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"greyish" Definitions
  1. fairly grey in colour

1000 Sentences With "greyish"

How to use greyish in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "greyish" and check conjugation/comparative form for "greyish". Mastering all the usages of "greyish" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Ever look up at the sky and see greyish objects floating around?
I lived only in the greyish, insensate world of my mind, where I
Inside, there's a pile of ivory pumpkins with delicate patches of greyish-green.
This hair features a greyish-white base that melts into the rainbow of our dreams (literally).
"For quite a long time there was nothing except a green-greyish fog," said one participant.
We should imagine better aliens than those greyish-green creatures the shape of lifesize Bratz dolls.
Back in the 1990s, she created greyish paintings made with beeswax and ashes she brought back from Auschwitz.
Google's Pixel 2 also came in black and white but also a muted greyish-blue color, which was cool.
The ditch is full of a stagnant greyish fluid that stinks of rotten food and probably of feces too.
But by the time he became president, his hair had faded to the greyish-white seen in the Union College sample.
The greyish panties, still round her ankles, of an 11-year-old girl raped by her father as she washed the dishes.
I'm faced with a cavernous greyish path ahead of me, propelled forward with red arrows through the vag like I'm on a rollercoaster.
But others feel that it inadvertently reinforces even more gender stereotypes, limiting nonbinary individuals to greyish androgynous figures defined primarily by their haircuts.
I don&apost think you can for the pairs with colorful lenses, but I got a regular greyish-black pair that I love.
If I didn't know better, I would have thought that it was flavored with black sesame, based on its greyish color and nutty, sweet flavor.
The video's debut — and Pete's new blue hue — sent Twitter into a tailspin, naturally, with fans speculating on what the greyish-blue choice actually means.
His neck is thick and his teeth are very white and he has a course layer of greyish stubble around the mouth they live in.
My fondest Passover memories are of my sister cringing in horror as I piled horseradish onto the curiously delicious mold of unidentifiable greyish-white fish.
"Classy, elegant, expensive," French model Robin Avignon said to describe the collection after the show where he wore a greyish aviator jacket over stripped pants.
"Classy, elegant, expensive," French model Robin Avignon said to describe the collection after the show where he wore a greyish aviator jacket over stripped pants.
Pollution from vehicles in the City of Light often builds up into a greyish haze over the city and is becoming an increasing concern to local health authorities.
The smoke deposits traces of black carbon on the marble, which leaves behind a greyish tinge, as well as a brown variety of carbon that leaves a yellowish-brown hue.
Then they burst and turn into greyish-yellow sores that are usually about an eighth of an inch wide, according to the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR).
While the announcement might be a step in the right direction, it inadvertently reinforces even more gender stereotypes, limiting nonbinary individuals to greyish androgynous figures defined primarily by their haircuts.
Besides pitching skincare products made from nearby mudflats, the festival also gives visitors the chance to play in tonnes of the greyish goo at mud wrestling pits, mud slides and mud baths.
Here's why: "As the lunar soil (regolith) is a light, greyish-brown color, it is not very photogenic, and it doesn't show much contrast between brightly lit areas and shadows," he said.
Review and full article: The length of the forewings is 4.5–5 mm. The forewings are greyish brown intermixed with pale greyish-brown scales and greyish-brown scales tipped with pale greyish brown. The hindwings are translucent pale greyish brown.
The forewings are glossy light greyish olive with deep greyish olive spots along the costa. The hindwings are glossy greyish olive.
The tail is greyish with a greyish black rear margin.
Chicks are greyish, with a short tail and greyish- blue eyes.
The hindwing is greyish brown and the underside unicolorous greyish brown.
The hindwing is greyish brown and the underside unicolorous greyish brown.
The hindwing is greyish brown and the underside unicolorous greyish brown.
The hindwing is greyish brown and the underside unicolorous greyish brown.
The forewings are silvery buff. The hindwings are greyish to greyish brown.
Review and full article: The length of the forewings is 5–6 mm. The forewings are greyish brown intermixed with greyish-brown scales tipped with pale greyish brown. The hindwings are translucent greyish brown, gradually darkening towards the apex.
The termen has five short greyish-black strips. The hindwings are greyish brown.
Review and full article: The length of the forewings is 5.2–7.2 mm. The forewings have pale greyish-brown scales intermixed with greyish-brown scales tipped with pale greyish brown and greyish brown scales. The hindwings are translucent pale brown.
The forewings are greyish brown with indistinct pale submarginal bands. The hindwings are yellow with a greyish-brown spot near the centre and a broad greyish-brown margin.
Review and full article: The length of the forewings is 5.9–7.5 mm. The forewings are pale greyish brown intermixed with greyish-brown scales and greyish-brown scales tipped with pale greyish brown. The hindwings are translucent brown, gradually darkening towards the apex.
The forewings are highly variable, ranging from greyish brown to pale greyish brown or brown. Most scales are tipped with white. Both surfaces of the hindwings are pale greyish brown.
Head and prothoracic plate black, anal plate greyish brown, thoracic legs pale brown, body greyish white.
Blastobasis orladelaneae is a moth in the family Blastobasidae that is endemic to New Caledonia. The length of the forewings is . The forewings are greyish brown intermixed with pale greyish-brown scales and a few pale greyish-brown and white scales. The hindwings are pale greyish brown.
The hindwings are very pale greyish basally, lightly infuscated toward the margin, the margin narrowly greyish fuscous.
The hindwing is unicolorous greyish brown with an indistinct black discal spot and the underside unicolorous greyish brown.
Femur I light greyish-tan, patella I greyish-brown, tibia, metatarsus and tarsus I orangish-red. Chelicerae darker than the dorsal shield of the prosoma. Sternum pale greyish-yellow, labium darker. Opisthosoma purplish- grey.
The forewings are glossy light greyish olive with deep greyish olive spots along the costa and a light greyish olive terminal band, edged with pure white towards the base. The hindwings are glossy buffy olive.
The forewings are greyish yellow, with scattered yellowish-brown scales. The hindwings are greyish yellow with scattered with orange scales.
The habitat consists of either the Northern Desert or the Northern Andean Cordillera Biotic Provinces. The length of the forewings is about 9 mm for males. The forewings are grey, with numerous dark grey, greyish-brown, and greyish-black scales, appearing dark grey. The hindwings are pale greyish white, pale grey distally and greyish black along the anal margin.
The base of the pectoral fin is greyish black, darkening to black towards the rear. The pectoral filaments are greyish-black with white tips and bases. The front part of the pelvic fin is greyish black with the rest of it being coloured white. The anal fin is greyish-black with its last ray being white.
The forewings are greyish fuscous, with the median and subterminal areas pale greyish. The hindwings are greyish ocher, with five inconspicuous transverse lines., 1993: A new species of Eupterotidae from Taiwan (Lepidoptera). Tyô to Ga, 44 (1): 25-27.
The wingspan is about 24–25 mm. The forewings are light greyish brown. The hindwings are also light greyish brown, but paler.
The distal one-fourth is greyish brown, deepening from the costa to the dorsum and with the discocellular spot pale greyish brown.
The forewings are pale smoke grey with light greyish olive and olivaveous black striae and patches. The hindwings are glossy light greyish olive.
The forewings are pale greyish orange, covered with brown scales throughout. The median costal patch is elongated and trapezoidal, separated by a greyish-orange stripe basally and accompanied by a small, dark patch bordered with a greyish-orange stripe. The hindwings are grey.
Review and full article: The length of the forewings is about 3.8 mm. The forewings are white intermixed with pale greyish-brown scales and greyish-brown scales tipped with pale greyish brown. The hindwings are translucent pale brown, gradually darkening towards the apex.
The hindwings are greyish yellow, the basal area of the hind margin and the outer marginal area with some greyish green, dotted with black.
Females are drab-coloured, being dull brownish above, and white below with strong dark streaking. They have greyish facial skin, and a greyish-black bill.
Some subspecies from elsewhere are quite similar, like the grey-cheeked C. p. rafflesii of southern Sumatra and black-cheeked C. p. melanops of eastern Sumatra, as well as those from southwestern Borneo. Several others differ noticeably, especially in northern, central and eastern Borneo where some have grey or olivaceous-greyish thighs, orange cheeks, grizzled or olivaceous-greyish upperparts, or a greyish or greyish-banded tail.
It has a reddish-brown sheen to the throat and upper breast, and greyish-blue underparts. Both sexes have red irises, black beaks and greyish legs.
Anal tufts are greyish at base and black tipped. Thorax pale brown. Forewings are greyish with two indistinct subbasal lines. Antemedial is a curved dark band.
Review and full article: The length of the forewings is 6.2–7.9 mm. The forewings are greyish brown intermixed with greyish-brown scales tipped with pale greyish brown and few reddish-brown scales. The hindwings are translucent pale brown. The larvae feed within beans of Coffea arabica.
The immature male has a black head but is otherwise less conspicuous than the mature male, being more greyish-olive above and greyish below. The female is similar but lacks the black head and is altogether much duller in appearance, more greyish-olive, with paler underparts.
Both sexes are overall mainly blackish, but the male has distinctive, large greyish-blue facial- and neck-wattles and greyish-white wings, which flash conspicuously in flight.
Body greyish brown dorsally and purple in ventral. Lateral sides are greyish with a longitudinal brown line. Spiracles black. Head ochreous with a black spot in front.
C. siccifolia characteristics include head light greyish-ochreous. Antennae white, ringed with fuscous, basal joint pale greyish-ochreous. Posterior tarsi grey-whitish. Forewings brownish-grey, somewhat shining.
The wingspan is about 9 mm. The forewing is greyish brown. The hindwing is greyish, without a discal spot. The underside is unicolorous grey, without discal spots.
The habitat consists of the Northern Valdivian Forest Biotic Province. The length of the forewings is about 9 mm. The forewings are covered with mixture of greyish white, dark brown, brownish black, and reddish brown scales. The hindwings are greyish white, with scattered greyish brown and dark brown scales.
Megalota ouentoroi is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in New Caledonia in the southwest Pacific Ocean. The wingspan is about 15 mm. The ground colour of the forewings is greyish white, strigulated (finely streaked) with greyish brown and suffused with greyish in the dorsal area.
The forewings are shining white, towards the dorsum faintly suffused with pale ochreous. The hindwings are whitish, sometimes faintly greyish tinged. The termen is tinged with pale greyish ochreous.
The forewings are greyish, glossy in the basal area of the wing and tinged brownish in the dorsal part. The hindwings are dark brown with a greyish-white costal area.
The forewings are pale ochreous, suffused and blotched with greyish fuscous. There are three fuscous discal dots, with a slight greyish fuscous cloud between them. There is an ill-defined pale basal patch and the costal and apical margins are diffusely dotted with greyish fuscous. The hindwings are shining grey.Proc. zool. Soc. Lond.
The habitat consists of the Northern Valdivian Forest Biotic Province. The length of the forewings is about 7.5 mm for males and 8 mm for females. The forewings are white or pale greyish white, the basal portion with pale greyish brown scaling. The hindwings are white, with grey and greyish brown scaling.
A clutch of four to five (occasionally fewer) eggs is laid. The eggs average about and have a pale greenish or greyish-white background colour liberally sprinkled with greyish-brown spots.
