Laothoe amurensis
Aspen hawk-moth | |
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Species: | L. amurensis
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Binomial name | |
Laothoe amurensis Staudinger, 1892[1]
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Laothoe amurensis (aspen hawk-moth) is a moth of the family Sphingidae. It is found in the northern part of the Palearctic ecozone. It flies in May and can be found only in far-Eastern Europe, including parts of Poland, Finland, Ukraine and Belarus. It exists also in Asia as few another subspecies. In spite of being very rare, it isn't protected, e.g. in Poland. There are known few places where obtaining this moth by attracting to light is possible.
The wingspan is 71–98 mm. Very similar to Laothoe populi, a common European moth found everywhere, but bigger and much more dark.
Eggs laid singly or in small groups of 2–4 pieces are laid on the underside of leaves.
The larvae feed singly on Populus tremula and willow. Green with 7 pale stripes, look like L. populi caterpillars, but, opposite to it, have got 2–3 little "horns" above its head; difficult to distinguish.
This moth spends winter as chrystalid in the soil.
Species
- Laothoe amurensis amurensis (from central Poland and southern Finland, east through Russia, southern Siberia and Yakutia to the Pacific coast, including Sakhalin Island. In the eastern Palaearctic, it occurs south as far as the Altai Mountains of Xinjiang, northern Mongolia, northern Heilongjiang, Primorskiy Kray and Hokkaido and Honshu in Japan)
- Laothoe amurensis sinica Rothschild & Jordan, 1903 (China and Korea)
References
- ^ "CATE Creating a Taxonomic eScience – Sphingidae". Cate-sphingidae.org. Retrieved 2011-11-01.[permanent dead link ]