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Kessleria cottiensis

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Kessleria cottiensis
Female
Male
Scientific classification
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K. cottiensis
Binomial name
Kessleria cottiensis
Huemer & Mutanen, 2015

Kessleria cottiensis is a moth of the Yponomeutidae family. It is found only in a small area in the south-western Alps (Cottian Alps) of Italy and France. The habitat consists of alpine grasslands interspersed with calcareous rocks.

The length of the forewings is 7-8.8 mm for males and 5.8–6.3 mm for females. The forewings of the males are dark grey-brown, mottled with whitish scales, particularly in the distal half, forming indistinct patches in the fold and on the costa at about four-fifth and irregular black dots on the veins and a few brown scales in the medial part of the wing. There is an oblique blackish fascia at about one-third to halfway. It is indistinct dark grey-brown, mottled with whitish scales, particularly in the distal half, forming indistinct patches in the fold and on the costa at about four-fifths. There are also irregular black dots on the veins and a few brown scales in the medial part of the wing. The ground colour of the forewings of the females is whitish, mottled with black scales. Adults have been recorded on wing in late July.

Etymology

The species name refers to the type locality in the Cottian Alps (Alpi Cozie, Alpes cottiennes).[1]

References

  1. ^ Peter Huemer, Marko Mutanen 2015: Alpha taxonomy of the genus Kessleria Nowicki, 1864, revisited in light of DNA-barcoding (Lepidoptera, Yponomeutidae). ZooKeys, 503: 89-133. doi:10.3897/zookeys.503.9590