Ichneutica mutans
Ichneutica mutans, commonly known as the New Zealand cutworm or the grey-brown cutworm, is a moth of the family Noctuidae. This moth endemic to New Zealand and can be found throughout New Zealand, including from Three Kings Islands down to Stewart Island. However this species is not found in the Chatham Islands. The adult moths are on the wing all year round. I. mutans is variable in appearance and can be confused with similar species in the same genus. As a result of the variety of host species consumed by the larvae of the species, including such crops as turnips, wheat and apples, this species is regarded as an agricultural pest. However between the early 1960s and late 1980s the population of I. mutans was shown to have decreased significantly, by over 80%, at two study sites.
Taxonomy
This species was first described by Francis Walker in 1857. The lectotype specimen is held at the Natural History Museum, London. The type locality of I. mutans is presumed by Robert Hoare to be Auckland. As a result of the variability in the appearance of I. mutans Walker, thinking he was describing new species, went on to describe it numerous times under the names Hadena lignifusca, Xylina spurcata, Xylina vexata. Other entomologists were also misled by the variable appearance of this moth into thinking they too were describing a new species. They used the names Mamestra acceptrix, Mamestra passa and Hadena debilis. Some of these subsequent names, H. lignifusca, M. acceptrix and H. debilis, were synonymised by Edward Meyrick in 1887 when he transferred the species to the genus Mamestra. X. spurcata and X. vexata were synonymised by Meyrick in 1912 and M. passa was synonymised by John G. Franclemont in 1981. In 1988 J. S. Dugdale in his catalogue placed this species within the Graphania genus. In 2019 Robert Hoare undertook a major review of New Zealand Noctuidae. During this review the genus Ichneutica was greatly expanded and the genus Graphania was subsumed into that genus as a synonym. As a result of this review, this species is now known as ''Ichneutica mutans.''Description
George Hudson described the larva of this species as follows:Walker in his original description of I. mutans described the adult of the species as follows:
I. mutans is variable and as a result the species can be confused with I. averilla and I. petrograpta as well as I. bromias despite the fact that the later species is not found in the same area as I. mutans.