Google
WWW MPG website only

Digital Guide to Moth Identification

Crambidae
80a0717 – 4953   Anania tertialis (Guenée, 1854)
             Crowned Phlyctaenia Moth

© Lula Field
Similar Species:
  • Pinned specimens of related species. (Hint: select View by Region on the related species page.)
Synonymy: Ebulea tertialis Guenée, 1854
Phalaena coronata of authors not Hufnagel, 1767
Botys syringicola Packard, 1870
Taxonomic Notes: Anania tertialis (Guenée, 1854), formerly treated as a subspecies of Anania coronata (Hufnagel, 1767), a species extralimital to North America, is raised to full species status in Leraut (2005), Nouv. Rev. Entomol., 22(2): 128.
References
  • Barcode of Life (BOLD) - Caution: Some specimens shown may not be sequenced. DNA barcode provides evidence of relatedness not proof of identification.
  • Leraut, P.J.A., 2005. Contribution à l'étude de quelques genres et espèces de Pyraustinae (Lepidoptera: Crambidae). Nouvelle Revue d'Entomologie, 22(2): 123-139.
  • Munroe, E., 1976. Moths of America North of Mexico, Fascicle 13.2a, p. 30; pl. 2.15-27. order or free PDF
  • Powell, J. A. & P. A. Opler, 2009. Moths of Western North America, Pl. 22.29m; p. 174. Book Review and ordering
  • Species Page at Block Island Moths
  • Species Page at BugGuide.Net
  • Species Page at E. H. Strickland Museum
  • Species Page at Mass Moths
  • Yang Z., J-F. Landry, L. Handfield, Y. Zhang, M.A. Solis, D. Handfield, B.G. Scholtens, M. Mutanen, M. Nuss, P.D.N. Hebert, 2012. DNA barcoding and morphology reveal three cryptic species of Anania (Lepidoptera: Crambidae: Pyraustinae) in North America, all distinct from their European counterpart. Systematic Entomology, 37: 687-705. (PDF)
Anania tertialis
© Bob Patterson
Anania tertialis
© Larry Line
Anania tertialis
© Nolie Schneider
Anania tertialis
© Machele White
Anania tertialis
© Carol Wolf
Anania tertialis
© Matthew Priebe
Anania tertialis
22mm – © Charles D. Bird
Anania tertialis
CalPhotos – © Jerry Powell
Anania tertialis
© Jim Vargo

Moth Photographers Group  at the  Mississippi Entomological Museum  at the  Mississippi State University

Send suggestions, or submit photographs to Webmaster — Moth Photographers Group

Database design and scripting support provided by Mike Boone