The forewings are dark grey and there is a small pale greyish- ochreous spot in the middle of the base, and the extreme dorsal edge is pale greyish ochreous at the base. There is a short pale greyish-ochreous dash on the fold beneath the middle, and a longer one in the disc beyond the middle. There are some indistinct marginal dots of pale greyish-ochreous suffusion around the apex and termen. The hindwings are grey.
The labial palpus in the male is stronger than in females. The first segment is greyish white, in male mixed with pale ochreous. The second and third segments are brown, mixed with pale ochreous except greyish white dorsally. The thorax and tegula are brown tinged with greyish white except the tegula which are pale reddish brown at the base.
Full article: where it is known from the central and western highlands and in the central mid- altitudes of the Ngaia Forest. The length of the forewings is 6.8–9.1 mm. The forewings are greyish brown intermixed with a few pale greyish brown and brown scales. The hindwings are pale greyish brown basally, but gradually darkening towards the apex.
On the distal one-third consists of brownish red scales tipped with pale greyish yellow intermixed with brown scales tipped with pale greyish yellow and a few pale greyish yellow scales. The hindwings are pale grey., et al. 2010: A Review of African Blastobasinae (Lepidoptera: Gelechioidea: Coleophoridae), with New Taxa Reared from Native Fruits in Kenya.
The male of Z. pallidus has an orange-brown hairy carapace. On the sides there are greyish-white, long hairs. The abdomen is greyish orange- brown with orange markings and light transverse streaks towards the rear. The legs are yellow-orange, except for the first pair, which is very hairy with long greyish-white and orange-brown hairs.
The long-tailed dwarf hamster has a head-and-body length of between and a tail at least a third as long as this. It weighs between . The dorsal pelage is either a pale sandy brown or a dark greyish brown. The ventral surface is greyish white, individual hairs having dark bases, greyish shafts and white tips.
The ground colour of the forewings is white with some greyish brown basal spots. The ground colour of the hindwings is white with greyish white transverse lines. Adults are on wing in October.
The hindwings are cream with pale greyish strigulation (fine streaks).
The markings are greyish brown. The hindwings are brownish grey.
The markings are brown and the hindwings are greyish brown.
The markings are dark brown. The hindwings are greyish brown.
Its underparts are mostly greyish, with dark or dusky mottles.
The specific name is derived from canus (meaning greyish white).
The hindwing is greyish brown with an indistinct discal spot.
The antennae, head and body are uniformly pale greyish yellow.
Head, thorax and abdomen greyish or brownish fuscous. Thorax spotted with black. Forewings greyish, irrorated with fuscous and a black spot at base. There is a slightly diffused angled antemedial band which are narrower.
The wingspan is 20–28 mm. The forewings are greyish white with pale veins and scattered dark brown scales. The hindwings are greyish white. Adults have been recorded on wing from June to August.
The forewings are whitish cream, the veins in the posterior third of the wing suffused with greyish. The hindwings are greyish. Females are darker, with both the markings and hindwings more brownish than in males.
Mesophleps catericta is a moth of the family Gelechiidae. It is found in Namibia and South Africa (Limpopo, Mpumalanga). The wingspan is 16–17 mm. The forewings are greyish brown, sprinkled with greyish white scales.
Madhuca hirtiflora grows as a tree up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . Its bark is greyish brown. Inflorescences bear up to six flowers. The fruit is greyish, ellipsoid, up to long.
The hindwings are greyish brown. Females have more light greyish and yellow in the forewings. Adults are on wing from late June to July. The larvae feed on Veronica longifolia within the shoots or stems.
Madhuca sericea grows up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish brown. Inflorescences bear up to seven flowers. The fruits are ellipsoid, up to long and greyish when young.
There is a reticulate pattern along the outer and hind margins of the forewings. There is also a longitudinal greyish stripe in the discal and radial areas. The hindwings are semitransparent, suffused with greyish scales.
In the male, the head and thorax are greyish brown. Abdomen fuscous. Forewings greyish brown with numerous indistinct waved lines. Orbicular and reniform stigmata indistinct, where the latter with a few raised scaled on it.
The ventrum is greyish while the femurs are reddish. The iris is golden. Males have a greyish throat. The male advertisement call is a series of two or three clacks/pulses sounding like "quack-quack".
Pupation takes place within the tube. They are greyish green with purplish markings above and pale greyish green on the underside. The head is pale reddish brown. The reach a length of 14.5-17.5 mm.
Review and full article: The length of the forewings is 5.1–7.4 mm. The forewings have greyish-brown scales tipped with pale greyish brown. The hindwings are translucent pale brown, gradually darkening towards the apex.
Review and full article: The length of the forewings is 3.8–5.2 mm. The forewings are greyish brown intermixed with greyish-brown scales tipped with white and white scales. The hindwings are translucent pale brown.
The scales are greyish at the base and predominantly dark brown apically. There are greyish white markings and white costal and tornal spots. Adults have been recorded on wing from late June to early July.
Pupates takes place in a greyish ochreous cocoon spun amongst debris.
The hindwings are cream, suffused with greyish brown and darker strigulations.
The glossy, greyish brown oblong seeds the pods contain are long.
The trees are 3-7m tall, with smooth greyish white bark.
The hindwings are pale greyish brown with darker strigulation (fine streaks).
The underside of the hindwings are greyish with a discal spot.
The markings are greyish brown. The hindwings are pale brownish cream.
The hindwings are pale greyish buff, slightly darker toward the margins.
Older bark is greyish, but twigs are brown, yellow or reddish.
The antenna have a reddish-brown scape dorsally, yellow ventrally. The flagellum is yellowish brown ringed with brown. The thorax and tegula in males are rosy, in females greyish brown tinged with rosy. The forewings are rosy, with scattered greyish-white and black scales in the distal half and a longitudinal greyish-black stripe at the base just below the costa.
The costa and basal area are greyish-black. The hindwings have some black marginal spots, the posterior ones usually oblong and much larger than the others on veins 2-4. There is some greyish-black dusting at the base. Females are greyish-black, the forewings with a series of seven indistinct whitish submarginal spots, the anterior three narrower than in the males.
Antennae over l, pale greyish. Thorax light purplish grey, anterior margin black. Forewings elongate, costa gently arched, apex obtuse, termen very obliquely rounded; deep greyish purple, cilia pale grey. Hindwings purplish-bronzy grey; cilia light grey.
The forewings are dark brown to greyish brown with more or less distinct chestnut-coloured and darker brown markings. The hindwings are pale greyish white. Adults have been recorded on wing in February, March and August.
The forewings are greyish brown with most scales white or beige at the base and brown to dark brown apically. The hindwings are pale greyish brown. Adults have been recorded on wing in January and March.
The ground colour of the forewings is pale ochraceous buff with scattered greyish fuscous irroration (fine streaks). The hindwings are pale buff, mottled with greyish fuscous., 1980, Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society 34 (2): 182-186.
The postmedial band is also dark greyish brown and crosses the wing. The median band and subterminal band are paler yellowish brown. The hindwings are uniform greyish brown. The main flight period is May to July.
Blastobasis basipectenella is a moth in the family Blastobasidae. It is found in Thailand. The length of the forewings is 6–6.1 mm. The forewings have greyish-brown and pale greyish-brown scales, each tipped with white.
Platystoma seminationis can reach a body length of . In these flies the interocular space and the epistomes are black and the eyes are reddish-brown. Thorax is greyish. The wings are translucent, greyish brown, with light spots.
8; Pl.54 The forewings are light greyish ochreous, sometimes faintly grey mottled. There is a cloudy elongate greyish mark in the disc at two-thirds, usually more or less perceptible. The hindwings are whitish grey.Exotic Microlep.
The dark greyish-brown forewings are oblong. The greyish-brown costa is gently curved, with seven pairs of very narrow white transverse lines. The apex is sub-rectangular. The middle dorsum has an equilateral triangular white spot.
The forewings are ochreous mixed with white. The hindwings are greyish-fuscous.
The feet were greyish brown. Males and females were not sexually dimorphic.
It is slightly tinged greyish terminally. The hindwings are dark and brown.
The hindwings are transparent, cream white with a few greyish strigulae terminally.
The hindwings are greyish white. The larvae possibly feed on Quercus lobata.
The spore print is dark greyish brown. It is listed as inedible.
The forewings are grey scaled and the hindwings are greyish-black scaled.
The lighter female has greyish streaks on the sides of the abdomen.
The hindwings are also greyish brown, but slightly paler than the forewings.
Larvae can be found from autumn to spring and are greyish-white.
The forewings are uniform dark greyish brown. The hindwings are dark brown.
The back and rump are mainly white, sometimes blotched with black, and the tail is black with white barring on the outer feathers. The iris is brown, the beak is greyish-black and the legs are greyish-olive.
The wingspan is 23.5 mm. The forewings are greyish brown, spotted with blackish brown. There are some whitish spots, mainly along the costa. The hindwings are dirty whitish, mixed with greyish apicad and strigulaed (finely streaked) with grey.
Outer margin is greyish. Larva with rudimentary first two abdominal proleg pairs. Body greyish white above and olive-grey below, with black spots in somewhat linear series on each somite. A reddish lateral spot found on fourth somite.
Outer margin is greyish. Larva with rudimentary first two abdominal proleg pairs. Body greyish white above and olive-grey below, with black spots in somewhat linear series on each somite. A reddish lateral spot found on fourth somite.
The dusky eagle-owl is a large greyish-brown owl with prominent ear tufts. Its underparts are greyish white with some dark brown streaks, and its dark brown wings have some whitish streaks. It is about in size.
The length of the forewings is about 9 mm for females. The forewings are greyish white, with numerous greyish brown and brown scales. The hindwings are white, with numerous dark scales. Adults have been recorded on wing in March.
The wingspan is 8-15.5 mm. The head is grey to greyish brown and the frons is greyish white. The thorax and tegula are dark brown. The forewing is narrow and the costal and dorsal margins are nearly parallel.
The upper parts are greyish buff and the flanks greyish brown. The underparts are buffy white. The tail is short, being about half the length of the head and body. It is bicoloured, being black above and buff below.
The young lizards are similarly coloured but often have a greyish-green tail.
The hindwings are cream, basally suffused with greyish brown mainly on the periphery.
The remaining area is brown. The hindwings are greyish brown, but whiter basally.
The hindwings are greyish brown, but paler basally, with traces of dark reticulation.
The hindwings are pale greyish beige. Adults are on wing in early February.
The hindwings are whitish, but cream posteriorly and with greyish strigulation (fine streaks).
The hindwings are greyish cream in the posterior half, diffusely spotted brownish grey.
The hindwings are greyish brown with a pattern of fine darker brown lines.
The bases are faintly greyish. The hindwing upperside has an interrupted yellow band.
The hindwings are greyish brown. Larvae were reared on Pinus arizonica var. copperi.
The hindwings are pale greyish brown with a pattern of darker brown lines.
The whole body is bronzed-brownish or auburn- purplish, with a greyish pubescence.
The underside of both wings is light greyish with an indistinct discal spot.
The hindwings are pale greyish-ochreous, becoming yellowish towards the apex. Females have light ochreous-yellow forewings and glossy greyish-ochreous hindwings. The larvae feed on Lyonia and Ribes species., 1998: The Japanese species of the genus Adoxophyes Meyrick (Lepidoptera, Tortricidae).
