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Bicolored Angle (Macaria bicolarata) - Bugwoodwiki

Bicolored Angle (Macaria bicolarata)

From Bugwoodwiki
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Taxonomy
DomainEukarya
KingdomAnimalia
PhylumArthropoda
SubphylumHexapoda
ClassInsecta
SubclassPterygota
InfraclassNeoptera
SuperorderHolometabola
OrderLepidoptera
SuperfamilyGeometroidea
FamilyGeometridae
SubfamilyEnnominae
TribeMacariini
GenusMacaria
Scientific Name
Macaria bicolorata
Scientific Name Synonyms
Semiothisa bicolorata
Common Name
bicolored angle moth

Description

Green body with marked head and with obvious, pale subdorsal stripe; also purplish form. Green head with lobes marked with brown herringbone pattern; brown streak on lobes with white margins (extensions of subdorsal and spiracular stripes); brownish green thoracic legs. Dark bluish green middorsal stripe; yellowish white subdorsal stripe; mainly dark green between subdorsal stripe and spiracles; diffuse, white and greenish yellow spiracular stripe. Mostly green prolegs; yellowish green venter. Up to 22 mm.

Food

Pitch, red, and other hard pines.

Life Cycle

One to two (or possibly three) generations, with the number increasing southward. Pupa overwinters in soil or debris. Mature caterpillar present from August to October in southern New England, and from June to November in southern New Jersey.

Comments

The bicolored angle, as well as the blurry chocolate angle, Macaria transitaria, and the granite moth, M. granitata, eat the foliage of pitch and other hard pines. The first two can be distinguished because the bicolored angle has more distinct middorsal and subdorsal stripes and fewer wavy, dark longitudinal lines. The granite moth differs because it usually has a bluish green body. The bicolored angle apparently does not occur north of central New Hampshire; northern records from jack pine refer to an undescribed species of Macaria (D. Ferguson, pers. comm.). Until recently, the bicolored angle was known as Semiothisa bicolorata.