Common NameWavy Chestnut YSeasonalityAdults have been collected in Alberta from mid-June through mid-August.IdentificationA medium-size moth (3.5-4.0 cm wingspan). The forewings are rich chestnut brown crossed by numerous wavy bands and lines of darker brown and black in a very unusual and distinctive pattern. There are scattered silver gold metallic scales in the lower parts of the antemedian and postmedian lines, as well as along the basal line and outlining parts of the reniform and orbicular spots. There is also a prominent two-part metallic gold stigma in the center of the forewings; the basal segment an open u-shape and the separate distal part an infilled oval or spot. The antennae are simple and both the sexes are similar. There are no closely similar species.
Scientific NameAutographa mappaCommon Name
Wavy Chestnut Y
Habitat
Open woodland, clearings and edges, bogs and fens.
Seasonality
Adults have been collected in Alberta from mid-June through mid-August.
Identification
A medium-size moth (3.5-4.0 cm wingspan). The forewings are rich chestnut brown crossed by numerous wavy bands and lines of darker brown and black in a very unusual and distinctive pattern. There are scattered…
A medium-size moth (3.5-4.0 cm wingspan). The forewings are rich chestnut brown crossed by numerous wavy bands and lines of darker brown and black in a very unusual and distinctive pattern. There are scattered silver gold metallic scales in the lower parts of the antemedian and postmedian lines, as well as along the basal line and outlining parts of the reniform and orbicular spots. There is also a prominent two-part metallic gold stigma in the center of the forewings; the basal segment an open u-shape and the separate distal part an infilled oval or spot. The antennae are simple and both the sexes are similar. There are no closely similar species.
Life History
Adults are nocturnal and come to light. There is a single brood each year.
Conservation
An uncommon but widespread species; no concerns.
Diet Info
No Alberta data. Elsewhere, recorded larval hosts include nettles (Urtica) and blueberry (Vaccinium sp.).
Range
From Newfoundland west across the wooded portions of Canada to Vancouver Island, south in the east to Maine, New Hampshire and Wisconsin, and in the western mountains south to Colorado and Oregon. In Alberta, it has…
From Newfoundland west across the wooded portions of Canada to Vancouver Island, south in the east to Maine, New Hampshire and Wisconsin, and in the western mountains south to Colorado and Oregon. In Alberta, it has been collected throughout the wooded areas, from the wooded portions of the valleys of the Grasslands region and the Foothills north through the Boreal Forest to Lake Athabasca and Zama.
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Citation
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Page Citation for Autographa mappa
Page Citation
"Species Details - Autographa mappa, University of Alberta E.H. Strickland Entomological Museum." University of Alberta Museums Search Site, https://search.museums.ualberta.ca/g/2-1126. Accessed 08 Nov. 2024.
References
AuthorLafontaine, J. Donald and Robert W. Poole
TitleNoctuoidea : Noctuidae (part) : Plusiinae
Publication Date1995
Pages182
AuthorEichlin, Thomas D. and Hugh B. Cunningham
TitleThe Plusiinae (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) of America north of Mexico, emphasizing genitalic and larval morphology.
Publication Date1978
Pages122
Specimen Information
There are 76 specimens of this Species.
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76 results plotted on map in 46 markers. Note: Only records with latitude and longitude coordinates are plotted on map.