Walshia: Named for Benjamin Dann Walsh (1808 – 1869), British born entomologist who eventually became the first Illinois state entomologist. His insect collection contained over 30,000 specimens, and upon his death, was donated to the Chicago Academy of Sciences. Walsh was a classmate of Charles Darwin at Cambridge and was a proponent of his theory of evolution. The common zoological Greek suffix ia is used to form nouns.
miscecolorella: Includes the Latin words misce and colos or (color), which combined mean “to mix color.” The suffix ella is Latin for “small.”
Pronunciation
wal-she-uh mis-kay-kul-ur-el-uh
Documented Occurrences
This map shows the confirmed sightings of the sweetclover root borer in Indiana. All sightings were confirmed through photographic documentation by individuals who contributed to the Great American IN Nature Lepidoptera Project (GAIN LP).
Sweetclover root borers are primarily larval hosts of plants in the Leguminosae (Fabaceae) family, but also have been documented feeding on thistles (Cirsium spp.) in the Asteraceae family.
Known Larval Food Sources in Indiana
Family
Taxonomic Name
Common Name
Order: Asterales
Asteraceae
Cirsium spp.
thistle
Order: Fabales
Fabaceae
Arachis hypogaea
groundnut
Astragalus spp.
milkvetch
Lupinus spp.
lupines
Melilotus spp.
sweetclover
Copyright 2024 Indiana Nature LLC. All Rights Reserved.