The habitat consists of the Valdivian Forest Biotic Province. The length of the forewings is about 8.5 mm for males. The forewings are dark grey, with a greyish black triangular mark on the costa. The basal area is greyish black.
The forewings are black above vein two and the terminal area is more greyish and extends onto the termen, the rest of the wing is subhyaline (almost glass like) white. The hindwings are subhyaline white, slightly greyish next to the termen.
The back is grey-green. The uppertail is dark blue-green, and the undertail is chestnut. The throat is vinous, the breast is greyish-vinous, and the belly is greyish-fawn. The beak is slaty- blue, having a black tip.
The ground colour of the forewings is mostly white, but sometimes greyish white or yellowish white and even brown in one specimen. The hindwings are silky white with many greyish brown transverse lines. Adults are on wing in November and December.
Review and full article: The length of the forewings is 4–5.5 mm. The forewings have greyish brown scales tipped with white intermixed with greyish-brown and white scales. The hindwings are translucent pale brown, gradually darkening towards the apex.
Review and full article: The length of the forewings is 3.5–4.9 mm. The forewings are pale greyish brown intermixed with few greyish-brown scales, with no distinct markings. The hindwings are translucent pale brown, gradually darkening towards the apex.
The hindwings are greyish brown. The wings become dark grey brown to purplish towards the margin. The cilia are pale greyish brown with pale-grey tips. A dark subbasal band and a pale basal line are present on the hindwings.
Male, female. Forewing length 5.2–5.5 mm. Head: frons shining ochreous-white with greenish and reddish reflections, vertex and neck tufts shining greyish brown with reddish reflection, medially and laterally lined white, collar greyish brown; labial palpus first segment very short, white, second segment fourth-fifths of the length of third, white with a greyish-brown line dorsally and laterally on outside, basal one-third white dorsally, third segment white, lined dark brown laterally; scape dark brown with a white anterior line, white ventrally; antenna shining dark greyish brown, a white line from base to beyond one-half, at two-thirds an indistinct whitish ring of one segment. Thorax and tegulae greyish brown with reddish reflection, thorax with a white median line, tegulae lined white inwardly.
Male, female. Forewing length 3.6-3.7 mm. Head: frons shining pale ochreous, vertex and neck tufts shining greyish brown, laterally and medially lined white, collar greyish brown; labial palpus first segment very short, white, second segment three-quarters of the length of third, greyish brown with white longitudinal lines laterally and ventrally, third segment white, lined dark brown laterally, lines join dorsally just before apex; scape brown with a white anterior line, white ventrally, antenna shining dark brown, a white line from base to two-thirds, followed towards apex by white segments, two dark brown, two white, six dark brown, three white and two dark brown segments at apex. Thorax greyish brown with white median line, tegulae greyish brown, lined white inwardly.
Rüppell's horseshoe bat is a small microbat, although fairly large for an African species. The upper parts have grey to greyish brown fur, each individual hair having a pale greyish-brown or greyish-fawn shaft with a blackish tip. The underparts are slightly paler than the dorsal pelage. The ears are small and the noseleaf has a sub-triangular lancet with slightly concave sides and a rounded tip.
The habitat consists of the Northern Valdivian Forest Biotic Province. The length of the forewings is about 7.5 mm for males and 7-7.5 mm for females. The median area of the forewings is white or pale greyish white, contrasting with the dark brown basal area and faintly reddish brown distal area. The hindwings are greyish white, with dark brown scales basally and pale greyish brown scales distally.
The forewings are greyish wiiite, with a broad stripe of black scales filling the cell and beyond it. There is an oblique curved stripe of similar scales in the postmedian area and a trace of a subterminal one much interrupted. The hindwings are greyish white, with a slight patch of thin grey scales in the cellular area and a trace of a scaled greyish postmedial stripe.Bethune-Baker, G. T. 1915.
The incisors are pure white, straight and long and project forward in front of the snout. The dorsal surface of the body varies in colour from sandy brown to dark greyish brown and the underparts vary from white to greyish brown. The tail is sandy brown and is tipped with a tuft of greyish-white hair. The hands and feet are broad, have small claws and are covered with white hairs.
The fore- and hindwings are lustrous white, the forewings with the costa yellowish white, becoming greyish brown at the base. There are two pairs of broad pale greyish buff fasciae, nearly straight, the most distal line expanded at the costa and a narrow greyish brown terminal fascia. The hindwings have a similar pattern corresponding with the fasciae of forewings., 1968: A taxonomic revision of the genus Ditrigona (Lepidoptera: Drepanidae: Drepaninae).
The markings are black. The hindwings are greyish, tinged with brownish towards the termen.
The female bird is slightly duller than the male and has a greyish crown.
The wings are dark, greyish fuscous in males and paler, more yellowish in females.
The hindwings are whitish, tinged with pale brownish and with pale greyish-brown strigulation.
The markings are dark rust brown. The hindwings are dirty cream, spotted with greyish.
The female fody's upper parts are olive-brown and its underparts are greyish brown.
The hindwings are greyish brown, but paler basally and with an ochreous anal portion.
The forewings are speckled brown and the hindwings are greyish brown in both sexes.
The hindwings are pale greyish brown with thin darker brown lines toward the apex.
The hindwings are pale greyish brown with thin darker brown lines toward the apex.
The hindwings are pale greyish brown. Larvae were reared on Pinus arizonica var. copperi.
They have a dark head, with a dusty greyish- white and black-spotted body.
The forewings are shining bluish white, with an elongate bright orange patch preceding the apex and reaching the costa but not the dorsum. This is preceded by a slight greyish shade, which does not extend along its upper edge and is followed by a strong black apical spot. Before and below the spot is an outwardly curved greyish shade, partly enclosing an elongate silver-white oblique streak along the tornus. Alternate orange and greyish-fuscous lines diverge downwards from the apex through the upper half of the cilia, which are plain greyish white about the tornus.
Male, female. Forewing length 3.1-5.7 mm. Head: frons shining ochreous-white, vertex and neck tufts shining greyish brown with some reddish reflection, laterally and medially lined white, collar brown; labial palpus first segment very short, white, second segment three-quarters of the length of third, greyish brown with white longitudinal lines laterally and ventrally, third segment white, laterally lined dark brown; scape dark brown with a white anterior line, white ventrally, antenna from greyish brown in basal half, to shining dark grey in apical half, a white line from base to one-third, distal half interrupted, the apical section can be white, greyish white or dark grey, preceding by two, more or less distinct, white rings, especially in male specimens the white markings on the antennae are often greyish white and narrower than in female specimens. Thorax and tegulae greyish brown, thorax with a white median line, tegulae lined white inwardly.
The wingspan is 17–19 mm. The forewings are light greyish ochreous with a triangular greyish-violet blotch from the dorsum at two-fifths reaching more than half across the wing, edged anteriorly towards the dorsum by a white line terminating in a small orange scale-projection and preceded by some greyish- violet dorsal suffusion, the apex of the blotch connected with the costa before one-third by a greyish-violet line. There is a transverse-oval dark fuscous whitish-edged blotch on the end of the cell and a curved greyish- violet line from the middle of the costa passing just beyond this to the dorsum at four-fifths, its lower half thickened into a fasciate blotch. There is a greyish-violet line from the costa at three-fourths to the dorsum before the tornus, thickened and sinuate inwards near the costa, the space between this and the preceding tinged whitish towards the costa.
The top of the bill is yellow and the pouch is usually greyish. Breeding adults have long feather plumes on the head. It shares its habitat with the great white pelican, which is generally larger and has white instead of greyish plumage.
The forewings are white, with markings formed by pale greyish ocherous and greyish ocherous dark brown-tipped scales. The hindwings are grey, with a faint coppery luster. Adults have been recorded on wing in June and November. The larvae feed on Iva axillaris.
Holcocera extensa is a moth in the family Blastobasidae. It is found in South Africa.Afro Moths The length of the forewings is 8.2–8.5 mm. The forewings are greyish brown intermixed with greyish brown scales tipped with pale grey and pale grey scales.
The forewings are greyish white, scattered with greyish-brown scales forming transverse lines and spots. The hindwings are brownish grey.Ponomarenko, M. G. & Park, K. T. (1996). "Notes on some Tineids from Korea and Russian Far East, with description of four new species".
There are also blackish scattered scales, especially towards the apex. The costal fringes are light greyish and the dorsal fringes are more greyish proximally covered with light dorsal wing scales. The underside is dark grey. The hindwings are grey with grey fringes.
Scythris arachnodes is a moth of the family Scythrididae. It is found on the Canary Islands.Fauna Europaea The wingspan is 7–10 mm. The forewings are black, with a few greyish white scales at the base and two greyish white transverse bands.
The antemedial line is invisible and the discal spots are blackish brown and separated. The postmedial line is faint, greyish white and serrated. The terminal line is black and interrupted. The hindwings are greyish white, pale brown along the costa, termen and veins.
Bryotropha pallorella is a moth of the family Gelechiidae. It is found in Portugal, Spain, France, Corsica, Sardinia, Italy and Morocco. The wingspan is 11–13 mm. The forewings are greyish brown to dark greyish brown, weakly mottled with lighter and darker scales.
Emireh Point. From Meyrouba VI, Lebanon. Greyish-blue Jurassic flint, patinated to white. Upper Paleolithic.
The hindwings are greyish brown, but more cream at the costa and dotted with brown.
The markings are dark grey with black spots. The hindwings are whitish with greyish strigulations.
There are some fuscous scales, speckled along the inner margin. The hindwings are greyish yellow.
The forewings are dull greyish brown with a conspicuous discal dot and angled brown fasciae.
Forewing greyish brown. The caterpillar is known to feed on Ziziphus jujube and Ziziphus mauritiana.
The hindwing is greyish brown, without a discal spot and the underside is unicolorous grey.
The costa, apex and almost the entire termen are orange cream. The hindwings are greyish.
B. longinqua is slightly smaller (14 mm) with a greyish carapace and red-brown legs.
The forewings are white, irregularly irrorated (sprinkled) with light ochreous grey and with the discal stigmata forming small greyish spots, a subtriangular blotch of light grey suffusion resting on the fold between these. The costal edge is suffused with grey on the median third and there is an angulated white subterminal shade clear of greyish irroration. The posterior part of the costa and termen is obscurely spotted greyish. The hindwings are light grey.
There is a large greyish shade on the subcosta beyond the postmedian line, interrupted by a whitish oblique hue on the subcostal and there is an apical whitish marking, defined on the inside by a greyish shade on the subcostal. The apical streak is angulated and the terminal line is blackish. There is a series of thin lunules at the end of the cellules. The hindwings are pale greyish ochreous, the outer area darker.
The ground colour is greyish brown to dark brown. The hindwing and cilia are greyish brown and the abdomen is grey, although the first two segments are shining white. It is similar to Conopomorpha litchiella, but distinguishable by the uniformly greyish brown to dark brown forewing with three pairs of stripes and differences in the genitalia. Furthermore, in Conopomorpha litchiella, the forewing is whitish yellow in distal portion and the larva is yellowish green.
Upperside greyish brown. Forewing with the usual comparatively large, bi-pupilled, yellow-ringed, black preapical ocellus. Hindwing usually with two, sometimes with three, very rarely without any, smaller similar uni-pupilled postdiscal ocelli. Underside greyish white, not very densely covered with transverse short brown striae.
