Herald Aug – E Sep (H) T: Forbes (1954) L: Bowman (1951), Crumb (1956), Prentice (1962), Ives and Wong (1988) C: CNC, NFRC, OLDS, PMAE, UASM 60.8. Hypenodinae Very small (10–14 mm wingspan) moths with relatively n...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pohl, Greg, Anweiler, Gary, Schmidt, Christian, Kondla, Norbert
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2010
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3789204
https://zenodo.org/record/3789204
Description
Summary:Scoliopterygini 1680 * R H Scoliopteryx libatrix (Linnaeus, 1758) L May – Jun; L M B G Herald Aug – E Sep (H) T: Forbes (1954) L: Bowman (1951), Crumb (1956), Prentice (1962), Ives and Wong (1988) C: CNC, NFRC, OLDS, PMAE, UASM 60.8. Hypenodinae Very small (10–14 mm wingspan) moths with relatively narrow wings, clothed with very fine scales. Th e subfamily is defined by several larval characters and by the evenly scaled frons (Fibiger and Lafontaine 2005). Interestingly, the recently described Micronoctuidae Fibiger, 2005 (primarily a palaeotropical group not known from the New World), appears to be very closely related to the Hypenodinae, based on molecular data (Zahiri et al. in press). Th e Hypenodinae contains the smallest North American noctuids. Th e larvae feed on fungi, lichens and/or algae. This is a small subfamily, currently with only five North American genera. Two species in the genus Hypenodes occur in AB. Hypenodes was revised by Ferguson (1954). 1681 * R Hypenodes fractilinea (Smith, 1908) L Jun – E Aug – B g T: Ferguson (1954) L: [Bowman (1951)], Pohl et al. (2004b) C: CNC, NFRC, UASM 1682 * R Hypenodes sombrus Ferguson, 1954 L Jul m B – T: Ferguson (1954) L: None C: UASM 60.9. Boletobiinae Small (22–25 mm wingspan), broad-winged nocturnal moths, superficially very similar to some geometrids. They are defined by a number of adult and larval characters, including the long, thin, roughly scaled palps and the fully scaled frons of the adults. Th e larvae feed on mushrooms and bracket fungi. The Boletobiinae occur in both North America and Eurasia, with about 18 species in four genera in North America, including one introduced European genus ( Parascotia ), and one that is likely misplaced in the Boletobiinae ( Prosoparia Lafontaine and Schmidt in press). One species is found in AB. Some North American species, including the sole species occurring in AB, were covered by Franclemont (1985). 1683 R Mycterophora inexplicata (Walker, [1863]) E Jul – L Jul – B g T: Forbes (1954), Franclemont (1985) L: Bowman (1951) C: CNC, NFRC, UASM 60.10. Phytometrinae A small group of small to medium-sized (20–30 mm wingspan) moths with relatively broad wings. Th e group is defined by a number of derived character states, mainly genitalic. The Phytometrinae have traditionally been included within the Hypeninae, but the subfamily was reinstated by Fibiger and Lafontaine (2005). In North America, the subfamily Phytometrinae contains some 25 species in nine genera. The group is in need of revision. Th e lone AB species was treated by Forbes (1954) and Covell (1984). 1684 R Spargaloma sexpunctata Grote, 1873 M Jun – M Jul – B g T: Forbes (1954), Covell (1984) L: Bowman (1951) C: CNC, NFRC, UASM 60.11. Erebinae Medium-sized to very large (50–160 mm wingspan) moths, often with brightly color- ed hindwings or with eyespots on fore- and hingwings (Thermesiini). Th e subfamily contains many large colorful species, as well as several species that are active during the day. Larval hostplants are a diverse array of vascular plants, but tend to be specialized within groups, such as deciduous trees and shrubs for the Catocalini; a few (e.g., Caenurgina spp.) are occasional pests of forage crops. Erebinae occur worldwide but are most diverse and abundant in tropical and subtropical regions. Th ere are approximately 325 species in 65 genera in North America, of which 35 species are reported from AB. Th e group as a whole is in need of work, but revisions have been published for the tribe Melipotini (Richards 1939) and the genera Euclidia (Franclemont 1957) and Zale (Smith 1908). The genus Catocala was illustrated by Barnes and McDunnough (1918a); a modern revision of the genus is currently under way as an upcoming Moths of North America fascicle by Gall and Hawks. : Published as part of Pohl, Greg, Anweiler, Gary, Schmidt, Christian & Kondla, Norbert, 2010, An annotated list of the Lepidoptera of Alberta, Canada, pp. 1-549 in ZooKeys 38 (38) on pages 246-248, DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.38.383, http://zenodo.org/record/576629 : {"references": ["Forbes WTM (1954) Th e Lepidoptera of New York and neighboring states, Part III. Noctuidae. Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station Memoirs 329: 1 - 433.", "Bowman K (1951) An annotated list of the Lepidoptera of Alberta. Canadian Journal of Zoology 29: 121 - 165.", "Crumb SE (1956) Th e larvae of the Phalaenidae. United States Department of Agriculture, Technical Bulletin 1135: 1 - 356.", "Prentice RM (1962) Forest Lepidoptera of Canada reported by the Forest Insect Survey, Vol. 2: Nycteolidae, Notodontidae, Noctuidae, Liparidae. Canada Dept. of Forestry, Forest Entomology and Pathology Branch, Publication No. 1013, pp. 77 - 281.", "Ives WGH, Wong HR (1988) Tree and shrub insects of the Prairie provinces. Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, Northern Forestry Centre, Edmonton, AB, Information Report NOR-X- 292, 327 pp.", "Fibiger M, Lafontaine JD (2005) A review of the higher classification of the Noctuidae (Lepidoptera) with special reference to the holarctic fauna. Esperiana 11: 7 - 690.", "Ferguson DC (1954) A revision of the genus Hypenodes Doubleday with descriptions of new species (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae). Th e Canadian Entomologist 86: 289 - 298.", "Smith JB (1908) A revision of some species of Noctuidae heretofore referred to the genus Homoptera Boidsduval. Proceedings of the United States National Museum 35 (1645): 209 - 275.", "Pohl GR, Langor DW, Landry J-F, Spence JR (2004 b) Lepidoptera of the Boreal Mixedwood Forest near Lac La Biche, Alberta, including new provincial records. Canadian Field-Naturalist 118: 530 - 549.", "Franclemont JG (1985) A new species of Parascotia with notes on the genera Mycterophora and Parascotia (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae: incertae sedis). Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington 87: 826 - 833.", "Covell CV Jr (1984) A field guide to moths of eastern North America. Houghton Mifflin, Boston, MA, Peterson Field Guide Series No. 30, 496 pp.", "Richards AG Jr (1939) A revision of the North American species of the Phoberia - Melipotis - Drasteria group of moths (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae). Entomologica Americana 19: 1 - 100.", "Franclemont JG (1957) The genus Euclidia, with the description of a new species (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae: Catocalinae). Bulletin of the Brooklyn Entomological Society 52: 5 - 15.", "Barnes W, McDunnough JH (1918 a) Illustrations of the North American species of the genus Catocala. Memoirs of the American Museum of Natural History, New Series 3, 47 pp."]}