Observation about 14 mi (23 km) from locality of designated paratypes at Duncan and Quamichan Lk, 41 mi (38 km) from paratypes locality in Victoria.
Original description page 392 here.
2023-09-16_06-03-24
2023-09-16_06-02-35
Attracted to lights in old field - garden - orchard habitat along coast of Northumberland Strait.
This is a screenshot of a video so quality is poor. If iD is correct, this may be a new species for New Brunswick. The alternating bands of cloth on the sheet are 11mm wide.
Found in the morning inside my light trap.
This is the iNat CV suggestion for this moth. According to Annotated Checklist of the Moths and Butterflies (Lepidoptera) of Canada and Alaska, Pohl 2018, there are no Xylesthia species in SK, so more research may be needed here.
Found in the morning inside my light trap.
@gpohl: another moth that isn't listed for SK in your checklist.
Found this moth climbing in our Juniper bush while we were weeding the front yard. Over the course of about 1.5-2 hrs. it expanded it's wings to full size. I suspect that the caterpillar grew up on our neighbour's Virginia Creeper and over wintered as a pupa somewhere near the bush in our front yard.
Found in the morning inside my light trap.
iNat CV suggests this moth. It is not listed in Annotated Checklist of the Moths and Butterflies (Lepidoptera) of Canada and Alaska, Pohl 2018.
Moth also matches very well with https://mothphotographersgroup.msstate.edu/species.php?hodges=9653, https://bugguide.net/node/view/30821 and
https://search.museums.ualberta.ca/g/2-5100, especially the distinctive dark brown orbicular, reniform an ST bands.
Found in the morning inside my light trap.
iNat CV suggests this moth. It is not listed in Annotated Checklist of the Moths and Butterflies (Lepidoptera) of Canada and Alaska, Pohl 2018 (for that matter no Callopistria are listed either) for SK.
Moth also matches very well with https://mothphotographersgroup.msstate.edu/species.php?hodges=9630 and https://bugguide.net/node/view/3965
@gpohl: I think this this one could qualify to be added as a stray for SK in your checklist
Resembles:
https://bugguide.net/node/view/1972624
See also:
https://inaturalist.ca/observations/37552867
@gpohl maybe new genus for Yukon?
At light. See also https://inaturalist.ca/observations/156836349
not sure about the genus Polygonum; very close to water.
This plume was tiny, the smallest I've come across. Perhaps 12-15mm ws.
Coll.#BW265
Caught with a net
Donated to Cornell University Insect Collection - CUIC000056352
Dissected by Loren Jones
Coll.#BW266
Caught with a net
In the hills and coulee across the road from Frenchman Valley Campsite.
This was a difficult choice These are my reasons for choosing Caloptilia burgessiella over the four other Caloptilia species with only two yellow spots on each forewing.
Caloptilia bimaculatella: first spot too large
Caloptilia canadensisella: has small yellow tornal spot and no dark dots in first costal spot.
Caloptilia cornusella: too purple. costal spots too far apart, no semicircular curve and no dark dots in first costal spot.
Caloptilia umbratella: too purple. some yellowish-brown spots are often evident after the 2nd costal spot. This was the closest match to Caloptilia burgessiella
Caloptilia burgessiella: Fore and middle tibia dull black. Tarsi and hind legs whiteish. Face white to antenna bases. Top of head brown. Palpi white with short black tip. Thorax brown. Antennae vertex brown. Forewing umber brown with purple iridescence. First spot on wing semi-circular enclosing 2 tiny dark dots along costal edge. Second mark quadrate, 2 times as long as wide. No subterminal bars on costa. Fringe fuscous with faint lines in apex. Wingspan: 11 - 14 mm (Forbes, 1923)
@gpohl @jasondombroskie
2mm, extracted from leaf litter alongside a montane stream.
Adult Markings: The face, palpi, tuft, and antennae are white, except for the extreme tips of the antennae which are dark brown. The thorax and basal two-thirds of the forewing are shining white, while the apical third is suffused with golden. A rather broad golden basal streak begins at the base on the costa and extends parallel to the fold to the middle of the wing or beyond. In the apical golden portion of the wing, there are three costal white streaks that are nearly perpendicular to the margin. All three have dark margins on the anterior side, but the margin is best developed in the anteriormost streak. A dorsal white streak with a dark anterior margin occurs opposite the first costal streak. A second indistinct dorsal streak that often lacks the black margin occurs opposite the second costal streak. There is a conspicuous black apical spot, and the cilia are whitish, but tipped with fuscous around the apex. The marginal line in the cilia is dark brown. The hindwing and cilia are pale grayish ocherous, and the legs are whitish ocherous.
Phyllonorycter quercialbella closely resembles P. argentifimbriella but it has only three costal streaks, compared with four in P. argentifimbriella.
Wingspan: 7 mm - Braun, 1908)
@gpohl @jasondombroskie
O. inquietana? Found on Carex in the alpine elevation 1745 m (5725 ft).
On Asclepias speciosa on creek bank - the plant association is probably purely incidental.
Attracted to white/UV lights in old field habitat at edge of mixed forest along coast of Northumberland Strait.
Not listed for New Brunswick in Pohl et als 2018.
Please not identification page at Bugguide It was directly above the caterpillar host plant Cypress Spurge (Euphorbia cyparissias)
https://bugguide.net/node/view/1164121
Small moth. I think I have the right family
St Williams, ON
On American Sweetgum - Liquidambar styraciflua
This would be a new moth for Ontario (Canada?). This mine was graciously shown to DB and I by Eric Giles who had discovered it earlier in the week. Thanks... a wonderful find!