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Conservation Status

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Common and of no concern.
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Cyclicity

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April to October, the early individuals being worn and these appear to have come up from the south.
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Distribution

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Munroe (1973) divided the genus Nomophila into 12 distinct species of which one, Nomophila nearctica, was limited to North America (Goater 1986). Common to abundant in eastern North America, sometimes migrating to the far north (Covell 1984), also widespread in western North America. Reported from Areas 7 (Lloydminster), 10 (Edmonton) and 20 (Nordegg) in Alberta by Bowman (1951) as Nomophila noctuella Dyar.
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General Description

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A large Pyralid with narrow, dark brown forewings and light brown hindwings. The orbicular, reniform and claviform areas are dark while the subterminal space is strigose. The wingspan ranges from 24-35 mm. The size, short labial palps, dark brown forewings with dark areas, and strigose subterminal area make this species easy to identify.
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Habitat

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Widespread.
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Life Cycle

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Adults are diurnal and come to light at night.
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Trophic Strategy

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The larvae feed on a wide variety of plants, including grasses, Polygonum and sweet clover (Covell 1984).
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Nomophila nearctica

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Nomophila nearctica, the lucerne moth, clover nomophila, false webworm, celery stalkworm or American celery webworm, is a moth of the family Crambidae. It is known from southern Canada and all of the United States, south to Mexico and the Neotropics.

The wingspan is 24–35 mm. When at rest, adults keep their wings overlapped and hugged against the abdomen, giving a long and narrow profile. The forewing is elongate, grayish-brown with two side-by-side dark oval spots near the middle of the wing, and another dark bilobed spot a little farther out. The hindwings are much broader. They are pale brownish-gray with a whitish fringe.[2]

Adults are on wing from April to November in North America.

The larvae feed on celery, grasses, lucerne, Medicago sativa, Polygonum, Melilotus and various other low-growing herbaceous plants. They have a black head. The abdomen is variably light brown to dark gray with a bumpy surface and sparse long hairs and a thin dark dorsal line bordered by narrow pale strip.

References

  1. ^ "mothphotographersgroup". Mothphotographersgroup.msstate.edu. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
  2. ^ "Bug Guide". Bug Guide. Retrieved 2011-10-18.
Wikispecies has information related to Nomophila nearctica.
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Nomophila nearctica: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Nomophila nearctica, the lucerne moth, clover nomophila, false webworm, celery stalkworm or American celery webworm, is a moth of the family Crambidae. It is known from southern Canada and all of the United States, south to Mexico and the Neotropics.

The wingspan is 24–35 mm. When at rest, adults keep their wings overlapped and hugged against the abdomen, giving a long and narrow profile. The forewing is elongate, grayish-brown with two side-by-side dark oval spots near the middle of the wing, and another dark bilobed spot a little farther out. The hindwings are much broader. They are pale brownish-gray with a whitish fringe.

Adults are on wing from April to November in North America.

The larvae feed on celery, grasses, lucerne, Medicago sativa, Polygonum, Melilotus and various other low-growing herbaceous plants. They have a black head. The abdomen is variably light brown to dark gray with a bumpy surface and sparse long hairs and a thin dark dorsal line bordered by narrow pale strip.

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