dcsimg

Conservation Status

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No concern.
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Cyclicity

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Adults fly in mid to late June.
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Distribution

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Nova Scotia to southeastern Alberta, south to VA, IL and TX (McGuffin 1988, Ferguson 1985).
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General Description

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A rather small, bright green geometrid with two white transverse lines. Synchlora aerata is similar, but the transverse lines are scalloped rather than smooth, and the abdomen has a white dorsal line, not round spots as in Nemoria. N. unitaria has the white hindwing PM line closer to the wing base (about halfway to the margin), while mimosaria has the line more than halfway from the wing base to the outer margin; the PM and AM are also often connected forming a U-shaped white line on the hindwing rather than two discrete lines which meet the anal margin. The other two Alberta Nemoria, rubrifrontaria and darwiniata, have more than one pink-ringed abdominal spot, mimosaria has at most one spot, never encircled in pink.
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Habitat

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Mixedwood and deciduous forests and woodlands.
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Life Cycle

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The unique larvae of Nemoria species bear lateral flanges, and those of mimosaria have toothed, forward pointing flanges resembling dead plant tissue such as willow catkins. The pupa overwinters (Wagner et al. 2001). Adults come to light.
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Trophic Strategy

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Larvae feed on a wide variety of deciduous shrubs and trees, and also on conifer trees (McGuffin 1988). Prentice (1963) reports the largest proportion of larval collections from white birch (Betula papyrifera) and balsam fir ((Abies balsamifera).
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Nemoria mimosaria

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Nemoria mimosaria, the white-fringed emerald or flanged looper, is a moth of the family Geometridae. The species was first described by Achille Guenée in 1858.[1] It is found from Nova Scotia to south-eastern Alberta, south to Virginia, Illinois, and Texas.

The wingspan is about 26 mm. Adults are on wing from mid to late June.

The larvae feed on various deciduous shrubs and trees and conifer trees, including Betula papyrifera, Abies balsamifera, Salix, Alnus, and Myrica asplenifolia.

Adult specimen

References

  1. ^ Cotinis (May 26, 2020). "Species Nemoria mimosaria - White-Fringed Emerald - Hodges#7048". BugGuide. Retrieved November 10, 2020.

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Nemoria mimosaria: Brief Summary

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Nemoria mimosaria, the white-fringed emerald or flanged looper, is a moth of the family Geometridae. The species was first described by Achille Guenée in 1858. It is found from Nova Scotia to south-eastern Alberta, south to Virginia, Illinois, and Texas.

The wingspan is about 26 mm. Adults are on wing from mid to late June.

The larvae feed on various deciduous shrubs and trees and conifer trees, including Betula papyrifera, Abies balsamifera, Salix, Alnus, and Myrica asplenifolia.

Adult specimen
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