(Imported from text file) |
m (Move page script moved page Trichoplusia ni (Cabbage Looper) to Phil Bendle Collection:Trichoplusia ni (Cabbage Looper) without leaving a redirect) |
Revision as of 14:36, 31 July 2019
ingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Noctuidae
Subfamily: Plusiinae
Tribe: Argyrogrammatini
Genus: Trichoplusia
Species: T. ni
Binomial name: Trichoplusia ni
Synonyms: Phytometra brassicae, Plusia innata
Common name: Cabbage Looper
Trichoplusia ni is a nocturnal brown moth. It is found throughout the southern Palaearctic ecozone, all of North America, parts of Africa and most of the Oriental and Indo-Australian-New Zealand region.
The caterpillar, a measuring worm, is smooth and pale green with white stripes and is one of a many species called cabbage worm. It is called a "looper" because it arches its body as it crawls, inchworm-style. This species is very destructive to plants due to its voracious consumption of leaves. It is not restricted to cole crops (Brassicaceae); other plant hosts include tomato, cucumber and potato. The adult of the species is a nocturnal brown moth.
Trichoplusia ni looks similar to Ctenoplusia limbirena which has a pale brownish mark near the outer forewing margin.
The Trichoplusia ni caterpillar
[2]
The head
[4]
The rear of the larva (caterpillar)
[5]