Stictoptera cucullioides

Stictoptera cucullioides
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Noctuidae
Genus: Stictoptera
Species: S. cucullioides
Binomial name
Stictoptera cucullioides
Guenée, 1852
Synonyms
  • Stictoptera subobliqua (Walker, 1857)
  • Steiria subobliqua Walker, 1857
  • Steiria variabilis Moore, 1882
  • Stictoptera timesia Swinhoe, 1893

Stictoptera cucullioides is a moth of the Noctuidae family. It is found from the Indo-Australian tropics of India, Sri Lanka to the Bismarck Islands and Queensland. It is an introduced species in Hawaii, where it is found on Oahu, Molokai, Maui and Hawaii.

Description

In male, head and thorax greyosh brown. Abdomen fuscous. Fore wings greyish brown with numerous indistinct waved line. Orbicular and reniform stigmata indistinct, where the latter with a few raised scaled on it. A series of small marginal lunules can be seen. Hind wings opalescent hyaline, where the veins and broad outer band are fuscous with pale colored cilia.[1]

The larvae is fat, slightly tumid at the posterior end and with a berry-shaped swelling over the anterior part of the abdomen and thoracic segments. The head is half the breadth of the body. The skin of the body is smooth, translucent, but the more or less round head is brown to red-brown. The body is light whitish green with white lines. Another batch of larvae on the same host (Mesua) were darker, especially the dorsal line which was blackish flanked by broadish dull white lines. A third batch (on Calophyllum) were more purplish in the dark areas but generally similarly marked. The length at maturity is approximately 30 mm and the breadth 5 mm.

Ecology

Larvae have been recorded on Mesua and Calophyllum species (including Calophyllum inophyllum) and have been reared on Garcinia species. Other recorded foodplants include Clusia rosea, Garcinia cambogia and Mammea americana.[2]

The larvae tend to be found when their host-plant is in flush, especially when the leaves are yellow-white to pinkish. The larvae rest fully stretched on the undersides of the tender new leaves. They move actively from place to place. They turn pinkish before pupating, going down to the earth to make a fairly close-fitting dense cocoon of silk incorporating particles of earth and leaf litter near the surface. The pupa is attached lightly by the cremaster inside.

References

  1. Hampson G. F. (1892). "The Fauna Of British India Including Ceylon And Burma Moths Vol-ii". Digital Library of India. p. 558. Retrieved 4 July 2016.
  2. "Stictoptera cucullioides Guenée, 1852". Butterfly House. Retrieved 8 August 2016.


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