Los Angeles Bioblitz Challenge

AboutIndicator SpeciesSpeciesExplore Data

Cutworm Moths And Allies (Noctuidae)

78 observations

photo of Cutworm Moths And Allies (Noctuidae)
Cutworm Moths And Allies (Noctuidae)
Observer
scubabruin
Date
8/2/2021
Quality grade
needs_id
License
CC-BY-NC
Coordinates are obscured
Observer has choosen to obscure the coordinates.
Zoom map iNaturalist observation
About
Images

Description

Cillum enim nisi qui velit reprehenderit ut ipsum quis est consectetur. Labore labore proident exercitation veniam cillum. Esse laboris aliquip commodo incididunt qui qui quis labore id voluptate. Qui velit deserunt minim qui labore nostrud. Et Lorem exercitation cillum eu do esse. Anim ut do in occaecat.

Adipisicing aliquip culpa cupidatat nulla cupidatat exercitation exercitation exercitation culpa Lorem magna enim sunt ad. Officia ex veniam dolore incididunt enim dolor. Deserunt magna elit voluptate duis ex mollit deserunt duis cupidatat tempor sint. Velit ea ipsum est exercitation excepteur laboris id.

Native Status

Cutworm Moths and Allies (Noctuidae) is native / not native to Los Angeles, California, USA.

Habitat

Adipisicing aliquip culpa cupidatat nulla cupidatat exercitation exercitation exercitation culpa Lorem magna enim sunt ad. Officia ex veniam dolore incididunt enim dolor. Deserunt magna elit voluptate duis ex mollit deserunt duis cupidatat tempor sint. Velit ea ipsum est exercitation excepteur laboris id.

Taxon Range

Note: Range maps are only available for some species.

Taxonomy

13 Observed species for Cutworm Moths And Allies (Noctuidae)

Species Interactions

Species interaction data comes from GloBI. The species with links are species that have observations.

Eats

Preys on

  • (Polistes chinensis antennalis)

Pollinates

  • (Dryas)
  • Arctic Bladderpod (Physaria arctica)
  • Entireleaf Mountain-avens (Dryas integrifolia)

Eaten by

  • Broad-bordered Grass Yellow (Eurema brigitta)
  • Small Grass-yellow (Eurema smilax)
  • Ramon Blue (Hemiargus ramon)
  • Asian Elephant (Elephas maximus)

Preyed upon by

  • Antillean Ghost-faced Bat (Mormoops blainvillei)

Pollinated by

  • (Schinia bina)

More Information

iNaturalist taxa