Agrotis ipsilon

Dark sword-grass
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Noctuidae
Genus: Agrotis
Species: A. ipsilon
Binomial name
Agrotis ipsilon
(Hufnagel, 1766)
Synonyms
  • Phalaena ipsilon Hufnagel, 1766
  • Noctua suffusa Denis & Schiffermüller, 1775
  • Noctua ypsilon Rottemburg, 1777
  • Phalaena idonea Cramer, 1780
  • Bombyx spinula Esper, 1786
  • Phalaena spinifera Villers, 1789
  • Phalaena spinula Donovan, 1801
  • Agrotis telifera Harris, 1841
  • Agrotis bipars Walker, 1857
  • Agrotis frivola Wallengren, 1860
  • Agrotis aneituna Walker, 1865
  • Agrotis pepoli Bertolini, 1874
  • Agrotis aureolum Schaus, 1898

Agrotis ipsilon,[1] the Dark sword-grass, or black cutworm, is a small noctuid moth found worldwide. The larvae are a serious agricultural pest and feed on nearly all varieties of vegetables and many important grains.[2][3]

Description

The dark sword-grass has pale brown forewings with dark brown and black markings and translucent hindwings, greyish white with brown venation. The hindwings have a thin dark line along the margins of the hindwings.[4]

Adult

The moth gets its specific name from black markings on the forewings shaped like a Y and resembling the Greek letter 'ipsilon'.

The moth has a wingspan of from four to five and a half centimetres.[1]

Range

The moth is found in many regions of the world. It is absent from some tropical regions and colder areas and is more widespread in the northern than the southern hemisphere. It reinvades temperate areas each year having overwintered in warmer or subtropical regions.[2]

Life cycle

Caterpillar
Pupa

The caterpillar of the dark sword-grass is smooth and ranges from purplish to brown in colour and is patterned with grey lines and spots.[1]

Host plants

The adults feed on nectar from flowers. Weeds are often preferred to crops by the larvae. Some favoured species include bluegrass, curled dock, lambsquarters, yellow rocket and redroot pigweed. Among crop plants, the larvae favour most vegetable plants, alfalfa, clover, cotton, rice, sorghum, strawberry, sugarbeet, tobacco and sometimes grains and grasses.[2]

Damage

Each larva can consume over 400 square centimetres of foliage during its development. They feed above ground until about the fourth instar. After that they do considerable damage to crops by severing young plants at ground level. In the midwestern USA the black cutworm is considered to be a serious pest of corn which is very susceptible at the one-leaf stage but by the 4 or 5-leaf stage it is relatively unaffected. Damage to the underground parts of plants can also be harmful.[2] Other crops where serious damage occurs include cotton, maize, tobacco, sunflower, tomatoes, sugar beet and potato.[5]

See also

References

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