Girlfriend underwing

Catocala amica

''Catocala amica'', the girlfriend underwing, is a moth of the family Erebidae. The species was first described by Jacob Hübner in 1818. It is found from southern Canada through the United States east of the Rocky Mountains, ranging westward to Oklahoma and Arizona, northward to Minnesota and southwestward to Texas.
Girlfriend Underwing - Catocala amica Habitat: Attracted to 365+395 nm LED lights in a semi-rural area

2021(182) Catocala,Catocala amica,Catocala amica-lineella,Catocala lineella,Erebidae,Geotagged,Girlfriend or Little Lined Underwing,Girlfriend underwing,Lineella Underwing,Summer,United States,moth

Appearance

The wingspan of adults is 35–40 mm. They are generally easy to recognize by the cryptically patterned forewings, the yellow background color of their hindwings, and the black pattern on the latter. This consists of a black band along the outer edge, save for the hindmost part where a separate black dot is found. Forewing hue varies a lot, but similar sympatric species usually have an additional black band running across the central hindwings. Unlike in many other underwing moths, their tibiae are all spineless.

Adults are on the wing from June to September depending on the location; they are often attracted to UV light at night. The caterpillars feed on oak species, including.

Of section ''Quercus''
⤷  Bur oak
⤷  Chestnut oak
⤷  Dwarf chinkapin oak
⤷  Post oak
⤷  Swamp white oak
⤷  White oak
Of section ''Lobatae''
⤷  Bear oak
⤷  Eastern black oak
⤷  Northern red oak
⤷  Scarlet oak

Habitat

The wingspan of adults is 35–40 mm. They are generally easy to recognize by the cryptically patterned forewings, the yellow background color of their hindwings, and the black pattern on the latter. This consists of a black band along the outer edge, save for the hindmost part where a separate black dot is found. Forewing hue varies a lot, but similar sympatric species usually have an additional black band running across the central hindwings. Unlike in many other underwing moths, their tibiae are all spineless.

Adults are on the wing from June to September depending on the location; they are often attracted to UV light at night. The caterpillars feed on oak species, including.

Of section ''Quercus''
⤷  Bur oak
⤷  Chestnut oak
⤷  Dwarf chinkapin oak
⤷  Post oak
⤷  Swamp white oak
⤷  White oak
Of section ''Lobatae''
⤷  Bear oak
⤷  Eastern black oak
⤷  Northern red oak
⤷  Scarlet oak

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionArthropoda
ClassInsecta
OrderLepidoptera
FamilyErebidae
GenusCatocala
SpeciesC. amica