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Ichneutica cana facts for kids

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Ichneutica cana
Ichneutica cana female.jpg
Female
Ichneutica cana male.jpg
Male
Scientific classification
Genus:
Ichneutica
Species:
cana
Synonyms
  • Aletia empyrea Hudson, 1918
  • Ichneutica homerica Howes, 1943

Ichneutica cana is a moth of the family Noctuidae. It is endemic to New Zealand.

Taxonomy

I. cana was first described by George Howes in 1914 from a single male specimen collected in the Garvie Mountains, near Lake Wakatipu in Otago. This species was illustrated and discussed in George Hudson's 1928 book The Butterflies and Moths of New Zealand. John S. Dugdale agreed with the placement of this species within the genus Ichneutica in 1988. Robert J. B. Hoare also confirmed the placement of this species within the genus Ichneutica in his major review of New Zealand Noctuidae species in 2019.

Description

Howes originally described the species as follows:

Face grey. Palpi blackish at base. Head and thorax grey, frontal area lighter grey. Head and thorax densely clothed with long dark-grey hair. Thorax broad in proportion to length, with a slight posterior crest. Abdomen grey. Forewings grey, with pale grey lines and occasional darker marks. A single light-grey line at base; a jagged grey line about 15, strongly dentate near dorsum; outwardly suffused with dark grey. Orbicular faintly shown in light grey, and separated from reniform by a distinct dark-grey patch. Reniform faintly outlined in light grey. A jagged light-grey line at 34, bending towards termen until centre of wing, then inwards before reaching dorsum. Terminal edge margined with light grey, edged basally with a dark suffusion, which forms a faintly defined line; slight grey marks along veins where they reach termen. Cilia short, light grey and dark grey alternate patches. Hindwings light grey with a faint ochreous tinge, a darker band across wing at J and a slightly waved subterminal band. Terminal edge and cilia grey-white. Underside grey with a faint ochreous tinge and a well-defined irregular dark-grey line at about 34 across both wings.

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