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Riband Wave

Lat. “Idaea aversata“
species of infraorder “Butterflies and Moths“
1 species

This summary provides information about the distribution, description, and biology of Idaea aversata, a moth species. It is found abundantly in Europe, the Near East, North Africa, and the Palearctic region. It has a wingspan of 30-35 mm and is easily recognized by its buff or cream wings with dark bands. The species has two main forms, one with darker shading between the bands and the other without. The larvae feed on various plants and overwinter as small larvae. The adults are nocturnal and fly from June to August, attracted to light.

Distribution
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It is an abundant species in Europe, the Near East and North Africa and across the Palearctic. Records are few in the Iberian Peninsula and the Balkan Peninsula. The north border is northern Sweden and northern Finland. The northernmost parts of Russia and a few areas of Russia, northwest of the Caspian Sea are excluded. In North Africa (eastern Algeria and Tunisia), there is a smaller presence belonging to a separate subspecies (Idaea aversata indeviata Prout, 1935). Outside Europe, the distribution area extends from northern Turkey up to the Caucasus, from there via Central Asia, Siberia and north-east China to Japan. The occurrence in Japan is regarded as subspecies (Idaea aversata japonica Inoue, 1955). A small, isolated occurrence in southern Turkey is remarkable.

Description
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The species has a wingspan of 30–35 mm. Its distinctive outline is familiar at lighted windows. The wings are buff or cream with dark fasciae (bands). Two main forms exist, equally abundant: one has darker shading between the central fasciae, the other (designated ab. remutata) has not. The ground colour of the wings is whitish yellow to ochre. Some specimens have a red-orange colouring. The pattern elements are dark brown and clearly shown. On the forewings there are three crosslines; on the hindwings there are two crosslines. The outer cross line has a significant outward angle near the costa. The area between the middle and outer cross line is dark brown. The discal flecks are small and inconspicuous, they may also be missing. Small marginal dots lie at the outer edge and can make almost a narrow marginal line. See also Prout. The larva is moderately stout, tapering anteriorly and somewhat flattened, with a projecting and puckered lateral ridge The head small and reddish brown thickly dusted with black. The body is rugose, the skin transversely folded and dull brown. The posterior four segments are paler, tinged with ochreous. The dorsal line is whitish, indistinct, on the thorax and last four abdominals with a dark bordering, on the intermediate segments accompanied by brown V-shaped markings, There are one or two white dorsal spots and the subdorsal line s indistinct. The lateral line is whitish ochreous its underside dark, with a blunt pale wedge-shaped blotch on each segment, containing two brown lines, and followed by a smaller one in which is a grey V. The pupa is smooth but not glossy, rather blunt anteriorly; pale reddish brown, darker dorsally and at the segmental incisions, wings greenish, cremaster dark brown.

Biology
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The adults fly at night from June to August, occasionally later,[1] and are attracted to light. The larva feeds on a variety of plants including bedstraw, chickweed, dandelion and knotgrass. The species overwinters as a small larva.

^ The flight season refers to the British Isles. This may vary in other parts of the range.

Bibliography
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Chinery, Michael Collins Guide to the Insects of Britain and Western Europe 1986 (Reprinted 1991) Skinner, Bernard Colour Identification Guide to Moths of the British Isles 1984 Sihvonen, Pasi (2006). “The Sterrhinae moth fauna of Fenglin Nature Reserve, North-East China (Insecta, Lepidoptera, Geometridae)”. Spixiana. 29 (3): 247–257. München. ISSN 0341-8391.

External links#

Savela, Markku. “Idaea aversata (Linnaeus, 1758)”. Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms. Retrieved May 31, 2019. Lepiforum e.V. Mazzei, Paolo; Morel, Daniel & Panfili, Raniero Moths and Butterflies of Europe and North Africa

This summary provides information about the distribution, description, and biology of Idaea aversata, a moth species. It is found abundantly in Europe, the Near East, North Africa, and the Palearctic region. It has a wingspan of 30-35 mm and is easily recognized by its buff or cream wings with dark bands. The species has two main forms, one with darker shading between the bands and the other without. The larvae feed on various plants and overwinter as small larvae. The adults are nocturnal and fly from June to August, attracted to light.

Ancestry Graph

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Further Information

Copyright

Wikipedia
This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Idaea aversata the free encyclopedia Wikipedia which is released under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License). On Wikipedia a list of authors is available.