Contribution Toward a Monograph of the Insects of the Lepidopterous Family Noctuidæ of Temperate North America

Contribution Toward a Monograph of the Insects of the Lepidopterous Family Noctuidæ of Temperate North America

Author: John Bernhard Smith

Publisher:

Published: 1890

Total Pages: 262

ISBN-13:

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The genus Agrotis embraces moths of medium size as a rule, and many of them of the typical "Owlet" type. The caterpillars of many of the species are very injurious to cultivated plants, and come under the head of "Cut-Worms," a name given them from their habit of cutting off, just at the surface of the ground, the plants upon which they feed. The genus Agrotis, our American species alone considered has but to characters common to all forms: the eyes are naked and the middle and posterior tibiae are always spinose!


Contribution Toward a Monograph of the Insects of the Lepidopterous Family Noctuidæ of Temperate North America

Contribution Toward a Monograph of the Insects of the Lepidopterous Family Noctuidæ of Temperate North America

Author: John Bernhard Smith

Publisher:

Published: 1890

Total Pages: 268

ISBN-13:

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The genus Agrotis embraces moths of medium size as a rule, and many of them of the typical "Owlet" type. The caterpillars of many of the species are very injurious to cultivated plants, and come under the head of "Cut-Worms," a name given them from their habit of cutting off, just at the surface of the ground, the plants upon which they feed. The genus Agrotis, our American species alone considered has but to characters common to all forms: the eyes are naked and the middle and posterior tibiae are always spinose!


Lepidopterorum Catalogus

Lepidopterorum Catalogus

Author: Poole

Publisher: CRC Press

Published: 1989-01-01

Total Pages: 326

ISBN-13: 9780916846459

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The noctuidae of the world, a family with numerous important agricultural pests, comprises about a third of the entire order Lepidoptera. This new three-volume set is the first complete catalog for the world. About 38,000 named species (including known synonyms) are listed alphabetically under each genus name in over 1,000 pages of text. Genera area also listed alphabetically, but subfamily affiliations are noted for each of the valid names to enable users to segregate genera by subfamily. Valid names are noted in boldface. Synonyms are listed for each genus and species; the species synonyms are also listed alphabetically among the valid names, thus enabling users to make two kinds of searches in the text as well as in the index. The catalog provides citation data on all described names (other than infraspecific names), with references cited in the compete bibliography at the end. Reference is also made to more important papers on the biology, larvae, host plants, and illustrations for each species, again with full titles noted in the bibliography. The main host plants for each species, where known, are listed under each. Details of holotypes, where known, are also noted. The bibliography has entries for approximately 4,400 papers.