Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Lymantria dispar

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Kingdom
  
Order
  
Genus
  
Higher classification
  
Lymantria

Phylum
  
Family
  
Scientific name
  
Lymantria dispar

Rank
  
Species

Lymantria dispar Gypsy Moth Lymantria dispar UKMoths

Similar
  
Lymantria, Insect, Lymantriinae, Butterflies and moths, Artaxa subflava

Gypsy moth caterpillar lymantria dispar hubbard park meriden ct usa


Lymantria dispar, the gypsy moth, are moths in the family Erebidae. Lymantria dispar covers many subspecies, subspecies identification such as L. d. dispar or L. d. japonica leaves no ambiguity in identification. Lymantria dispar subspecies have a range which covers in Europe, Africa, Asia, North America and South America.

Contents

Lymantria dispar Japanese gypsy moth

Lymantria dispar gypsy moth schwammspinner


Subspecies

Lymantria dispar European Lepidoptera and their ecology Lymantria dispar

The European gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar dispar) is native to temperate forests in western Europe. It had been introduced to Canada in 1912 and in the United States in 1869.

Lymantria dispar Gypsy Moths Lymantria dispar BugGuideNet

The Asian gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar asiatica) is native to southern Europe, northern Africa, Asia and Pacific. It is spreading to northern Europe (Germany, and other countries), where it hybridized with the European gypsy moth. A colony had been reported from Great Britain in 1995.

This moth is an important defoliator on broad-leaf and conifer trees.

Etymology

Lymantria dispar httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

The order Lepidoptera contains moths and butterflies characterized by having a complete metamorphosis; larvae transform to pupae and then metamorphosing into adult moths or butterflies. The family is Lymantriidae. Lymantriid larvae are commonly called tussock moths because of the tufts of hair on larvae.

Lymantria dispar Lymantriadispar1jpg

The meaning of the name Lymantria dispar is composed of two Latin-derived words. Lymantria means 'destroyer'. The word dispar is derived from the Latin word that means 'to separate' and it depicts the differing characteristics between the sexes.

The North American gypsy moth and the European gypsy moth are of the same species, often listed as Lymantria dispar dispar. Confusion over the species and subspecies, for classification still exists. The U. S. Department of Agriculture defines the Asian gypsy moth as "any biotype of Lymantria dispar possessing female flight capability", despite Lymantria dispar asiatica not being the only classified subspecies that is capable of flight. Traditionally, Lymantria dispar has been referred to as "gypsy moths" even when referring to Japanese, Indian and Asiatic gypsy moths.

References

Lymantria dispar Wikipedia