An annotated list of the Lepidoptera of Alberta, Canada
Author
Pohl, Greg
Northern Forestry Centre, Natural Resources Canada, Edmonton ,, Canada
Author
Anweiler, Gary
University of Alberta Strickland Entomology Museum ,, Canada
Author
Schmidt, Christian
Canadian Food Inspection Agency, Ottawa, Canada
Author
Kondla, Norbert
Calgary ,, Canada
text
ZooKeys
2010
2010-03-05
38
38
1
549
journal article
10.3897/zookeys.38.383
aa97d560-1969-4b79-93bb-2614b7835c0e
1313–2970
576629
55.1.
Larentiinae
– carpet moths
Medium-sized moths (approximately
15–35 mm
wingspan) with complex patterns of transverse bands. Th ey can be separated from other geometrids by wing venation: on the hindwing, the Sc + R
1
veins are fused with the Rs vein for more than one-quarter the length of the discal cell. No other easily observable characters define the group. Larvae of most species feed on the foliage of trees; a few species of
Eupithecia
in
Hawaii
are carnivorous on aphids and spiders. Th e
Larentiinae
includes a few forest pest species such as the winter moths (
Operophtera
spp.).
Approximately 5700 species of
Larentiinae
are known worldwide, primarily from temperate regions. Approximately 470 species occur in North America; 137 are known from AB. Th is subfamily is in need of taxonomic work, and many specimens in collections have not been adequately identified because of the diffi culty in making species determinations. Some groups are reasonably well known, including
Anticlea
(
Rindge 1967
)
, some
Dysstroma
(
McDunnough 1946a
),
Entephria
(
Troubridge 1997
)
,
Eubaphe
(
Fletcher 1954
)
, Canadian
Eupithecia
(
Bolte 1990
)
, some
Hydriomena
(
McDunnough 1954
)
,
Operophtera
(
Troubridge and Fitzpatrick 1993
)
,
Plemyria
(
Choi 1998
)
, and
Rheumaptera
(
Skou 1986
)
. McGuffi n (1958b) treated the known larvae.