Jump to content

Green longhorn

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Green Longhorn)

Green longhorn
Male
Female
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Adelidae
Genus: Adela
Species:
A. reaumurella
Binomial name
Adela reaumurella
Synonyms
  • Phalaena reaumurella Linnaeus, 1758
  • Phalaena viridella Scopoli, 1763

The green longhorn (Adela reaumurella) is a lepidopteran from the moth family Adelidae, the fairy longhorn moths.[1]

Distribution

[edit]

Adela reaumurella has a palearctic distribution. It occurs in southern North Europe, Western Europe through Central Europe to Eastern Europe. Across the temperate Palearctic the range extends to Japan. In the South, the species occurs to Sicily and Anatolia. It is missing on the Iberian Peninsula.[2]

Habitat

[edit]

These moths inhabit forests and open meadows.[3]

Description

[edit]

The wingspan of Adela reaumurella ranges from 14 to 18 millimeter.[4] Wings have an ovoid-elongated shape with rounded apex. The upper wings of both sexes are bronzy or metallic greenish, close along the body. The hind wings are dark brown with a bronze-violet shine. The males have very long thread-shaped whitish antennas, forward-facing and reaching about four times the length of the body. They have very developed eyes and rough black hair on their heads and thorax. The females have relatively short antennas with shorter and lighter hair on their heads.[4][5] They have also a few orange hairs between the eyes.[6] [7]

Biology

[edit]

The flight time of these day-active moths ranges from April to June. The males are often seen in the spring sunshine forming swarms of up to 30 specimens.[4][8] If a female flies through the swarm, it is caught by a male and the mating in flight takes place. The caterpillars live among fallen leaves from birch and oak and feed on leaves remains, often Quercus species, forming mines on them. They protect themselves for the summer and winter in an oblong, brown bag-like structure of small pieces of fallen leaves.[4] In this bag also the pupation takes place the following spring.[5]

Etymology

[edit]

The name honours the French naturalist René Antoine Ferchault de Réaumur.

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Funet - Markku Savela's Lepidoptera and some other life forms
  2. ^ Fauna Europaea
  3. ^ Michael Chinery, Farfalle d'Italia e d'Europa (Butterflies and Day Flying Moths of Britain and Europe), Novara, Istituto Geografico De Agostini, 1990 [1989], p. 323, ISBN 88-402-0802-X.
  4. ^ a b c d UK Moths
  5. ^ a b Peter Holden, Geoffrey Abbott RSPB Handbook of Garden Wildlife
  6. ^ Garden safari
  7. ^ Meyrick, E., 1895 A Handbook of British Lepidoptera MacMillan, London pdf Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. Keys and description
  8. ^ Michael Chinery, Insectes de France et d'Europe occidentale, Paris, Flammarion, août 2012, 320 p. (ISBN 978-2-0812-8823-2), p. 124-125 (in French)
[edit]