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Owen's Larch Looper (Macaria oweni) - Bugwoodwiki

Owen's Larch Looper (Macaria oweni)

From Bugwoodwiki
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Taxonomy
DomainEukarya
KingdomAnimalia
PhylumArthropoda
SubphylumHexapoda
ClassInsecta
SubclassPterygota
InfraclassNeoptera
SuperorderHolometabola
OrderLepidoptera
SuperfamilyGeometroidea
FamilyGeometridae
SubfamilyEnnominae
TribeMacariini
GenusMacaria
Scientific Name
Macaria oweni
Common Name
Owen's angle moth

Maier, C.T.; Lemmon, C.R.; Fengler, J.M.; Schweitzer, D.F.; Reardon, R.C.; Caterpillars on the Foliage of Conifers in the Northeastern United States. Morgantown, WV. USDA Forest Service. Forest Health Technology Enterprise Team Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station. FHTET-2004-01. March 2004. 151 p.

Description

Green body with pale subdorsal stripe darkened below and with purplish thoracic legs and prolegs. Purplish to reddish brown head with lobes marked in dark brown herringbone pattern; dark brown streak on lobes with pinkish white margins (extensions of subdorsal and spiracular stripes). Indistinct, dark green middorsal stripe; yellowish white subdorsal stripe with two (sometimes fused) very dark green longitudinal lines immediately below. White and yellow spiracular stripe; purplish area on anal plate. Up to 20 mm.

Food

Eastern larch.

Life Cycle

Probably one generation. Pupa overwinters in soil, debris, or sphagnum. Mature caterpillar present from July to September.

Comments

The purplish color of the head and prolegs of Owen's larch looper should distinguish it from the green larch looper (green form), Macaria sexmaculata, and another looper, M. submarmorata, on eastern larch in New England and southeastern Canada. The green larch looper (green form) has a yellowish green head and green prolegs, whereas M. submarmorata apparently has a darkly marked head and green prolegs (McGuffin 1972). Owen's larch looper formerly was known as Semiothisa oweni.