Eupithecia trisignaria

Eupithecia trisignaria
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Geometridae
Genus: Eupithecia
Species: E. trisignaria
Binomial name
Eupithecia trisignaria
Herrich-Schäffer, 1848[1][2]

Eupithecia trisignaria, the triple-spotted pug, is a moth of the Geometridae family. It is found from across the Palearctic ecozone from Europe to Siberia.

The wingspan is about 20 mm.The ground colour of the forewings is fuscous (brownish-grey, tawny). The darker striae (crosslines) are indistinct and obtusely angulated. The edges of a vague geniculate median band are marked faintly darker, especially as two dark costal spots which form the corners of an equilateral triangle with the discal spot. The forewing fringes are chequered to not chequered.The hindwings are fuscous with only very faint striae and fasciae; even less conspicuously patterned than the forewings but with a clear dark fuscous, shortly linear discal mark.[3]

There is one generation per year with adults on wing from June to August.

The larvae feed on various Apiaceae species, including Angelica and Heracleum species. Larvae can be found from August to October. It overwinters as a pupa.


References

  1. Eupithecia trisignaria at Fauna Europaea
  2. Taxapad
  3. Eupithecia trisignaria full description Watson, L., and Dallwitz, M.J. 2003 onwards. British insects: the genera of Lepidoptera-Geometridae. Version: 29th December 2011
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