Ichneutica subcyprea

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Ichneutica subcyprea
Specimen of Ichneutica subcyprea collected from the Coromandel Peninsula
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Clade: Pancrustacea
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Superfamily: Noctuoidea
Family: Noctuidae
Genus: Ichneutica
Species:
I. subcyprea
Binomial name
Ichneutica subcyprea
Hoare, 2019

Ichneutica subcyprea is a moth of the family Noctuidae.[1] This species is endemic to New Zealand. This species is very similar in appearance to I. chlorodonta. It feeds on fern species in the genus Tmesipteris. It is the only New Zealand noctuid known to exclusively feed on ferns. The preferred habitat of this species is humid native forest and the adults are on the wing from September to December.

This species was first described by Robert Hoare in 2019.[2] The holotype specimen was collected as a larva by Hoare on Farley Track in the Waitākere Ranges.[2] He found it on a dead frond base of a tree fern in the genus Tmesipteris and reared it to adulthood on Tmesipteris.[2] The holotype specimen is held at the New Zealand Arthropod Collection.[2]

Description

The larvae of this species are bright green in appearance.[2]

Adult I. subcyprea is very similar in appearance to I. chlorodonta.[2] However I. chlorodonta differs from I. subcyprea as the male of that species has slightly longer pectinations, it has a distinctive lilac-grey to lead grey colour to the antemedian and postmedian lines, green scaling between antemedian and postmedian lines, much darker brown hindwings, and has a paler underside of the hindwings.[2]

The adult male wingspan is between 32 and 34 mm whereas the female wingspan is between 30 and 32 mm.[2]

Distribution

This species is endemic to New Zealand.[3] I. subcyprea is found in the North Island in Northland, Auckland, the Coromandel, near Ohakune, on Mount Taranaki and Mount Messenger.[2] This species has also been found in the South Island in Southland in the Opouri Valley.[2]

Habitat

This species exists where its host-plant lives, that is, in humid native forest.[2]

Behaviour

Life history and host species

References

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