Hoary Footman

Eilema caniola

''Eilema caniola'', the hoary footman, is a moth of the family Erebidae. The species was first described by Jacob Hübner in 1808.
Hoary Footman, Heesch, Netherlands "Footman" is a fitting name, it's very leggy, initially I didn't even recognize it as a moth.
It looks fairly similar to the Scarce Footman (Eilema complana), yet lacks the yellow line along the wings. Furthermore, the dark dot at the thorax is also a key.
 Eilema caniola,Europe,Heesch,Moth Week 2021,Netherlands,World,the Netherlands

Appearance

The wingspan is 28–35 mm. It is almost the same in colouring as ''Eilema griseola'' and ''Eilema lurideola'' but the forewings are much smaller, the outer margin is oblique, only slightly excurved; the colour is much lighter, more yellowish grey, so that the pale yellow costal stripe is less prominent. Hindwings are very pale, scarcely darker at the costal margin, with the apex much more pointed than in the two species mentioned, with which it might be confounded.

It is at once distinguished from ''Eilema complanum'' by the underside of the forewing, on which the pale grey colour extends to the margin, the latter not being broadly yellow as in ''E. complanum''. - ab. ''vitellina'' Bdv. is a form with the forewing dusted with grey close to the distal margin and of a pale bright yellow ground colour in the male - ab. ''albeola'' Hbn. is considerably smaller, and, except for the bright yellow thorax, entirely white on the upperside; it occurs among ordinary specimens.

Larva are grey or reddish brown with dark dorsal line, red subdorsal lines edged with black and occasionally spotted with white or black.

Naming

*''Eilema caniola caniola''
⤷ ''Eilema caniola torstenii'' von Mentzer, 1980

Distribution

This species can be found in North Africa, in western and southern Europe, in eastern Europe up to south-western Russia, in the Near East, in the eastern Palearctic realm and in the Oriental realm. These thermophilic moths usually occur in urban areas and as a caterpillar on old walls, roofs, shingle beaches and rocky areas.

Behavior

These moths are nocturnal and rest at day on shady rocks. They fly in two or three generations from July to September depending on the location. They are attracted to light. The larvae mainly feed on algae, especially on green films of ''Pleurococcus'' and on a variety of lichens growing on rocks, but also on the flowers of broom, birdsfoot trefoil and clover.

Habitat

This species can be found in North Africa, in western and southern Europe, in eastern Europe up to south-western Russia, in the Near East, in the eastern Palearctic realm and in the Oriental realm. These thermophilic moths usually occur in urban areas and as a caterpillar on old walls, roofs, shingle beaches and rocky areas.

References:

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Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionArthropoda
ClassInsecta
OrderLepidoptera
FamilyErebidae
GenusEilema
SpeciesE. caniola
Photographed in
Netherlands