Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-75dct Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-31T13:10:19.124Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Biological and Descriptive Notes on Noctuid Larvae1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

W. C. McGuffin
Affiliation:
Forest Zoology Laboratory, Calgary, Alta.

Extract

These observations, dealing with noctuid larvae, were made while the writer was associated with the Canadian Forest Insect and Disease Survey. Twenty-four species have been examined: 9 in the Hadeninae, 10 in the Cucullinae, 3 in the Amphipyrinae, and 2 in the Catocalinae. The arrangement of the subfamilies follows that of McDunnough (1938). This material is being published because many of these species have not been included in Crumb (1956) and new data are presented on the species considered by him. The descriptions were made from living and preserved larvae. Notes on biologies, unless otherwise indicated, refer to those made by the writer in Manitoba and Alberta during the years 1944-1954. The hosts are those on which larvae have been reared to adults by the Forest Insect and Disease Survey, except in a few cases where the host is cited from the literature. “Free-living larvae”, are those that feed openly. When the number of instars is not known the larvae are described as antepenultimate, penultimate, and ultimate. In measurements, H.W. refers to head width, B.L., to total larval length, and B.W., to greatest larval width.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 1958

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bowman, K. 1951. An annotated list of the Lepidoptera of Alberta. Can. J. Zool. 29: 121165.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Comstock, John A. 1937. Miscellaneous notes on western Lepidoptera. Bull. S. Calif. Aca. Sc. 36: 1923.Google Scholar
Crumb, S. E. 1927. The army worms. Bull. Brook. Ent. Soc. 22(1): 4155.Google Scholar
Crumb, S. E. 1932. The more important climbing cutworms. Bull. Brook. Ent. Soc. 27(2): 73100.Google Scholar
Crumb, S. E. 1956. The larvae of the Phalaenidae. Tech. Bull. No. 1135, U.S.D.A. pp. 1356.Google Scholar
Ferguson, D. C. 1955. The Lepidoptera of Nova Scotia. Part I (Macrolepidoptera) Bull. No. 2, Nova Scotia. Museum of Science, Halifax, Nova Scotia, pp. 1375.Google Scholar
Forbes, W. T. M. 1954. *Lepidoptera of New York and neighbouring states. Noctuidae. Part III. Mem. 329. Cornell U. Agr. Exp. Sta. pp. 1433.Google Scholar
Jones, J. R. J. L. 1951. An annotated checklist of the Macrolepidoptera of British Columbia. Occas. Pap. No. 1, Ent. Soc. B.C. pp. i–viii, 1148.Google Scholar
McDunnough, J. H. 1933. Notes on the early stages of certain noctuid and geometrid species. Can. Ent. 65: 121126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Richards, A. G. Jr., 1939. A revision of the North American species of the Phoberia-Melipotis-Drasteria group of moths (Lepidoptera, Phalaenidae). Ent. Am. 19: 1100.Google Scholar
Sanders, G. E., and Dustan, A. G.. 1919. The fruit worms of the apple of Nova Scotia. Bull. No. 17, Entomological Branch, Dept. of Agriculture, Canada, pp. 128.Google Scholar