Zale Buchholzi
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Zale Buchholzi
''Zale buchholzi'', or Buchholz's zale, is a moth of the family Erebidae. The species was Species description, first described by James Halliday McDunnough in 1943. It is found in coastal pinelands of the Atlantic coastal plain from New Jersey to Florida, west along the Gulf Coast to Texas. There is one generation per year. The larvae feed on pitch pine and pond pine in New Jersey. Larvae have also been recorded on Pinus taeda, loblolly and longleaf pine in the south. External links *"Buchholz's Zale (''Zale buchholzi'')"
''Forest Pests''. Archived October 31, 2007. Omopterini Moths described in 1943 {{Erebidae-stub ...
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James Halliday McDunnough
James Halliday McDunnough (10 May 1877 – 23 February 1962) was a Canadian linguist, musician, and entomologist best known for his work with North American Lepidoptera, but who also made important contributions about North American Ephemeroptera. Early life McDunnough travelled with his mother and aunt to Berlin to be trained as a classical musician, studying under the great violinist Joseph Joachim. After a season as a violinist in a symphony orchestra in Glasgow, Scotland (presumably what is now the Royal Scottish National Orchestra), he taught English to a Russian family and then decided to change careers. In 1904 he went back to study in Berlin, receiving his doctorate in zoology in 1909. Returning to North America, he worked briefly at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Massachusetts and married Margaret Bertels, from Berlin. He soon learned of an important opportunity: a wealthy surgeon in Decatur, Illinois named William Barnes needed an entomologist to se ...
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