Epiphyas postvittana (Walker, 1863)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.12812142 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038F980D-FFC0-843B-D3F2-FB4E990FD167 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Epiphyas postvittana (Walker, 1863) |
status |
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7. Epiphyas postvittana (Walker, 1863) View in CoL
— Peninha, Colares, Sintra, Lisboa. 330 m a.s.l. MGRS: 29 SMC5991 View Materials . 20.X.2014. Eduardo Marabuto leg. 2 specimens at light-trap. ( Fig. 2a View Fig ) .
Chronological first Iberian record, the nearest known records in Europe lie in NW France ( Cosson, 2009) and the extreme south of Spain ( Gaona et al., 2020).
The light brown Apple moth is originally native to Australia but has been known in New Zealand since 1891 ( EvAns, 1952) And in GreAt BritAin since the 1930’s ( Meyrick, 1937; BAker, 1968), from where it may have colonised Ireland ( Bond, 1998), France since 2000 ( Cosson, 2009), while scattered records exist from the Netherlands ( Wolschrijn & Kuchlein, 2006) and Sweden ( Svensson, 2009). New Caledonia and Hawaii have also been colonised ( Danthanarayana, 1975), and more recently California ( Varela et al., 2008; Brown et al., 2010) and the Azores ( Vieira & Karsholt, 2010; Vieira et al., 2012; Pérez Santa-Rita et al., 2018). After the finding reported here, it has been further recorded in the extreme south of Spain (Cádiz) by Gaona et al. (2020), so the species may be expanding. The caterpillars are extremely polyphagous, known to be able to feed on up to 500 plant species belonging to 363 genera in 121 different families ( Suckling & Brockerhoff, 2010), and hence the species has potential economic importance, justifying aggressive control measures such as the ones being carried out in California ( Venette et al., 2003) . The spreading of the species and ulterior finding in Portugal follows the climatic suitability of SW Europe and particularly the western coastal areas of the continent for the species, according to ecological niche-modelling ( He, 2010).
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