Aseptis
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Aseptis
''Aseptis'' is a genus of moths of the family Noctuidae. The genus was erected by James Halliday McDunnough in 1937. Species *''Aseptis fumeola'' species group ** ''Aseptis ethnica'' (J. B. Smith, 1899) ** ''Aseptis fanatica'' Mustelin, 2006 ** ''Aseptis ferruginea'' Mustelin, 2000 ** ''Aseptis fumeola'' (Hampson, 1908) ** ''Aseptis murina'' Mustelin, 2000 *''Aseptis lichena'' species group ** ''Aseptis lichena'' (Barnes & McDunnough, 1912) ** ''Aseptis pseudolichena'' Mustelin & Leuschner, 2000 *unplaced to species group ** ''Aseptis binotata'' (Walker, 1865) ** ''Aseptis catalina'' (J. B. Smith, 1899) ** ''Aseptis characta'' (Grote, 1880) ** ''Aseptis fumosa'' (Grote, 1879) ** ''Aseptis perfumosa'' (Hampson, 1918) ** ''Aseptis serrula'' (Barnes & McDunnough, 1918) ** ''Aseptis susquesa'' (J. B. Smith, 1908) ** ''Aseptis torreyana'' Mustelin, 2006 Former species * ''Aseptis adnixa'' (Grote, 1880) * ''Aseptis bultata'' (J. B. Smith, 1906) * ''Aseptis cara'' (Barnes & McDunnough, ...
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Aseptis
''Aseptis'' is a genus of moths of the family Noctuidae. The genus was erected by James Halliday McDunnough in 1937. Species *''Aseptis fumeola'' species group ** ''Aseptis ethnica'' (J. B. Smith, 1899) ** ''Aseptis fanatica'' Mustelin, 2006 ** ''Aseptis ferruginea'' Mustelin, 2000 ** ''Aseptis fumeola'' (Hampson, 1908) ** ''Aseptis murina'' Mustelin, 2000 *''Aseptis lichena'' species group ** ''Aseptis lichena'' (Barnes & McDunnough, 1912) ** ''Aseptis pseudolichena'' Mustelin & Leuschner, 2000 *unplaced to species group ** ''Aseptis binotata'' (Walker, 1865) ** ''Aseptis catalina'' (J. B. Smith, 1899) ** ''Aseptis characta'' (Grote, 1880) ** ''Aseptis fumosa'' (Grote, 1879) ** ''Aseptis perfumosa'' (Hampson, 1918) ** ''Aseptis serrula'' (Barnes & McDunnough, 1918) ** ''Aseptis susquesa'' (J. B. Smith, 1908) ** ''Aseptis torreyana'' Mustelin, 2006 Former species * ''Aseptis adnixa'' (Grote, 1880) * ''Aseptis bultata'' (J. B. Smith, 1906) * ''Aseptis cara'' (Barnes & McDunnough, ...
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Aseptis Bultata
''Aseptis binotata'', the rusty shoulder knot moth, is a moth of the family Noctuidae. The species was first described by Francis Walker in 1865. It is found widespread in western North America, west of south-central Alberta, Wyoming, and Nebraska. Along the Pacific Coast it occurs from northern Mexico to south-central British Columbia. It can be found from sea level to altitudes over 2000 meters in a variety of habitats from dense forest to shrub desert. The wingspan is 29.5–35 mm. It is the most variable species in the genus ''Aseptis'' with respect to forewing color and pattern strength. It may be brownish, warm dark brown, pale to medium gray brown, yellowish light brown, or reddish brown depending on locality. The most noticeable marking in dark specimens is the large pale yellowish postreniform patch, which is bisected by the dark postmedial line. The antemedial line is strongly convex laterally and is filled with light tan. Black forewing markings include a s ...
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Aseptis Paviae
''Aseptis binotata'', the rusty shoulder knot moth, is a moth of the family Noctuidae. The species was first described by Francis Walker in 1865. It is found widespread in western North America, west of south-central Alberta, Wyoming, and Nebraska. Along the Pacific Coast it occurs from northern Mexico to south-central British Columbia. It can be found from sea level to altitudes over 2000 meters in a variety of habitats from dense forest to shrub desert. The wingspan is 29.5–35 mm. It is the most variable species in the genus ''Aseptis'' with respect to forewing color and pattern strength. It may be brownish, warm dark brown, pale to medium gray brown, yellowish light brown, or reddish brown depending on locality. The most noticeable marking in dark specimens is the large pale yellowish postreniform patch, which is bisected by the dark postmedial line. The antemedial line is strongly convex laterally and is filled with light tan. Black forewing markings include a s ...
