![]() | Stippled Line-moth (one synonym : Cleora dolichoptila Turner, 1947) DIPTYCHINI, ENNOMINAE, GEOMETRIDAE, GEOMETROIDEA | (donherbisonevans@yahoo.com) and Stella Crossley |
male caterpillar
(Photo: courtesy of Steve Williams,
Moths of Victoria: Part 5)
The Caterpillars of this species feed on the foliage of:
The pupa is a rusty brown.
The adults have grey or fawn forewings, each with variable orange patches, and dark wiggly lines including a variable dark line along the centre.
The hindwings are grey, darkening toward the margins, each with a faint submarginal dark zigzag line, and a dark spot near the middle. The hindwings have a rounded kite shape, with a slightly concave part near the tornus. The moths have a wingspan of about 3 cms.
The eggs are oval and off-white, turning darker as hatching approaches. They are laid in an open cluster.
The species is found over most of the non-tropical regions of Australia, including:
Further reading :
Ian F.B. Common,
Moths of Australia,
Melbourne University Press, 1990, fig. 34.10, p. 364.
Marilyn Hewish,
Satin Moths and Allies - GEOMETROIDEA (A),
Moths of Victoria: Part 5,
Entomological Society of Victoria, 2014, pp. 16-17.
Oswald B. Lower,
Descriptions of New South Australian Lepidoptera,
Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia,
Volume 15 (1892), p. 9.
Olga Schmidt,
An annotated and illustrated list
of the primary type specimens of geometrid moths
deposited in the Queensland Museum (Australia, Brisbane),
Spixiana,
Volume 5, Part 1 (2012), pp. 79-100, Figs. 15 a,b.
A. Jefferis Turner,
New Australian species of Boarmiadae (Lepidoptera),
Proceedings of the Royal Society of Queensland,
Volume 58 (1947), pp. 91-92, No. 48.
Cathy Byrne,
Characterisation of the Australian Nacophorini and a Phylogeny for the
Geometridae from Molecular and Morphological Data,
Ph.D. thesis, University of Tasmania, 2003.
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(updated 14 July 2010, 16 September 2013, 14 June 2015, 20 April 2018, 13 April 2020, 14 February 2021)