The forewings of the males are greyish to black brown, mottled with light yellow or light greyish scales. The hindwings are light grey. They have black-brown forewings, mottled with yellow and light brown scales. The hindwings light grey, but darker at the apex.
The wingspan is 19–23 mm for males and 16–18 mm for females. The forewings are clay-brown to greyish brown, mottled with light greyish, yellow brown and some black scales. The hindwings are grey. Adults are on wing from June to September.
Aroga websteri is a moth of the family Gelechiidae. It is found in North America, where it has been recorded from Washington.Aroga at funetmothphotographersgroup The wingspan is 14–16 mm. The forewings are sordid white, heavily stuffed with greyish-fuscous and overlying greyish-fuscous scales.
The forewings are yellowish brown, sprinkled with black and greyish white scales and three small scale tufts near the base, around them greyish white mixed with black scales. The costal margin has scale tufts at one-fourth, halfway and two-thirds. The hindwings are grey.
The forewing costa is greyish red. The basal area is grayish red in males and pearly greyish white in females. The hindwings are translucent smoky. Adults have been recorded on wing in March, May and November in the Dominican Republic and in July in Cuba.
The underparts and the sides of the long tail are white. Females are greyish black above and greyish white. Young birds have scaly brown upperparts and head. The nominate race is found on the Indian subcontinent and the females of this race are the palest.
Xanthophyllum neglectum grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The smooth bark is greyish, greenish brown or dark green. The flowers are white or yellowish, drying pale brownish. The greyish green fruits are round and measure up to in diameter.
Retrieved July 15, 2017. The wingspan is about 19 mm. The forewings are creamy, partially finely dusted with pale greyish fuscous, not dusted towards the costa anteriorly and between the veins elsewhere. The dorsal area below the fold is evenly suffused with pale greyish fuscous.
Alluvial soils are greyish yellow to brownish yellow in colour and occupy along the major rivers.
The underside is more greyish, with discal spots, postmedials and a broad, dark grey submarginal band.
The forewings are greyish ochreous with brassy reflections. The hindwings are dark grey with metallic reflections.
The short, greyish leaves and softly hairy sepals and petals distinguish this species from similar verticordias.
The hindwings are cream, somewhat tinged brownish in the apex area and dotted with greyish brown.
There is also a large triagonal brownish suffusion on the tornus. The hindwings are greyish brown.
The basal half of the costa is suffused with dark brown. The hindwings are dark greyish.
Females are larger and have paler forewings, varying from dirty yellowish white to light greyish brown.
The flesh is greyish-brown, darker near the base of the stem, and smells of fenugreek.
The markings are dark brown. The hindwings are creamy, but greyish brown from beyond the middle.
After preparation, they are greyish. Rooster combs are often served in Chinese dim sum style dishes.
The forewings are glossy smoke grey with a sepia streak. The hindwings are glossy greyish olive.
The thorax and abdomen are greyish brown and the forewings have a grey-brown ground colour.
The underside of the hindwing is greyish brown, with a discal spot and a postmedian line.
They have greyish fur, and a small nose-leaf. Like many bats, they roost in caves.
The species has a brown cephalothorax long and an abdomen long with a whitish-greyish pattern.
The hindwings are greyish brown. The larva feeds on seeds in the fruit of Phyllanthus microcarpus.
The coat is variously described as sandy, tawny or greyish with brown, chestnut or "faded" rosettes.
The hindwings are dark greyish brown with a purplish gloss. A pale basal line is present.
The hindwings are uniformly pale greyish brown. The larvae are most likely plant detritivores or lichenivorous.
The wingspan is about 27 mm. The forewings are whitish-ochreous, with the dorsal three-fifths faintly greyish-tinged and the extreme costal edge whitish. The stigmata are dark grey, the plical small, obscure and rather obliquely beyond the first discal. There are two or three greyish dots in an oblique series from a small spot of greyish suffusion on the costa just before the middle to the second discal and there is a very oblique hardly excurved series of six grey dots from beneath the costa at two-thirds to near the termen in the middle, then angulated and continued as a faint dotted greyish line to the tornus.
The forewings are hoary greyish, with slight greyish- fuscous speckled shading. There is a small elongate blackish spot at the base of the costa and a blackish transverse spot on the fold at one-fourth from the base, followed by a smaller length-spot in the fold. There is also an outwardly oblique greyish fuscous shade at the middle of the costa, mixed with some chestnut scales, terminating in a slender curved line on the outer end of the cell. Before the apex is a slender hoary whitish transverse fascia, slightly angulated outwards on the middle and preceded by a greyish-fuscous shade mixed with some chestnut.
The forewings are ochreous orange with scattered deep greyish-purple scales and scattered deep greyish-purple strigulae on the costa, blackish on the edge. There is a spot of deep greyish- purple suffusion on the fold at one-fourth, as well as three narrow irregular deep greyish-purple fasciae, the first before the middle, rather oblique, hardly reaching the dorsum, the second at three-fourths, somewhat inwards oblique from the costa and the third terminal. The stigmata is dark grey, the first discal beyond the first fascia, the plical absorbed in this fascia, the second discal absorbed in the second fascia. The hindwings are grey.
Head and thorax greyish suffused with fuscous. Abdomen orange fulvous with slight greyish tuft at base. Forewings grey suffused with fuscous slightly and with a green tinge in some places. Somewhat indistinct waved sub-basal, oblique medial, postmedial and irregular sub-marginal dark lines can be seen.
The forewings are light yellow to greyish yellow, with greyish shadows. Adult males have been observed sucking perspiration from the skin of humans and lachrymation (tears) at the eye of an elephant. It has also been observed sucking on blood droplets exuded by mosquitoes on elephants.
The habitat consists of the Southern Pacific Biotic Province. The length of the forewings is about 8.5 mm for males. The forewings are pale greyish white, with dark brown areas on the costa at the base. The hindwings are greyish white, with numerous grey and brown scales.
There is a white or pale-ochreous streak from the base to one third of the wing, margined beneath by a dark-fuscous blotch. The forewings of the females are almost wholly suffused with greyish fuscous. The hindwings are greyish fuscous. The larvae feed on Potamogeton species.
The cap is dull yellow and wide, initially convex, later flat, or slightly depressed. The cap margin becomes furrowed when mature, and it is two-thirds peeling. The gills are white to greyish white, and are adnexed. The stipe is long, wide, cylindrical, white or later greyish.
Batocera humeridens is a large long-horn beetle reaching of length. The basic colour of the body is dark greyish with clearer greyish dorsal irregular spots on the elytra usually four on each elytron. Pronotum show two red depressions on both sides of the median line.
Phtheochroa lonnvei is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Ethiopia. The wingspan is about 25 mm. The forewings are white, suffused with greyish brown along the costa and with greyish brown strigulation (fine streaks) in the fold and along the dorsum.
Review and full article: The length of the forewings is 3.8–6 mm. The forewings have greyish- brown scales tipped with white intermixed with greyish-brown scales and white scales. The hindwings are translucent pale brown, gradually darkening from a third of the length to the apex.
Male of Anthomyia procellaris, dorsal view Anthomyia procellaris can reach a length of . These small flies show velvety black on greyish markings, with three black spots on the center of the thorax. The eyes are bare and the proboscis is robust. The abdomen is mainly greyish.
Bryotropha gallurella is a moth of the family Gelechiidae. It is found in Portugal, Spain, southern France, Corsica, Sardinia, Sicily and Italy. The wingspan is 11–14 mm. The forewings are greyish brown to dark greyish brown, the central part heavily mixed with ochreous to ochreous brown.
Acleris emargana has a wingspan of 18–22 mm. It is a quite variable species. The forewings are greyish brown or yellow ochreous, lightly translucent, usually more or less notched and hooked on the costa, with a reticulated (net-like) pattern. Hindwings are greyish and translucent.
The wingspan is about 25 mm. The forewings are ochreous-white, sprinkled with light greyish-ochreous and with three small blackish spots on the costa at one-fourth, before the middle, and at two-thirds. The first discal stigma is small and black, with an arched pale greyish-ochreous cloud adjacent to it beneath. The plical and second discal are represented by white transverse ridge-tufts, the latter followed by a round pale greyish-ochreous cloud.
The forewings are white with a greyish- ochreous subcostal streak from the base to beyond the middle and black basal and subbasal dots on the costa. The lines are pale greyish ochreous, broad and fascia like. There is a round black discal spot and a black dot on the costa, and another, whitish centred, on the costal end of the second line. There is a pale greyish-ochreous hindmarginal streak, preceded by a black dot below middle.
Eucalyptus rosacea is a mallee that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has smooth greyish bark that is shed in ribbons to reveal pinkish or yellowish new bark. Young plants and coppice regrowth have dull, greyish, linear leaves that are long and wide. Adult leaves are arranged alternately, the same shade of dull greyish to bluish green on both sides, linear to narrow oblong, long and wide, tapering to a petiole long.
The fringe and costa are white and the forewings have a double greyish-brown postmedial fascia, continuing medial in position to the hind edge. The inner postmedial fascia is lunulate and the outer postmedial fascia usually broken. There is a greyish-brown subterminal fascia, which is sometimes reduced to spots between the veins and there are dark brown terminal spots between the veins. The hindwings have the same greyish-brown fasciae as the forewings, but continuous.
The Abyssinian crimsonwing is a small, shy greyish olive finch with bright crimson wings, mantle, back and rump. It is sexually dimorphic. In the males the head and upper mantle are greyish olive apart from the blackish lores, while the rest of the upper parts, except for the short, rounded, black tail, are deep crimson. The chin is dull yellow and the rest of the underparts are greyish- olive, with some flank feathers having red tips.
The moths are about 19–24 mm in size and have greyish-silvery wings with black spots.
The limbs are grey or brown above and cream below, while the tail is uniformly greyish brown.
The hindwings are white, tinged with cream and strigulated (finely streaked) with greyish in the apex area.
The remaining area is suffused with grey-brown and dark brown. The hindwings are dark greyish brown.
The hindwings are thinly scaled and greyish white.Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia. 44: 65.
The strigulation and suffusions are pale brown. The hindwings are brownish cream, densely spotted with greyish brown.
The hindwings are greyish, becoming fuscous tinged posteriorly.Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia. 44: 66.
The forewings are light brownish ochreous and the hindwings are greyish ochreous.Exotic Microlepidoptera. 4 (2-4): 80.
The hindwings are pale greyish, with the apex slightly tinged with whitish ochreous.Exotic Microlepidoptera. 4 (1): 38.
It tends to be larger than typical sakers and has red-backed, brownish and greyish colour varieties.
Singularia walsinghami is a moth in the family Pterophoridae and is found in North America (including Colorado). The wingspan is 25–26 mm. The head, thorax and abdomen are greyish white. The legs are pale brown and the fore wings are greyish white, brownish along the extreme costal margin.
Spilonota grandlacia is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in New Caledonia in the south-west Pacific Ocean. The wingspan is about 14 mm. The ground colour of the forewings is greyish white, with a whiter dorsal patch and greyish costal strigulae (fine streaks).
The throat, cheast, and belly are greyish white with some greyish yellow reticulation on the belly. Male Micrixalus herrei have a single vocal sac and a nuptial pad on the first finger. Characteristic for the genus, they display the foot-flagging behaviour. Male-male combats also involve kicking.
