Return to Texas Entomology - Compiled by Mike Quinn
"It can be down right abundant in the Huachuca Mountains of SE Arizona in early August."
Range:
Southwestern U.S., south through Central America.
Holland (1903) reports this insect as "fairly common in southern California, New Mexico, and Arizona."
Texas: Davis Mountains, Jeff Davis Co., Guadalupe Mountains, Culberson Co.
Plus one sight record from Concan, Uvalde County.
Flight Period: This diurnal moth flies from late July to October.
Similar Species: There are four species of Alypiodes, of those, only A. geronimo also occurs in the U.S. (Arizona).
Alypiodes geronimo (Barnes, 1900)
Host Food Plant: Boerhaavia spp - Four-o’clock Family Nyctaginaceae
Nectar Plants: Frequently on Baccharis - Family Asteraceae
Photos: Adult - Larva - The Moths of Southeastern Arizona
Biography: Gottlieb August Wilhelm Herrich-Schäffer - Wikipedia
References:
Hampson, G.F. 1901. Catalogue of the Arctiadae (Arctianae) and Agaristidae in the collection of the British Museum (Natural History) Catalogue of the Lepidoptera Phalaenae in the British Museum, 3: xix + 690 pp.
Holland, W.J. 1903. The Moth Book: A Popular Guide to a Knowledge of the Moths of North America. Doubleday, Page, & Co., N.Y. xxiv + 479 pp.
Knudson, E. & C. Bordelon. 2003. Checklist of Guadalupe Mountains National Park, Publication No. 4. Texas Lepidoptera Survey, Houston. (treats 1300 species, 12 color plates).
Knudson, E. & C. Bordelon. 2003. Checklist of Davis Mountains, TX, Publication No. 7. Texas Lepidoptera Survey, Houston. (treats 1100 species, 10 color plates).
26 Aug 2007 © Mike Quinn / mike.quinn@tpwd.state.tx.us / Texas Entomology / Texas Lep Information