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Aseptis Genetrix
''Aseptis binotata'', the rusty shoulder knot moth, is a moth of the family Noctuidae. The species was first described by Francis Walker in 1865. It is found widespread in western North America, west of south-central Alberta, Wyoming, and Nebraska. Along the Pacific Coast it occurs from northern Mexico to south-central British Columbia. It can be found from sea level to altitudes over 2000 meters in a variety of habitats from dense forest to shrub desert. The wingspan is 29.5–35 mm. It is the most variable species in the genus ''Aseptis'' with respect to forewing color and pattern strength. It may be brownish, warm dark brown, pale to medium gray brown, yellowish light brown, or reddish brown depending on locality. The most noticeable marking in dark specimens is the large pale yellowish postreniform patch, which is bisected by the dark postmedial line. The antemedial line is strongly convex laterally and is filled with light tan. Black forewing markings include a s ...
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Aseptis Dilara
''Aseptis binotata'', the rusty shoulder knot moth, is a moth of the family Noctuidae. The species was first described by Francis Walker in 1865. It is found widespread in western North America, west of south-central Alberta, Wyoming, and Nebraska. Along the Pacific Coast it occurs from northern Mexico to south-central British Columbia. It can be found from sea level to altitudes over 2000 meters in a variety of habitats from dense forest to shrub desert. The wingspan is 29.5–35 mm. It is the most variable species in the genus ''Aseptis'' with respect to forewing color and pattern strength. It may be brownish, warm dark brown, pale to medium gray brown, yellowish light brown, or reddish brown depending on locality. The most noticeable marking in dark specimens is the large pale yellowish postreniform patch, which is bisected by the dark postmedial line. The antemedial line is strongly convex laterally and is filled with light tan. Black forewing markings include a s ...
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Aseptis Cara
''Aseptis binotata'', the rusty shoulder knot moth, is a moth of the family Noctuidae. The species was first described by Francis Walker in 1865. It is found widespread in western North America, west of south-central Alberta, Wyoming, and Nebraska. Along the Pacific Coast it occurs from northern Mexico to south-central British Columbia. It can be found from sea level to altitudes over 2000 meters in a variety of habitats from dense forest to shrub desert. The wingspan is 29.5–35 mm. It is the most variable species in the genus ''Aseptis'' with respect to forewing color and pattern strength. It may be brownish, warm dark brown, pale to medium gray brown, yellowish light brown, or reddish brown depending on locality. The most noticeable marking in dark specimens is the large pale yellowish postreniform patch, which is bisected by the dark postmedial line. The antemedial line is strongly convex laterally and is filled with light tan. Black forewing markings include a s ...
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Aseptis Binotata
''Aseptis binotata'', the rusty shoulder knot moth, is a moth of the family Noctuidae. The species was first described by Francis Walker in 1865. It is found widespread in western North America, west of south-central Alberta, Wyoming, and Nebraska. Along the Pacific Coast it occurs from northern Mexico to south-central British Columbia. It can be found from sea level to altitudes over 2000 meters in a variety of habitats from dense forest to shrub desert. The wingspan is 29.5–35 mm. It is the most variable species in the genus ''Aseptis'' with respect to forewing color and pattern strength. It may be brownish, warm dark brown, pale to medium gray brown, yellowish light brown, or reddish brown depending on locality. The most noticeable marking in dark specimens is the large pale yellowish postreniform patch, which is bisected by the dark postmedial line. The antemedial line is strongly convex laterally and is filled with light tan. Black forewing markings include a series o ...
