Curved-toothed Geometer Moth
Curved-toothed Geometer Moth
Eutrapela clemataria
Insecta
COMMON

Stats

Lifespan
Annual
Size
Small
Diet
Herbivore
Activity
Nocturnal
Social
Solitary
Biome
Temperate forest
Range
North America
Movement
Flight
Breeding
Egg-laying
Defense
Camouflage
Status
Common

About

The Curved-toothed Geometer Moth, or Eutrapela clemataria, is a moth found in deciduous and mixed woodlands in North America, from Nova Scotia to Florida, west to Texas, and north to Saskatchewan. It has a wingspan of 3 to 5 centimeters, and its body is covered in purplish-brown fur.

Life cycle

  1. 1.
    egg
    A tiny ribbed egg laid on the underside of a host-plant leaf, hatching within days.
  2. 2.
    caterpillar
    A voracious caterpillar feeds and molts through several instars, growing rapidly.
  3. 3.
    cocoon
    A silk cocoon spun in leaf litter or soil while the body remodels into a winged adult.
  4. 4.
    moth
    A winged adult with feathery antennae and scaled wings, most active after dark.

Learn more

Taxonomy

Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Arthropoda
Class
Insecta
Order
Lepidoptera
Family
Geometridae
Genus
Eutrapela
Species
Eutrapela clemataria