Ghost Moth

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ghost Moth
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Hepialidae
Genus: Hepialus
Fabricius, 1775
Species: H. humuli
Binomial name
Hepialus humuli
(Linnaeus, 1758)
Synonyms

Genus:

  • Hepiolus Illiger, 1801
  • Epialus Agassiz, 1847
  • Epiolus Agassiz, 1847
  • Tephus Wallengren, 1869

Species:

  • Noctua humuli Linnaeus, 1758
  • Hepialus thulensis Newman, 1865
  • Hepialus humulator Haworth, 1802
  • Hepialus hethlandica Staudinger, 1871
  • Hepialus rosea Petersen, 1902
  • Hepialus albida Spuler, 1910
  • Hepialus azuga Pfitzner, 1912
  • Hepialus grandis Pfitzner, 1912
  • Hepialus dannenbergi Stephan, 1923
  • Hepialus pusillus Stephan, 1923
  • Hepialus rufomaculata Lempke, 1938
  • Hepialus albida Bytinski-Salz, 1939
  • Hepialus roseoornata Bytinski-Salz, 1939
  • Hepialus uniformis Bytinski-Salz, 1939
  • Hepialus faeroensis Dahl, 1954
  • Hepialus fumosa Cockayne, 1955
  • Hepialus radiata Cockayne, 1955
  • Hepialus postnigrescens Lempke, 1961
  • Hepialus postrufescens Lempke, 1961
  • Hepialus griseomaculata van Wisselingh, 1965
  • Hepialus thuleus

The Ghost Moth (Hepialus humuli), also known as the Ghost Swift, is a moth of the family Hepialidae. It is common throughout Europe except for the far south-east. This species is often considered the only species in the genus Hepialus and a number of previously included species is now reclassified into other genera. However, other authorities retain a number of species in the Hepialus genus.

Ghost Moth on a Faroese stamp
Female
Male

The male has a wingspan of about 44 mm and both forewings and hindwings are pure white (although in H. h. thulensis, found in Shetland and the Faroe Islands, there are buff-coloured individuals). The female is larger (wingspan about 48 mm) and has yellowish-buff forewings with darker linear markings and brown hindwings. The adults fly from June to August and are attracted to light. The species overwinters as a larva.

The Ghost Moth gets its name from the display flight of the male, which hovers, sometimes slowly rising and falling, over open ground to attract females. In a suitable location several males may display together in a lek.

The larva is whitish and maggot-like and feeds underground on the roots of a variety of wild and cultivated plants (see list below). The species can be an economically significant pest in forest nurseries.

The term ghost moth is sometimes used as a general term for all Hepialids.

Subspecies

  • Hepialus humuli humuli
  • Hepialus humuli thulensis Newman, 1865 (Great Britain, Faroe Islands)

Recorded food plants

Additional species which may be included in Hepialus

Chinese authors retain a number of species in Hepialus. Most of these are placed in the genus Thitarodes by others. Species retained in Hepialus include:

  • Hepialus bibelteus F.R. Shen & Y.S. Zhou, 1997
  • Hepialus biruensis S.Q. Fu, 2002
  • Hepialus deqinensis X.C. Liang, 1988
  • Hepialus haimaensis X.C. Liang, 1988
  • Hepialus latitegumenus F.R. Shen & Y.S. Zhou, 1997
  • Hepialus pui G.R. Zhang, D.X. Gu & X. Liu, 2007
  • Hepialus xiaojinensis Y.Q. Tu, K.S. Ma & D.L. Zhang, 2009

Species previously included in the genus Hepialus

Species previously placed in the genus Hepialus include:

  • Hepialus behrensii (Stretch, 1872) now Phymatopus behrensii
  • Hepialus californicus Boisduval, 1868, now Phymatopus californicus
  • Hepialus gracilis Grote, 1864, now Korscheltellus gracilis
  • Hepialus hecta (Linnaeus, 1758), now Phymatopus hecta
  • Hepialus hectoides Boisduval, 1868, now Phymatopus hectoides
  • Hepialus lupulinus (Linnaeus, 1758), now Korscheltellus lupulina
  • Hepialus montanus (Stretch, 1872) now Phymatopus behrensii
  • Hepialus mustelinus Packard, 1864
  • Hepialus sequoiolus, now Phymatopus californicus sequoiolus
  • Hepialus virescens (Doubleday), now Aenetus virescens

References

  • Chinery, Michael: Collins Guide to the Insects of Britain and Western Europe, 1986 (Reprinted 1991)
  • Skinner, Bernard: Colour Identification Guide to Moths of the British Isles, 1984

External links

Media related to Hepialus humuli at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.