Eriopygodes imbecilla
Eriopygodes imbecilla, the Silurian, is a moth of the family Noctuidae first described by Johan Christian Fabricius in 1794.
Distribution
This species is present in most of Europe.
Habitat
This species commonly lives on gullies and hollows in high moorland areas with host plants.
Description
The wingspan is 24–27 mm. The colour of these small moths may vary from tawny to reddish brown. Forewings usually show a pale kidney mark and two wavy cross lines, but often these markings are quite indistinct. Usually females are darker or chocolate brown and smaller than the males. The rear wings are often pale greyish. Seitz describes it E. imbecilla F. Forewing rufous ochreous, sometimes grey-tinged, in the male, rufous brown in the female; veins finely brownish; inner and outer lines brown; submarginal obscure, the marginal area beyond it generally darker; reniform stigma externally whitish, preceded by a brownish median shade; hindwing greyish fuscous : fringe rufous. — Larva dirty grey, with a few yellowish grey hairs; dorsal line fine, whitish, traversing a series of black or brown oval blotches : lateral stripes dark grey, with a pale line at middle; spiracles black, each with a shining black point above it; head blackish, with 3 white lines.
Biology
Adults fly from June to July. Larvae are polyphagous on low plants, mainly feeding on bilberry, heath bedstraw, Knautia and Lamium.