Full article: where it is known from Mount Elgon in the western highlands. The length of the forewings is 6.8 mm. The forewings are greyish brown, intermixed with greyish brown scales tipped with pale grey, pale grey scales and a few dark brown scales. The hindwings are pale grey.
The palpi and thorax are greyish-ochreous. The forewings are greyish-ochreous, although the second discal stigma is dark fuscous. The hindwings are light grey.A Taxonomic Review of the Coleophoridae (Lepidoptera) Of The Indian Subcontinent and Sri Lanka Described by Edward Meyrick The larvae feed on Strobilanthes species.
The forewings are pale greyish ochre with a dark olive terminal and subterminal line. There is a sepia discal spot in the cell and there are several olive faded lines. The hindwings are pale greyish ochre, with a faded reticulated pattern of strong olive.Lehmann, I.; Rajaei Sh., H. (2013).
The rear of the neck is from a brownish orange to a yellowish brown. Wing-coverts acquire a greyish-brown coloration accompanied with dense spotted yellowish to greyish brown. Scapulars are blackish brown. In males sometimes white and in females sometimes a yellowish-brown mark around the lower throat.
The dark dorsal area is overlaid avellaneous (dull greyish brown) in the central part and from the apex to vein 5 is an ill-defined, quadrate chrome-yellow area. The hindwings are whitish ochreous, basally shading to pale brown at the apex and greyish fuscous in the anal area.
The stem is tall, in diameter, and narrowest at center. It is hollow, and has an abruptly bulbous base that is between in diameter. The surface of the stem above the level of the ring is white and covered in woolly tufts of mycelia; below the ring it is white with buff to greyish transverse, grooved bands. The base may or may not have a rim of volval remnants that are powdery, and a greyish-buff to greyish-sepia colour.
The forewings are ashy grey, with sparsely scattered greyish fuscous speckling, the usual spots are not more noticeable than other specks. Near the base of the dorsum is an outwardly oblique greyish fuscous shade, rising to a little above the fold. A slight clouding of the same colour appears at the commencement of the costal and dorsal cilia respectively, the anteterminal portion of the wing beyond it being slightly paler than the general hue. The hindwings are greyish brown.Biol. centr.-amer. Lep.
The forewings are yellow to greyish yellow, with scattered greyish-brown scales. The costal margin is dark brown, except for the distal quarter. There is a dark brown fascia from the costal two-thirds to the dorsal two-fifths, as well as black scale tufts at the middle of the cell and at the middle of the fold, two black scale tufts at the end of the cell and a broad dark brown fascia terminally. The hindwings are greyish white to grey.
Eucalyptus roycei is a mallee or a small tree that typically that grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has rough fibrous or flaky greyish bark at the base, smooth greyish to cream-coloured bark above. Young plants and coppice regrowth have egg-shaped to lance-shaped leaves that are long and wide. Adult leaves are the same shade of dull greyish green on both sides, lance-shaped to curved, long and wide, tapering to a petiole long.
Eucalyptus oxymitra is a mallee that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has rough, imperfectly shed ribbons of greyish brown bark on the trunk, smooth grey to cream-coloured bark on the branches. Young plant and coppice regrowth have greyish blue, egg-shaped leaves that are long and wide. Adult leaves are the same shade of dull, greyish green on both sides, lance- shaped to egg-shaped, long and wide, tapering to a petiole long.
The colour is yellowish cream posteriorly where greyish and pinkish-brown suffusions occur. The hindwings are brownish grey.
The remaining area is suffused brown, dotted with dark brown and ferruginous. The hindwings are dark greyish brown.
The hindwings are greyish white anteriorly, becoming dark grey distally. Adults have been recorded on wing in October.
Legs greyish brown and hairy. Femora dorsally yellowish. Abdomen pentagonal and hairy. Dorsum yellowish with brown transverse bands.
C. c. cinclus has a black belly band. The young are greyish brown and have no chestnut band.
The apical half of the wing has a light chocolate-brown patch. The hindwings are pale greyish-fuscous.
The hindwings are greyish cream, but pale basally and mixed brownish grey and spotted in the distal half.
Madhuca palembanica grows up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish brown.
The hindwings are pale greyish brown with a faint darker line.Systematics and phylogeny of Sparganothina and related taxa.
The craft's interior was described as black with a greyish tint, similar to that of the creatures' outfits.
The wing areas show whitish or yellowish with dark spots near to hatching and the body becomes greyish.
Abstract and full article: . The length of the forewings is about 9 mm. The ground colour is greyish.
Juveniles have a greyish- brown colouration, similar to that of the females, with a blotchy or spotted chest.
A very small Subsaharan Myotis, with a forearm length of 37 mm, brown dorsal and greyish ventral pelage.
The snout is also greyish-green. The hind limbs have obscure cross-bands. The ventral surfaces are yellowish.
The wingspan is about 14 mm. The forewings are white, with the dorsal half greyish-ochreous, its upper edge partly suffused blackish-grey and a small dark grey spot on the base of the costa, as well as a blackish-grey acutely angulated line from the middle of the dorsum to the fold. There is a short oblique irregular greyish-ochreous streak from the edge of the greyish- ochreous half on the end of the cell and a light ochreous oblique line from the costa at four-fifths to the greyish-ochreous area. A small light grey spot is found on the termen above this area and there are three black marginal dots around the apex.
The wingspan is about 16 mm. The forewings are white with the costal edge greyish from the base to beyond one-fourth, with a darker spot at the extremity and a slight greyish projection midway between this and the base. There are small faint greyish median and subdorsal spots near the base and a rather large oval blackish spot in the disc at one-third, beneath this three irregular subdorsal spots of pale grey suffusion sprinkled blackish. Some pale grey suffusion is found in the middle of the disc, and a larger blotch towards the middle of the dorsum, as well as two greyish dots transversely placed on the end of the cell.
The wingspan is 14–16 mm. The forewings are white, with the inner and hindmarginal portions of the disc more or less suffused with greyish and with the costal edge fuscous towards the base. There is a narrow fuscous line along the fold and a longitudinal fuscous line in the central third of the disc, as well as an outwardly oblique greyish line from the costa at two-thirds towards the hindmargin, sharply bent in the disc and continued to the anal angle, posteriorly this line is margined with white, anteriorly it is more or less lost in the greyish suffusion. There is also a short fuscous longitudinal streak from the apex and a greyish suffusion along the hindmargin.
Male, female. Forewing length 4.9 mm. Head: frons shining pale silvery grey with greenish and reddish reflections; vertex and neck tufts shining dark greyish brown with reddish gloss, laterally and medially lined white, collar shining dark greyish brown with reddish gloss; labial palpus first segment very short, ochreous-white, second segment three-quarters of the length of third, greyish brown with white longitudinal lines laterally and ventrally, third segment white, laterally with brown lines; scape dorsally dark greyish brown with a white anterior line, ventrally white, antenna shining dark brown with an interrupted white line from base to beyond one-half, a short section at base often uninterrupted, followed towards apex by approximately ten dark brown segments, nine white, ten dark brown and seven white segments at apex. Thorax and tegulae shining dark greyish brown with reddish gloss, thorax with a white medial line and tegulae lined white inwardly.
The forewings are three times longer than wide, the apex rounded and the termen bluntly oblique. The ground colouration is greyish brown to brownish black, mixed with reddish brown and greyish white. The antemedian line is white, edged with erect black scales along the outside. The hindwings are pale grey.
The body and forewings are pale greyish olive to pale greyish buff. The abdomen is completely unmarked. The apex of the forewing is blunter than in other species and the termen is more rounded. The forewings have a number of diffuse irregular transverse lines and a very small pale stigma.
The basal two-fifths of the forewings is dark brown and the distal three-fifths greyish brown. There is a yellow spot at the distal one-third of the costal margin and an inconspicuous dark brown fascia from the costal three-fourths to near the tornus. The hindwings are greyish brown.
Rarely exceeding 6 m in height, has a single central leader and strong ascending branches forming a pyramidal crown. The leaves are a lustrous dark green, turning yellow to orange in autumn. The mottled bark ranges from greyish orange to greyish brown. The tree is reputed to be very fast growing.
The habitat consists of the Central Valley Biotic Province. The length of the forewings is about 8.5 mm for males and 10 mm for females. The forewings are brown, with greyish brown and reddish brown scaling. The hindwings are pale greyish white anteriorly, with grey and blackish brown scales posteriorly.
Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology 630: 1-77. Full article: The habitat consists of coastal lowlands, eastern midaltitudes and the western highlands. The length of the forewings is 6–9.2 mm. The forewings are greyish brown intermixed with pale brown and dark brown, or pale brown basally and greyish brown distally.
Their antennae are light brown and have half the length of the forewings. The abdomen is greyish black, the forewings greyish black-brown. The hindwings are black brown at their base with an edge of one-fifth of the wing in bright yellow. The underside of wings is whitish grey yellow.
The wingspan is 25–27 mm. There are two colour varieties in the species; albicollis is the greyish form and varians is the reddish form. Head, thorax and abdomen of males are pale or dark reddish brown. Forewings are pale reddish brown or greyish, with two antemedial curved waved lines.
The discal spot is greyish white, circled with black. The forewing underside is densely shaded with greyish-white scaling and two vestigial discal lines. The hindwing upperside is dirty white. The hindwing underside is as the upperside, but with some scattered brown scales, which are more numerous in the female.
The wingspan is 15–19 mm. The forewing is long, broad and light grey, with a prominent black medial area. The underside is greyish and brown, while the underside of the forewing is dark brownish and the underside of the hindwing greyish. The discal spot and postmedial line are well marked.
The wingspan is 13–15 mm. The forewing is long, broad, light grey and black. The upper part of the medial area is black in a triangular patch. The underside is greyish and brown, but the underside of the forewing is dark brownish and the underside of the hindwing greyish.
The greyish piculet (Picumnus granadensis) is a species of bird in the family Picidae. It is endemic to Colombia.
The veins, apex and outer margin are black. The hindwings are semihyaline greyish white, the veins and margins black.
The underside of the abdomen is yellow, greyish medially and laterally reddish. The forewing upperside has a marginal band.
The feet are greyish-green. Females are similar to males but with some primary coverts green instead of red.
The underparts are greyish-olive, the belly being tinged with yellow. The juvenile is similar to the adult female.
The forewings are greyish, mixed with brownish in the costal half and basal area. The hindwings are brownish grey.
Abstract: The wingspan is about 21 mm. The forewings are pale brownish grey and hindwings are light greyish brown.
The upper side is greyish-brown and the underside is white. The common sole approaches a maximum length of .
There is also a record for Quercus. They are slender and longitudinally banded in various shades of greyish brown.
Antenna pale ochreous. Thorax pale greyish ochreous. Abdomen pale grey with pale orange anal tuft. Forewings narrow and oblong.
1-5, Mar. 1912-Nov. 1937, page: 8 Male 32 mm. Head and thorax pale greyish- ocherous. Abdomen grey.
Its wingspan is about 36–40 mm. Head and thorax dark red brown. Abdomen greyish fuscous. Forewings purplish grey.
There are vague greyish length lines and the surface is dusty. Full-grown larvae can be found in May.
