Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Square spot rustic

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Kingdom
  
Order
  
Genus
  
Higher classification
  
Xestia

Phylum
  
Family
  
Scientific name
  
Xestia xanthographa

Rank
  
Species

Square-spot rustic wwwukmothsorguksiteassetsfiles182702134xx

Similar
  
Xestia, Setaceous Hebrew character, Butterflies and moths, Lesser yellow underwing, Six‑striped rustic

The square-spot rustic (Xestia xanthographa) is a moth of the family Noctuidae. It is found in Africa, Europe, northern Asia (excluding China) and North America.

Contents

Square-spot rustic Squarespot Rustic Xestia xanthographa NatureSpot

The species is quite variable in appearance, the forewings occurring in various shades of grey or brown, with melanic forms common in parts of its range. The best identifying feature is the large, pale, squarish stigma which gives the species its common name. The hindwings are pale to dark grey with a whitish fringe. The wingspan is 30–40 mm.

Square-spot rustic Squarespot Rustic LepiPhotos

Technical description and variation

Square-spot rustic Squarespot Rustic Xestia xanthographa UKMoths

Forewing dull brown; the upper stigmata with pale annuli, the reniform sometimes wholly pale, the orbicular round; claviform absent; hindwing ochreous white, suffused with fuscous towards termen only in male, more broadly in female; in ab. budensis Frr. the ground colour is grey; in ab. elutior Alph. the forewings are more brightly coloured, being cinnamon brown or yellowish grey; and in ab. palaestinensis Kalchb. [Now full species Xestia palaestinensis (Kalchberg, 1897)] , while the ground colour is paler, all the markings are more distinct. — ab. obscura Tutt and ab. nigra Tutt represent the reddish black and greyish black forms, with stigmata sometimes clear, at others almost obsolete, which occur in the North of Scotland, the hindwing also being blackish; rufescens Tutt and rufa Tutt are merely colour varieties.

Biology

Square-spot rustic Squarespot Rustic LepiPhotos

This moth flies at night from July to September [1] and is attracted to light, making it susceptible to light traps, and sugar. It also visits flowers such as heather, marram grass and ragwort. It is found in woodland edges, waste ground and suburban habitats with a distribution that covers most of England.

Square-spot rustic 2134 Squarespot Rustic

Larva greenish ochreous, with pale dorsal and subdorsal lines edged with dark; between them a row of oblique marks. The larva feeds on a variety of plants such as bedstraw, oak and willow, as well as various grasses. The species overwinters as a larva, remaining active and feeding throughout.

  1. ^ The flight season refers to the British Isles. This may vary in other parts of the range.
Square-spot rustic 2134 Squarespot Rustic

References

Square-spot rustic Wikipedia


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