Zygaena fausta

Zygaena fausta
Illustration by Jacob Hübner
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Subkingdom: Eumetazoa
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Hexapoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Division: Ditrysia
Family: Zygaenidae
Genus: Zygaena
Species: Z. fausta
Binomial name
Zygaena fausta
(Linnaeus, 1767)
Synonyms
  • Sphinx fausta Linnaeus, 1767
  • Zygaena faustina Ochsenheimer, 1908
  • Zygaena baetica Ramburs, 1839
  • Zygaena faustula Rambur, 1866
  • Zygaena mauritanica Mabille, 1885
  • Anthocera mabillei Kirby, 1892
  • Zyganea fasuta v. murciensis Reiss, 1922
  • Zygaena gibraltarica Tremewan, 1961
  • Zygaena almerica Burgeff, 1963
  • Zygaena aitanae Burgeff & Klaue, 1968
  • Zygaena resender Burgeff, 1969
Zygaena fausta
Zygaena fausta
Mating pair of Zygaena fausta showing the tail-to-tail position and sexual dimorphism
Zygaena fausta taking off, showing the bright red abdomen and eye spots on the thorax

Zygaena fausta is a member of the Zygaenidae family, the day-flying burnet moths. Its bright aposematic colours of red, white and black on the wings indicate to possible predators such as birds that it is foul tasting or poisonous. In flight, the bright red abdomen is revealed, contrasting with the white legs and black head and antennae; the thorax is black and white with an eye spot on each side (see image). There appears to be a considerable variation in pattern among specimens from different parts of Europe.

It is distributed on western Europe including Spain, France, northern Italy, Switzerland, Austria and southern and central Germany.[1]

It is rare or absent from Britain, the Netherlands and Belgium, where related species include the similarly aposematic five-spot burnet and the six-spot burnet.[2]

The caterpillar (larva) is dark grey with a black line above a line of white interrupted by yellow bands. The caterpillar's food plants are vetches of the genus Coronilla.[3]

The adults often visit a wide range of flowers including knapweed and eryngo. Typical habitat is dry chalk grassland. Adults fly throughout the summer from April or May until October. The sexes are similar but not identical (see image); mating takes place by day on isolated plants.

Subspecies

References

  1. Interactive map, Encyclopedia of Life, http://www.eol.org/pages/379460
  2. SoortenBank.nl, ETI BioInformatics, http://www.soortenbank.nl/soorten.php?soortengroep=insecten&id=1062
  3. Moths and Butterflies of Europe and North Africa, by Paolo Mazzei, Daniel Morel, Raniero Panfili, Ilaria Pimpinelli, Diego Reggianti. http://www.leps.it/indexjs.htm?SpeciesPages/ZygaeLaeta.htm
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