The fins are all uniformly greyish, with some presence of dots on the rays of the second dorsal fin.
Wingspan . Head, thorax and palpi ochreous. Antennae fuscous, basal 1/5 (in basal 1/3) ochreous. Abdomen greyish-fuscous.
The shell often becomes greyish white to salmon-orange when adult, with a light tan or dark brown periostracum.
The marginal band has an irregular proximal edge. The hindwing upperside is reddish-brown with a greyish marginal band.
Teeth slender, generally straight and slightly curved inwards. Body brownish to slightly greyish in color. Dorsum darker than belly.
The hindwings are pale yellowish, towards the dorsum greyish tinged.Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 18 (3): 638.
Colias marcopolo is one of the smaller species. Upperside of male pale sulphur yellow, with a not very broad greyish black distal marginal band and a nonconspicuous large yellow spot on the hindwing, but without a black middle spot on the forewing. Underside of forewing dirty yellow, with greyish-green distal margin; hindwing darker greyish green, with whitish middle spot. The female is yolk colour above and below, the distal marginal band being broader and having the inner edge diffuse, the forewing bearing yellow submarginal spots.
The forewings are pale ochreous yellowish, with the costa minutely strigulated with blackish from the base to three small blackish marks at two-thirds. There is some grey sprinkling along the dorsum and a roundish spot of greyish suffusion in the disc at one-fifth. The stigmata is dark fuscous, the plical beneath the first discal. There is also a transverse median patch of light greyish suffusion crossing the wing but not reaching the costa, as well as some greyish strigulation crossing the wing at three-fourths.
The habitat consists of the Intermediate Desert, Coquimban Desert, Central Valley and Northern Valdivian Forest biotic provinces. The length of the forewings is about 8.5-9.1 mm for females. The forewings are greyish brown, with dull reddish brown scaling in the median area, along the cubital vein and at the vein endings. The hindwings are pale greyish white, with a variable number of grey and greyish brown scales and with an area of black scaling on the anal margins opposite the black abdominal segment.
The forewings are fuscous with an indistinct blackish dot beneath the costa near the base. The stigmata are blackish, partially edged with light greyish ochreous, the plical larger, obliquely before the first discal. The costa is somewhat suffused with pale greyish ochreous towards the middle and there is a suffused pale greyish-ochreous spot on the costa at about three- fourths, with faint traces of a curved transverse line rising from it. The hindwings are grey, becoming paler and tinged with whitish ochreous towards the base.
Eucalyptus oldfieldii is mallee or tree with a sprawling, spreading habit, typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has smooth, mottled greyish or brownish bark, often with ribbons of imperfectly shed bark near the base. Young plants and coppice regrowth have dull greyish green, broadly lance-shaped to egg-shaped leaves that are long and wide. Adult leaves are arranged alternately, the same shade of dull green to greyish green on both sides, lance-shaped, long and wide, tapering to a petiole long.
Eucalyptus preissiana is a mallee that typically grows to a height of with a sprawling habit, and forms a lignotuber. It has smooth, greyish and brown bark. Young plants and coppice regrowth have stems that are square in cross-section and elliptical to egg-shaped leaves that are the greyish green, long, wide and arranged in opposite pairs. Adult leaves are sometimes arranged alternately, the same shade of dull greyish green on both sides, elliptical to egg-shaped or oblong, long and wide on a petiole long.
Black marks under eyes are unique and distinguish it from other species. Vent and under-tail coverts red or pink. Iris chestnut, beak blackish and legs grey. The juvenile is duller, greyish-black above, and with vent and under-tail areas less vivid and crown greyish with some red (in both sexes).
The face is whitish with a black moustache which unites with a stripe on the edge of the breast. The throat, breast and belly are greyish-yellow or greyish-buff, boldly streaked with black. The under tail coverts are red. The iris is chestnut and the beak is grey, long and sharply pointed.
The feet are long with three functioning toes, bare palms and strong claws. The back and sides of the animal are yellowish- or greyish- brown and the underparts greyish-white. The tail has a few bristles and scales and is brown above and white below. Its karyotype has 2n = 40 and FN = 80.
The plumage of M. f. fascinans includes a greyish breast with white on the bottom half, its head and back is greyish-brown, while its wings are a darker brown with white edges. The bill is black, it has a narrow eye-line and a buff alula stripe. The tail of M. f.
The forewings are light yellow to greyish yellow, with greyish shadows. Adult males have been observed sucking perspiration from the skin of humans and lachrymal fluids (tears) near the eye of Indian elephants. Other specimens flew around elephants or sucked elephants' body fluids from the vegetation onto which they had been smeared.
The wingspan of Pandemis cerasana can reach 16–25 mm.UK Moths Forewings ground colour ranges from pale ocher yellow to greyish brown with a large dark chestnut brown V marking and a dark brown lateral spot. The outer margin of forewings is sinuous, slightly oblique. The hind wings are almost uniform greyish brown.
Blastobasis byrsodepta is a moth in the family Blastobasidae. It is found in South Africa and the Democratic Republic of Congo.Afro Moths The length of the forewings is 6–7 mm. The forewings are greyish brown, the scales tipped with white intermixed with pale greyish brown scales tipped with white and brown scales.
The forewings are light greyish ochreous, with a faint pinkish tinge, the costal area slightly darker and the costal edge white except towards the extremities. The discal stigmata are minute, fuscous, placed on a very undefined median-longitudinal streak of whitish suffusion. The hindwings are pale greyish, suffused with whitish towards the base.
They are greyish-white, liberally speckled with greyish rusty-coloured spots, sometimes in a darker band round the egg. They measure about . Incubation lasts for about twelve days and is done exclusively by the female. She also feeds the chicks when they first hatch with the male joining in as they grow.
The base, median field and three marginal spots on the forewings are grey irrorated with brown scales. The antemedian and postmedian area and two marginal spots are white or greyish white. The hindwings are grey with a brownish suffusion and a wide, wavy greyish white transverse stripe. Adults are on wing in December.
The hindwing is light greyish and the terminal line brown. The fringes are basally beige and there is an indistinct discal spot. The underside is greyish and brown. The forewings have a well marked antemedial and postmedial line and a yellow costal streak and spots running from the antemedial line to the apex.
The greyish ears are from the notch to tip. The underside of the pelage is whitish, becoming a buff colour as it grades into the upper parts, the feet are also whitish. The hind foot is long. The upper surface of the tail is greyish, and distinctly contrasts the lighter coloured lower surface.
Epipsestis mediofusca is a moth in the family Drepanidae described by Yoshimoto in 1982. It is found in Nepal and Tibet, China. The wingspan is about 31 mm. The forewings are pale greyish ochreous, tinged with dark fuscous brown on the median area and with dark greyish ocher beyond the postmedian line.
The suffusions are pale ochreous and the costal strigulae (fine streaks) and spots are brownish. The hindwings are greyish brown.
Flowering occurs mainly from April to October and the fruits which follow are oval-shaped, greyish-white, hairy and long.
The hindwings are greyish brown., 1987: A study of chinese Archips Hübner,1822 (Lepidoptera:Tortricidae). Sinozoologia 5: 125-146. Full article: .
The hindwings are whitish, slightly suffused with greyish on the periphery and with a few grey strigulae near the apex.
The hindwings are greyish white anteriorly, becoming dark grey distally. Adults have been recorded on wing in October and November.
The dorsum is suffused with brownish with orange, green and brown scales. The hindwings are greyish brown with paler spots.
Alangium circulare grows as a tree up to tall. The smooth bark is grey-brown. The inflorescence is greyish pubescent.
The forewings are ochre yellow with a brown pattern and the hindwings are light yellow, with a greyish-brown margin.
The forewings are yellowish brown, the costa with a pale orange band along the margin. The hindwings are greyish orange.
The hindwings are dark greyish brown. Adults have been recorded on wing in February, March, April, May, October and December.
The forewings are greyish-olive with a tawny olive streak, edged black with minute white spots. The hindwings are fuscous.
The most common finding on ear examination is the presence of greyish white thick debris and heaviness in the ear.
The gills are greyish purple in the beginning, then brownish. The mushroom grows in coniferous forests for example near swamps.
The forewings are light greyish ochreous, irrorated (sprinkled) with fuscous and obscurely sprinkled with whitish. The hindwings are dark fuscous.
The margins of the leaves are spiny. The bark is greyish to black, finely cracked, and persists on the tree.
UKmoths The larvae feed on Cytisus, Genista and Ulex species.Moths and Butterflies of Europe and North Africa They are greyish.
The hindwings are greyish-ochreous, fuscous tinged around the apex.Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia. 25 (2): 85.
The species is and has white coloured wing undersides. Its hindwings are greyish with black spots. The abdomen is pinkish.
Hylicine leafhoppers are moderately robust insects and are brownish to greyish in colouration. They feed on Dicotyledon trees and shrubs.
In the female, the thorax and forewings are yellowish. The postmedial line is more distinct and anal tufts are greyish.
Cilia cinereous, darker around apex. Hindwings narrow and pointed, colour greyish fuscous. Cilia light fuscous with a white basal band.
The antennae are spotted with grey and fuscous. The thorax and abdomen are greyish, sprinkled with fuscous. The legs are greyish white, tinged on the segments and on the tips of the spurs with fuscous. The forewings are grey, slightly spotted with white and dusted with fuscous scales, the hind portion touched with ferruginous.
The orange-eyed flatbill grows to a length of about . It has olive upper parts and a greyish crown. The facial area, throat and chest are greyish-buff and the belly yellowish. The iris is orange, and this and the buff throat is distinctive and helps distinguish this bird from other species in the genus.
Acleris undulana, the cedar leaf moth, is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Spain, on Cyprus,Fauna Europaea as well as in Asia Minor, Syria and Russia (Altai).Acleris at funet The wingspan is 12–14 mm. The forewings are pale greyish cinereous (ash grey), with greyish transverse shading.
The forewings are greyish brown, with scattered greyish-white and black scales and with the costal margin fuscous. There are short obscure streaks, as well as an irregular blotch at the base, the middle and the end of the cell. The hindwings are grey with scattered brown scales.Li, Houhun; Zheng, Zhemin & Wang, Hongjian (1997).
The head and thorax are greyish-ochreous, with a white line above the eyes. The thorax is sometimes white-sprinkled. The antennae are grey and the abdomen is greyish-ochreous with suffused streaks of white irroration (speckling). The forewings are brownish-ochreous, becoming browner posteriorly, more or less sprinkled irregularly with whitish and blackish.
Ancylometis scaeocosma is a species of moth in the family Oecophoridae first described by Edward Meyrick in 1887. It is known from Réunion. This species has a wingspan of 11 mm for the male. The head and palpi are dark fuscous, antennae greyish-ochreous, thorax and abdomen greyish-ochreous, irrorated (sprinkled) with dark fuscous.
Ypsolopha straminella is a moth of the family Ypsolophidae. It is found in the Russian Far East.New taxonomic data on the genus Ypsolopha Latreille (Lepidoptera, Ypsolophidae) with descriptions of two new species from the Russian Far East The wingspan is 16.5–17.3 mm. The forewings are greyish yellow irrorated with brown and greyish scales.
