Notodontidae
Enlarge text Shrink text- Lepidoptera of Wayne County, Ohio, via WWW, Jan. 3, 2006(family: Notodontidae; common family: Prominent moths)
- Caterpillars of Eastern forests, 1997, via WWW, Jan. 3, 2004page listing families of caterpillars (prominents; family: Notodontidae)
- Arnett, R.H. American insects, 2nd ed., 2000:p. 779 (Notodontidae; Prominent moth family)
- Butterflies and moths of North America, via WWW, Sept. 25, 2007(Prominents (Notodontidae); the Notodontidae are members of the Superfamily Noctuoidea; medium-sized moths)
Notodontidae is a family of moths with approximately 3,800 known species. The family was described by James Francis Stephens in 1829. Moths of this family are found in all parts of the world, but they are most concentrated in tropical areas, especially in the New World (Miller, 1992). Species of this family tend to be heavy-bodied and long-winged, the wings held folded across the back of the body at rest. They rarely display any bright colours, usually being mainly grey or brown, with the exception of the subfamily Dioptinae (Grimaldi and Engel, 2005). These features mean they rather resemble Noctuidae although the families are not closely related. The adults do not feed. Many species have a tuft of hair on the trailing edge of the forewing which protrudes upwards at rest. This gives them their scientific name "back tooth" and the common name of prominents. The common names of some other species reflect their hairiness, such as puss moth and the group commonly known as kittens (Furcula spp.), so named as they resemble small versions of the puss moth.
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