Hyppa rectilinea (Esper, 1788)


Hyppa rectilinea: Adult (e.l. S-Bavaria, Ammersee, larva in October 2012) [S] Hyppa rectilinea: Adult (e.l. S-Bavaria, Ammersee, larva in October 2012) [S] Hyppa rectilinea: Adult [S] Hyppa rectilinea: Adult [S] Hyppa rectilinea: Larva at the end of the penultimate instar (northern Black Forest, early October 2010) [M] Hyppa rectilinea: Larva at the end of the penultimate instar (northern Black Forest, early October 2010) [M] Hyppa rectilinea: Larva after the last moult (northern Black Forest) [S] Hyppa rectilinea: Larva after the last moult (northern Black Forest) [S] Hyppa rectilinea: Larva after the last moult (northern Black Forest) [S] Hyppa rectilinea: Larva (northern Black Forest) [S] Hyppa rectilinea: Larva (northern Black Forest) [S] Hyppa rectilinea: Larva (northern Black Forest) [S] Hyppa rectilinea: Larva (northern Black Forest) [S] Hyppa rectilinea: Larva (Ammersee, moor forest, October 2012) [N] Hyppa rectilinea: Larva (Ammersee, Bavaria, moor forest, October 2012) [N] Hyppa rectilinea: Larva (Ammersee, Bavaria, moor forest, October 2012) [N] Hyppa rectilinea: Larva (Ammersee, Bavaria, moor forest, October 2012) [M] Hyppa rectilinea: Larva [S] Hyppa rectilinea: Larva [S] Hyppa rectilinea: Pupa [S] Hyppa rectilinea: Larval habitat in the northern Black Forest (early October 2010) [N] Hyppa rectilinea: Larval habitat in a spruce rich moor forest at the Bavarian Ammersee in October 2012) [N]

Host plants:
The caterpillar lives polyphagous on herbs and ground-level parts of shrubs (eg Vaccinium). I found a caterpillar in penultimate instar in moulting rest in a Calluna-spot in a rather shady place between a forest trail and a clearing in the northern Black Forest at 1000m above sea level (October 2010). In late October 2012, I found a fully-grown larva in the northern foreland of the Alps in a bog forest resting at daytime at a fern leave with feeding scars around 40cm above ground (Ammersee, Bavaria).

Habitat:
Hyppa rectilinea inhabits particularly acidic soils, slightly humid and montane coniferous forests and edges of bogs.

Life cycle:
The caterpillar overwinters in last instar and does not feed in spring again. This is reached in late September or in October. The moths fly from late May to late July.

Endangerment: regionally endangered or decreasing

Endangerment factors:
Light forest structures go lost more and more. Besides bogs are extremely vulnerable.

Remarks:
The distribution extends from the Pyrenees across Central and Northern Europe and on through the conifer zone of temperate Asia to the Pacific.


German version / deutsche Version