The hindwings are creamish, but greyish in the anal area and with subapical grey dots. The forewings of the females are greyish or cream white, the dorsum suffused with brownish and with brownish or grey spots or strigulae (fine streaks). The hindwings are cream, slightly mixed with ochreous and dotted with brownish at the apex.
It is 11-12 centimetres long with a wing length of 107–118.2 millimetres and a weight of 10.5-12.5 grams. The upperparts are dark grey-brown while the underparts are a uniform greyish. There are pale feathers on the forehead and lores. The rump is normally pale greyish but can occasionally be darker.
There are white scales tipped with dark brown intermixed with brown, white and greyish-orange scales. There are two short dark brown streaks in the cell, as well as a broad, suffused greyish-orange streak from the base to the apex. The larvae feed on Eurybia macrophylla. They mine the leaves of their host plant.
Adult moth has a greyish-brown body that is around 15–20 mm long. The wingspan of the adult moth ranges from 30–38 mm. The forewing of the adult moth has brownish color with paler veins whereas the hindwing is more lightly colored (greyish-white). There are also oblique white bands on the forewing.
The thorax is greyish-fuscous with a purple gloss, an ochreous anterior and a broader subapical band. The abdomen fuscous, although the posterior halves of the segments are ochreous. The forewings are ovate-triangular and greyish- fuscous, with a purple gloss. The markings are ochreous, gently becoming brighter posteriorly and white on the costa.
The upperparts are greyish-brown, and it the crown and nape are broadly streaked blackish-brown. A narrow, indistinct tawny collar can be seen on the hindneck. The wing-coverts are greyish-brown heavily spotted buff; the scapulars are blackish-brown, broadly edged buff. There are large white patched on either side of lower throat.
The dorsum is greyish-olive or greyish-brown. This species exhibits a number of different color morphs; a narrow pale or green vertebral band is often present. The limbs are barred. The venter is white but has a yellowish hue near the groin and a pale stripe occurs on the back of the thigh.
The forewings are brownish buff with greyish brown fasciae. The anterior part of the subterminal fascia is very dark brown and there are pale brown medial patches irrorated with greyish brown. The hindwings are slightly more yellowish buff, but brownish buff at the base and distal to the subterminal fascia.Bull. Br. Mus. nat. Hist.
The forewings are shining pale greyish brown, with slightly darker brown markings as a wide but short band at the base on the costa, a rather large spot submedially in the middle and in the cubital fold, and another medium-sized spot postmedially. There is also greyish-brown scaling which is paler than the markings on the costa above the spots, in the apical area and on the inner margin below the postmedian spot. The hindwings are greyish white. Adults have been recorded on wing in March, April, May and October.
In the name-type the ground-colour is white and the markings quite indistinct, light brown or grey-brown, the median band scarcely indicated except by transverse lines. Our English race is less pure white, generally somewhat suffused with greyish or yellowish, but scarcely needs a separate name. - qriseaia indicates the more extreme examples of this English race, in which the greyish tone of the markings becomes more pronounced and there is even some admixture of fuscous; the ground-colour remains white, but the hindwing is greyish. - subfasciaria Boh.
The forewings are pale fawn-ochreous, slightly shaded with greyish fuscous, especially above the fold and before the apex and termen. There are three blackish spots, the first on the cell before the middle, another in the fold straight below it and the third at the end of the cell. There are also four or five blackish dentate spots along the termen at the base of the greyish ochreous cilia which have a paler basal line. The hindwings are pale greyish, the central portion slightly iridescent.Trans. ent. Soc. Lond.
Chan Chich Lodge area - Belize The mottled owl is a medium-sized owl with adults reaching in length. Females are considerably larger than males; the mottled owl shows the greatest degree of sexual dimorphism of any species of owl. The crown, nape and back are mottled in several shades of darkish brown, the facial disc is pale brown and the throat, breast and belly are off-white with distinctive vertical brown streaks. The large eyes are brown, the beak is greyish-yellow or greyish-blue, and the legs and feet are greyish-yellow.
Hieromantis phaedora is a moth of the Stathmopodidae family. It is found in China (Fujian, Hainan) and the Andaman Islands.Review of the genus Hieromantis Meyrick from China, with descriptions of three new species (Lepidoptera, Stathmopodidae) The wingspan is 14−15 mm. The forewings are light yellow- ochreous with raised greyish tufts tipped with black on the dorsum at one- fourth of the wing and above the fold before the middle, these connected by a greyish shade, a patch of a faint greyish tinge in the disc and towards the dorsum preceding these.
The forewings are pale yellow with a brown crescent patch under the apex, with a brownish-black ovate spot inside. The antemedial line is greyish brown and punctuate and the postmedial line is brown and punctuate. The discal spot and mid-cell spot are greyish brown, and there is a white strip ringed with brown, as well as two big round greyish-brown patches near the lower angle of the cell, each with a dark brown ovate spot inside. The hindwings have antemedial and postmedial lines that are similar to those on the forewings.
The specific name spadix (meaning greyish brown, brown or reddish brown) is Latin and refers to the colour of the imago.
The wingspan is about 25–36 mm. Male with minutely ciliated antennae. Head and collar rufous. Thorax and abdomen greyish brown.
The hindwings are greyish brown. The ground colour of the females is paler and the markings are browner and better developed.
The forewings are bronzy greyish ochreous with the costa narrowly white from the base to two-thirds. The hindwings are grey.
The hindwings are greyish tinged dark fuscous.Leaf-Hoppers and their Natural Enemies The larvae feed on planthoppers of the superfamily Fulgoroidea.
The markings are yellowish brown, but brown at the costa. The hindwings are cream tinged yellowish and spotted greyish costo-apically.
The hindwings are pale greyish-white. Adults have been recorded on wing in August. The larvae feed on Alnus species.Obraztsov, 1963.
Its lower face meanwhile, is greyish-green to gray in color. The bright pink flowers are eight to ten millimeters long.
The markings are grey dotted, strigulated and edged with blackish. The hindwings are greyish suffused with brownish in the postmedian half.
The hindwings are greyish brown. Adults have been recorded on wing from June to July, probably in one generation per year.
The markings are brown. The hindwings are whitish cream, mixed with ochreous and strigulated with greyish brown in the apex area.
The hindwings are pale greyish brown with thin darker brown lines toward the apex.Systematics and phylogeny of Sparganothina and related taxa.
The forewings are grey with a reticulate pattern along the outer margin and in the tornal area. The hindwings are greyish.
The wingspan is 13–16 mm. White with sparse, sometimes obscure, darker speckling. Forewing ground colour white. Apical cilia greyish fuscous.
The hindwings are white, but shaded greyish brown towards the margin. Adults have been recorded on wing from March to May.
Individuals in freshwater may have a reddish colour caused by blood suffusion below the skin. The underside is greyish or white.
The best distinction is the slightly brighter green tone of the leaves, compared to the more greyish-green of P. totara.
Body greyish and head rufous. Black spots found on the head and ringing each segment. Its host plants are Wendlandia species.
The Pyrenean rock lizard is a large lizard growing to a snout-to-vent length of with a tail about double its body-length. Its dorsal colour is greyish-brown, sometimes finely flecked with dark markings but without significant striping. The flanks are dark, sometimes with slight pale flecking. The underparts are white, greyish or greenish.
Euchaetis rhizobola is a moth of the family Oecophoridae. It is found in Australia, including New South Wales, Queensland, the Australian Capital Territory, Victoria, South Australia and Western Australia. The wingspan is 31–33 mm. The forewings are ferruginous, irrorated with very pale greyish- ochreous and with very pale greyish-ochreous ; markings and a rosy costal edge.
The forewings are blackish, sparsely mottled with greyish bases of scales in males and slightly lustrous in females. There are three silvery markings, as well as a transverse fascia from the costal margin, often reaching the hindmargin. There is also a triangular costal spot and a triangular tornal spot. The hindwings are dark greyish, tinged with brown.
The forewings are greyish orange with scattered dark brown scales forming irregular transverse streaks and small dots. The pattern of the forewings consists of a dark brown area on the costal margin and twelve or thirteen dark brown costal marks. The hindwings are greyish brown, darker distally and with the basal part of the costal margin with white scales.
Average adult total length (including tail) of V. rainerguentheri is up to three feet (1 metre), though specimens close to five feet (1.6 metres) have been observed. The background color is dark greyish-black. The dorsal pattern consists of ocelli with yellow centers, arranged in transverse rows. The ventral surface is cream to greyish in color.
The habitat consists of the Northern Coast, Coquimban Desert, Central Valley and Valdivian Forest biotic provinces. The length of the forewings is about 8.5–9 mm for males and 9.5–10.5 mm for females. The forewings are white, with greyish brown scales along the costa near the base. The hindwings are white, with grey and greyish black scales.
Forewings very elongate-triangular, costa slightly arched, faintly sinuate in middle, apex very obtusely rounded, termen rounded, little oblique; pale brownish-ochreous, irregularly suffused with fuscous towards costa, posterior half of wing sprinkled with dark fuscous specks with some fuscous suffusion, terminal edge suffused with fuscous: cilia fuscous. Hindwings pale greyish; cilia whitish, with faint greyish basal shade.
The forewings are pale greyish orange, with distinct, blackish and round discal stigmata, the first one before the middle and the other larger one at the end of the cell. The costa has a short, blackish streak basally, strongly arched beyond two-thirds. The hindwings are pale greyish orange, covered with dense setae-like scales throughout.
The number of teeth on the mandible is used to differentiate between species; in S. filamentosus, there are about 20 teeth on the mandible. The color of the fish is greyish, with small, scattered dark spots, and whitish on the underside. The dorsal and caudal fins have small greyish spots. The lower borders of the caudal fin are black.
Sub- basal, antemedial and postmedial indistinct waved lines and antemedial and medial ill-defined bands are greyish. There is a grey apical patch with whitish edges, and sinuous dark line runs from it to inner margin. An indistinct dentate submarginal line present with a greyish margin. Hindwings with traces of medial and antemedial pale lines found near inner margin.
Sub-basal, antemedial and postmedial indistinct waved lines and antemedial and medial ill-defined bands are greyish. There is a grey apical patch with whitish edges, and sinuous dark line runs from it to inner margin. An indistinct dentate submarginal line present with a greyish margin. Hindwings with traces of medial and antemedial pale lines found near inner margin.
The pale-browed tinamou is approximately in length. It is recognized by its greyish-brown upper coat which is finely vermiculated with black, and a white throat, with the remainder of its underparts greyish to buffy. Its flanks are barred, and it has a very brown crown, and a prominent white supercilium. Its legs are pink.
Stenoma crocosticta is a moth of the family Depressariidae. It is found in Peru."Stenoma Zeller, 1839" at Markku Savela's Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms The wingspan is about 23 mm. The forewings are pale greyish ochreous with a greyish-ferruginous dot on the fold near the base, and dark grey elongate dot obliquely beyond and above it.
On the dorsal (upper) sideG. rupicola is a dark greyish brown with pale salmon-coloured semicircular spots with a dark edge on the front arranged in more or less regular series down the back. A thin black streak runs from the nostril through the eye to just above ear-opening. The belly is a greyish white.
Right hind foot of holotype Thecadactylus oskrobapreinorum has a maximum snout-to-vent length of . It is distinguished from other members of the genus by the distinct pattern of numerous irregular but sharply delineated black markings on its dorsal surface which is otherwise a pale greyish-yellow or greyish-olive. It has adhesive toe-pads on its feet.
