Cossus cossus
{{short description|Species of moth}}
{{Speciesbox
| name = Goat moth
| image = Cossus cossus01.jpg
| taxon = Cossus cossus
| authority = (Linnaeus, 1758)
| synonyms =
- Phalaena cossus Linnaeus, 1758
- Bombyx unguiculatus Fabricius, 1793
- Cossus ligniperda Fabricius, 1794
- Cossus balcanicus Lederer, 1863
- Cossus cossus stygianus Stichel, 1908
- Cossus cossus ab. subnigra O. Schultz, 1911
- Cossus cossus f. aceris Greip, 1918
- Cossus cossus f. nigra Dietze, 1919
- Cossus cossus altensis B. Hua, 1990
- Cossus araraticus Teich, 1896
- Cossus giganteus Schwingenschuss, 1938
- Cossus lucifer Grum-Grshimailo, 1891
- Cossus chinensis Rothschild, 1912
- Cossus cosso Püngeler, 1898
}}
Cossus cossus, the goat moth, is a moth of the family Cossidae. It is found in Northern Africa, Asia and Europe.
Biology
This is a large heavy moth with a wingspan of 68–96 mm. The wings are greyish brown and marked with fine dark cross lines. The moth flies from April to August depending on the location.
The caterpillars have a red/purple stripe across the back and a black head. They reach a length of 9–10 cm. The caterpillars feed in the trunks and branches of a wide variety of trees (see list below), taking three to five years to mature. The caterpillar holes can be found low on the stem (maximum 1.0–1.5 m above the ground). When ready to pupate the caterpillar leaves the tree to find a suitable spot.
The species prefer humid environments. Both the larva and moth have a smell reminiscent of goat, hence its name.{{cite book|last=Ford|first=R.L.E.|date=1963|publisher=Frederick Warne|place=London|title=The Observer's Book of Larger Moths|page=217}}
As a food
Pliny reported in Natural History that a grub which he gives the name cossus was considered a Roman delicacy after it was fed with flour. Some writers have equated this with Cossus cossus, but Pliny specifies that his cossus is found in oak trees, which makes this identification unlikely. Pliny's cossus is more likely to have been the larva of the beetle Cerambyx heros.
Recorded food plants
Taxonomy
Cossus balcanicus Lederer, 1863 from Bulgaria is probably a hybrid between C. cossus and Lamellocossus terebrus (Denis & Schiffermüller, 1775).
Subspecies
- Cossus cossus cossus
- Cossus cossus albescens Kitt, 1925 (Kazakhstan, Russia)
- Cossus cossus araraticus Teich, 1896 (Georgia, Azerbaijan, Turkey, Iran)
- Cossus cossus armeniacus Rothschild, 1912 (Turkey)
- Cossus cossus chinensis Rothschild, 1912 (China: Shaanxi)
- Cossus cossus dauricus Yakovlev, 2007 (Russia: Transbaikal)
- Cossus cossus dersu Yakovlev, 2009 (Russia: southern Ussuri, Primorsky Krai)
- Cossus cossus deserta Daniel, 1953 (Mongolia)
- Cossus cossus gueruenensis Friedel, 1977 (Asia Minor)
- Cossus cossus kopetdaghi Yakovlev, 2009 (Turkmenistan)
- Cossus cossus kossai Wiltshire, 1957 (Iraq, Jordan)
- Cossus cossus lucifer Grum-Grshimailo, 1891 (Tibet)
- Cossus cossus mongolicus Erschoff, 1882 (Mongolia)
- Cossus cossus omrana Wiltshire, 1957 (Iraq, Iran)
- Cossus cossus tianshanus Hua, Chou, Fang & Chen, 1990 (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan)
- Cossus cossus uralicus Seitz, 1912 (Uralsk)
Gallery
File:Cossus cossus.jpg|Caterpillar
File:Caterpillars cossus cossus.jpg|Caterpillars of different age on willow wood
File:Weidenbohrer-Unterseite.jpg|Caterpillar (underside; head to the right)
File:Cossus cossus caterpillar.png|Illustrated caterpillar
File:Weide mit Cossus cossus.jpg|Willow with caterpillars
File:Rups van een wilgenhoutvlinder.JPG|Caterpillars
File:Cossus cossus exuvia.JPG|Pupal case
File:Britishentomologyvolume5Plate60.jpg|Illustration from John Curtis's British Entomology Volume 5
File:Cossus cossus pupa.png|Illustrated pupa
File:Cossus Cossus.png|Illustrated adult
File:Cossus cossus1.jpg|Mounted
File:Cossus cossus - Weidenbohrer Raupe 01.webm|Caterpillar
References
{{Reflist}}
- {{cite book |title=Colour Identification Guide to Moths of the British Isles |last=Skinner |first=Bernard |year=1984 |publisher=Viking Press |isbn=0-670-80354-5 |page=3}}
- {{cite book |title=Field Guide to the Moths of Great Britain and Ireland |last=Waring |first=Paul |author2=Martin Townsend |year=2003 |publisher=British Wildlife Publishing |isbn=0-9531399-2-1 |page=23}}
- This information, or an older version, was partially obtained from De Vlinderstichting - Vlindernet – [http://www.vlindernet.nl/vlindersoort.php?vlinderid=10329 http://www.vlindernet.nl/] (geraadpleegd 18-05-2017).
External links
{{Commonscat}}
{{Wikispecies}}
- [https://ukmoths.org.uk/show.php?id=2097 Goat Moth at UKMoths]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20160304204614/http://www.faunaeur.org/full_results.php?id=439949 Fauna Europaea]
- [http://naturedocumentaries.org/9778/red-goat-moth-cossus-cossus-caterpillar-searching-pupation-site/ A video of a red goat moth caterpillar searching for a pupation site]
{{Taxonbar|from=Q278629}}