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Aseptis Ethnica
''Aseptis ethnica'' is a moth of the family Noctuidae first described by John Bernhardt Smith John Bernhardt Smith (November 21, 1858 – March 12, 1912) was an American professor of entomology who specialized in systematics and economic entomology while also serving as the State Entomologist of New Jersey. Smith is remembered in insect ta ... in 1899. It is found in North America in Arizona, California, western Oregon, and Baja California Norte in Mexico. The habitat consists of open pine and oak forest and mountain chaparral, mostly at elevations of above 1500 meters in southern California but at lower elevations farther north. The wingspan is 38–43.5 mm. Adults from southern California have dull grayish-tan forewings with a grainy appearance. In central and northern California and Oregon, it is dull deeper brown, sometimes with some reddish tones surrounding the dark-filled reniform and orbicular spots. Most adults are much less contrasting than '' Aseptis fume ...
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Aseptis Lichena
''Aseptis lichena'' is a moth of the family Noctuidae first described by William Barnes and James Halliday McDunnough in 1912. It is found in the United States in south-central California (Tehachapi Mountains) and north-central California (near Blairsden, Lake Tahoe, and Yosemite Park). It is also reported from Mount Shasta, Mount Lassen, and other locations in northern California. The wingspan The wingspan (or just span) of a bird or an airplane is the distance from one wingtip to the other wingtip. For example, the Boeing 777–200 has a wingspan of , and a wandering albatross (''Diomedea exulans'') caught in 1965 had a wingspan o ... is 33–39 mm. The forewings are powdery dark olive green, produced by a mixture of black, green, and yellow scales. ''Aseptis lichena'' is darker green than the similar '' Aseptis pseudolichena''. Adults are on wing in mid-summer. References Moths described in 1912 Aseptis {{Noctuinae-stub ...
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Aseptis Fumosa
''Aseptis fumosa'' is a moth of the family Noctuidae first described by Augustus Radcliffe Grote in 1879. It is widespread in western North America and is known from western Canada, Washington, Nebraska, Colorado, Utah, Arizona, Nevada and California. It occurs in a variety of diverse habitats including coast chaparral, dry conifer forest, and shrub steppe. The wingspan is about 31.5–38 mm. The forewings are uniform smoky dark blackish brown with brown filling of the antemedial and postmedial lines that is most evident as dots on the costa. The weakly figure-eight shaped reniform spot, orbicular spot, and short claviform spot are black filled with ground color or slightly darker scales. The male hindwing is pearly gray distal to the spot that accentuates the vein asymmetry. The hindwing of the female is smoky dark with dark but less conspicuous veins. Adults are on wing from April or May to July. The larvae feed on ''Purshia'' (including ''Purshia tridentata''), ...
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Aseptis Monica
''Aseptis susquesa'' is a moth of the family Noctuidae first described by John Bernhardt Smith in 1908. It is found in Arizona, California and Baja California in Mexico, at least as far south as Ensenada. The habitat consists of rocky areas in the mountain-desert transition zone and high desert. The wingspan is about 31.4 mm. The forewings are streaky medium gray to dark brown gray with streaks of warm light orange tan to yellow tan at the postreniform patch, in the fold, and in the large pointed claviform spot. A thin tan line parallels the margin near the anal angle. The reniform and orbicular spots are outlined in black with paler peripheral and darker central scaling. The distal forewing is streaky due to black veins and pale-gray scales and the transverse lines are obsolete. The hindwings are light whitish gray with brown-gray marginal shading and dark veins, darker in females. Adults are on wing from late March to early June. The larvae feed on '' Artemisia cal ...
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Aseptis Fanatica
''Aseptis fanatica'' is a moth of the family Noctuidae first described by Tomas Mustelin in 2006. It is found in western North America in Washington, Oregon, California, and Baja California Norte in Mexico. It is found in habitats like brush land and open forest in southern California, mostly at 1000–2000 meters, but occurs at lower elevations farther north. The wingspan is 35–42 mm. In southern California, Adults have dark chocolate-brown forewings, whereas in northern California, Oregon, and Washington it is darker brown to nearly black. Some individuals in central California are smooth bright red brown. The maculation is dark, either diffuse or weakly contrasting. The most prominent markings are the black-filled reniform spot, a black shade proximal to the incomplete pale subterminal line, and pale-yellowish spots on the costa at the antemedial and postmedial lines. Well-marked specimens have a serrate black postmedial line, some black on the veins, and scatter ...
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