Eupithecia venosata


Eupithecia venosata, the netted pug, is a moth of the family Geometridae, first described by the Danish zoologist Johan Christian Fabricius in 1787. It is found across the Palearctic realm from Portugal and Morocco in the west to the Lake Baikal in Siberia and Afghanistan and Pakistan in the east.

Description

The length of the forewings is 10–14 mm. The ground colour of the forewings and hindwings is brown to creamy white The forewings are large and round. Several light, black-edged, lines and the partly black coloured veins form a characteristic lattice. The hindwings have a similar, but greatly weakened pattern. Very strongly resembles Eupithecia schiefereri and is distinguishable from this clearly only by means of a genital examination.

Forma

fumosae Gregson is a dark smoke-coloured race from the Shetland Islands. – In ab. bandanae Gregson the white bands remain conspicuous on the smoky ground. Among fumosae. – ochracae Gregson also has the ground-colour darkened, but ochreous or clay-yellowish, not smoky; markings normal or sometimes weakened as in fumosae Orkney Islands.
See subspecies.
The larva is pale pinkish grey, darker on the back, with scattered, upstanding brushes. The pupa is shiny brown-yellow with a dark brown cremaster, which has at the base five beaded elevations and a stretched tip with several bristles.

Biology

The moth flies from April to June depending on the location.
The larvae feed spun up on campion, preferably bladder campion, red campion and sea campion.The pupa hibernates sometimes for two winters

Subspecies

Eupithecia venosata venosataEupithecia venosata fumosae Gregson, 1887Eupithecia venosata hebridensis Curtis, 1944Eupithecia venosata ochracae Gregson, 1886Eupithecia venosata plumbea Huggins, 1962