Eremophila buirchellii is an erect shrub growing to high and wide. The branches are densely covered with greyish branched hairs. The leaves are arranged alternately, mostly long, wide, lance-shaped with a dense covering of greyish branched hairs and densely clustered at the ends of the branches. The flowers are borne singly in leaf axils on a stalk long.
Krefft's warty frog is a sturdy frog with a short snout, visible tympani behind the eyes and short legs. It can grow to a length of . The fingers and toes are short with wide toe pads. The dorsal surface is glandular and densely covered with small warts and the general colour is greyish-brown, rusty brown or greyish black.
Philby's partridge is similar in appearance to the chukar partridge and has greyish-brown plumage with the flanks boldly banded in black and pale buff. It differs from that species in having black cheeks and throat, and a thin white line separates this from the greyish-blue head and nape. The beak and legs are pink.
It has dark flight feathers, and brown-edged wings. The head, neck, and upperparts, including the upperwing coverts, are mostly brownthis is the darkest part of the neck. The facial skin and the bill, including its gular pouch, are greyish to dusky greyish. The forehead, rump, and abdomen are white, and its legs and feet are grey.
The antemedial line is invisible and the discal spots are blackish brown and separated. The postmedial line is faint, greyish white and serrated, gently curved inwardly from the costal one- fifth to the dorsum at one-fifth. The terminal line is black and interrupted. The hindwings are greyish white, light brown along the costa and veins.
Caloptilia prismatica is a moth of the family Gracillariidae. It is known from Sri Lanka.Global Taxonomic Database of Gracillariidae (Lepidoptera) This species has a wingspan of 13–15 mm, head and thorax are greyish-ochreous, mixed with dark grey. Forewings are dark greyish-ochreous, with prismatic violet or blue reflections, strewn with numerous small blackish dots in longitudinal series.
The upper parts are greyish-brown or sandy brown with darker streaking, and the upper tail coverts are washed with rufous-brown. The wings are greyish-brown with black barring and pale tips to the feathers. The underparts are mostly whitish, but there is a dark neck patch and a buffish-grey breast band. The breast is unstreaked.
Drawing of white-throated nightjar E. mystacalis is the largest Australian nightjar species and measures around 30-37 cm. Males and females are very similar in appearance and display a dark variegated body. The upper body and wings are greyish-brown with broad blackish-brown streaks and spots. The underbody is spotted brown or greyish white and barred rufous.
Anarsia acaciae is a moth of the family Gelechiidae. It is found on the Canary Islands,Fauna Europaea Algeria, IsraelJonathan's Check-List of Israeli insects and south-western Arabia. The wingspan is about 13 mm. The forewings are hoary greyish with numerous short longitudinal streaks of greyish fuscous intermixed with lighter and darker shades of the ground colour.
The middle cross-band is greyish brown, grading to darker brown apically. There is a thin brown line centrally from the costa to the dorsum and the distal third is greyish brown, tinged in with rust in the costal half.Bug Guide Adults are mainly on wing from May to August. The larvae feed on Carya illinoensis.
Eucalyptus assimilans is a tree that typically grows to a height of . It has smooth white or greyish bark on the trunk and branches, that is shed in long, wide pale brown strips. The bark, leaves and flower buds are covered with a greyish, powdery bloom. Young plants and coppice regrowth have egg-shaped to broadly lance-shaped leaves.
The forewings are bronze brown with sparse dark scales. The hindwings are dark, greyish brown. Adults have been recorded in mid-July.
The costa and termen are dotted cream. The hindwings are greyish white, greyer on the periphery and strigulated (finely streaked) with grey.
The costal third and terminal areas are suffused with brown. The hindwings are whitish, strigulated with greyish and greyer towards the apex.
The coral has a smooth surface and is usually cream or greyish-brown, sometimes tinged with green. It is a zooxanthellate species.
The thick gills are crowded close together, and initially greyish before turning pinkish brown. Spores measure 11–14 by 9–12 µm.
The forewings are light greyish-ochreous, irrorated with whitish. The hindwings are grey-whitish. Adults have been recorded on wing in January.
The forewing ground colour is brownish ochreous with white markings. The hindwings are pale greyish. Adults are on wing in late May.
Its forewings are greyish brown with two large black patches based on the costa. Hindwings plain brown. Forwardly projected long labial palpi.
The animal is greyish or blackish, with dark tentacles . This species can be hard to differentiate from the similar species Cochlicopa lubricella.
2012 The wingspan is 14.5-15.5 mm. The forewings are yellowish brown, speckled with dark-fuscous scales. The hindwings are greyish brown.
The forewings are pale greyish ochreous suffusedly overlaid with white. The hindwings are whitish grey.Meyrick, E. (1926). "New South African Micro- Lepidoptera".
The forewings are pale greyish orange, with a large discal spot beyond the end of the cell. The hindwings are pale grey.
A pale greyish marginal shade is found around the apex and termen. The hindwings are pale whitish grey.Exotic Microlepidoptera. 4 (1): 33.
The forewings are ochreous white. The second discal stigma is minute, hardly perceptible and pale greyish ochreous. The hindwings are whitish.Exotic Microlepidoptera.
Pupation takes place outside of the mine. They are olive green (turning greyish white shortly before pupation) with a dark brown head.
The eye-ring is very dark, almost appearing blackish from a distance. The legs are dull greyish and the iris is dark.
The hindwings are light greyish yellow ochreous, sometimes greyer towards the apex and termen.Meyrick, Edward (1912–1916). Exotic Microlepidoptera. 1 (6): 174.
The hindwing is greyish brown, without a discal spot. The underside is unicolorous grey, with a small discal spot on the hindwing.
The ground colour is greyish or reddish brown in males and dark chocolate brown with an ivory coloured costal stripe in females.
The colour of the body is greyish-brown, pale on the ventral side with a narrow, longitudinal black band on the flanks.
The hindwings are greyish fuscous, thinly scaled basad. The larvae feed on Pyrus malus, boring in the twigs of their host plant.
Nowak, R.M. 1999. Walker's Mammals of the World. Johns Hopkins University Press. The back is greyish brown, and the belly is white.
The ground colour of the forewings is greyish white, sprinkled with brown-tipped scales, without distinct pattern. The hindwings are pale brown.
The hindmarginal and apical area are more or less irregularly suffused with fuscous. The hindwings are greyish- fuscous.Trans. Proc. R. Soc. S. Austr.
It also has buff edges to all the upper part and wing covert feathers, while the plumage below is broadly edged greyish-white.
The hindwings are greyish brown., 2013: Leaf-rollers from New Caledonia (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae). Shilap Revista de Lepidopterologia 41 (161): 69-93. Full article: .
Oval shape (eggshell shape) limpet with varying colours on the shell. Usually spots on greyish-brown or pale-white background with regular edge.
Forewings oblong and narrow. Forewings light glossy golden ochreous, with brownish-glossy-grey tufts. Two leaden-greyish horizontal patches present. Cilia light ochreous.
Mecaspis alternans can reach a length of about (rostrum excluded). The body is elongate shape, with a dark brown or greyish basic color.
The markings are greyish brown with browner spots between the veins. The hindwings are whitish creamy, strigulated (finely streaked) with pale brownish grey.
There is a broad subterminal and a narrow terminal line, both are pale grey. The hindwings are greyish white.Rothschild, W. (1912). "New Lithosianae".
They tend to build their nests from fibrous plant material, making them a uniform greyish brown colour which is often difficult to locate.
The forewings are greyish, marbled blackish.Viette P. 1965d. Nouvelles espèces de Noctuelles Quadrifides malgaches (Lépidoptères). - Lambillionea 64(9–10):38–49, pl. 1.
Cases on Patellifolia are reddish brown and about 13 mm long, while those on Salsola are dark greyish brown and 15–16 mm.
The hindwings are greyish brown with light brown hairs at the base. Some of the veins on the outer margin are light brown.
Pacific Northwest Moths. Retrieved January 8, 2018. The wingspan is 38–42 mm. The forewings are whitish to greyish with large discal spots.
The underside is creamy-white with a greyish margin. It typically weighs about , but can reach to as much as and in length.
There is a terminal series of dark fuscous dots. The hindwings are light greyish, darker towards the apex.Meyrick, Edward (1916–1923). Exotic Microlepidoptera.
The hindwing is greyish brown, with an indistinct discal spot. The underside is unicolorous grey, with a small discal spot on the hindwing.
The hindwing is greyish brown, with an indistinct discal spot. The underside is unicolorous grey, with a small discal spot on both wings.
The hindwing is greyish brown, with an indistinct discal spot. The underside is unicolorous grey, with a small discal spot on both wings.
The hindwing is greyish brown, with an indistinct discal spot. The underside is unicolorous grey, with a small discal spot on both wings.
The hindwing is greyish brown, with an indistinct discal spot. The underside is unicolorous grey, with a small discal spot on the hindwing.
The forewings are pale rosy, slightly tinged with greyish ochreous. The stigmata is faintly infuscated, hardly traceable. The hindwings are ochreous whitish.Exotic Microlepidoptera.
There is a small elongate pale greyish-brown patch near the lower angle of the cell and a brown spot inside the patch.
The hindwings are pale greyish brown, but the margin is darker, especially near the tornus. There are traces of an inner marginal streak.
The breast has a blue band and a red band. The belly is yellowish-green. The feet are greyish. The sexes are alike.
Antenna, head, thorax and abdomen purplish brown, the thorax with some long greyish hairs; beneath: the palpi and thorax greenish yellow, abdomen whitish.
The habitat consists of the Northern Valdivian and Valdivian Forest Biotic provinces. The length of the forewings is about 8.5 mm for males and 8.5–9 mm for females. The forewings are pale brown, fading to white, with blackish- brown areas of scales along the costa and with small brown or greyish-brown areas in the median area extending from the costa to the dark discal spot and along the outer margin below the costa and above the tornus. The hindwings are white to pale greyish white, with an increasing number of pale greyish-brown scales distally.
The wingspan is 19–20 mm. The forewings are bone-white with a very faint suffusion of bone- grey on the dorsal half and in a semicircular shade arising from the tornus. A greyish fuscous spot, at the extreme base of the costa, is followed by another costal spot at one-fifth, and before the apex are two faint, elongate, greyish fuscous costal shades. A small very faint reduplicated spot, on the disc at one-fourth, is followed by a similar double dot at the end of the cell, beneath which is a small inwardly oblique greyish fuscous dorsal streak.
The head and body length is with a tail of and the weight is . The fur is soft with no guard hairs as are seen in the closely related hoary bamboo rat (Rhizomys pruinosus). On the side of the face and the crown the fur is dark greyish brown and on the body paler greyish brown. The under parts are scantily haired.
The anterior margin of the wing is dark brown basally, becoming mottled dark brown and grey to three-fourths, then pale greyish brown. There is a dark-brown subcircular spot at three-fifths of the cell and one at the end of the cell. The hindwings are pale greyish brown, darkening slightly to the apex. The larvae feed on Amorpha fruticosa.
Upon collection and examination of this species, it is observed to have several distinct physical attributes. One trait is the fine dermal spinules, along with simple and bifurcate dermal spinules, covering the body. It also has four pectoral lateral-line neuromasts, which are sensory organs characteristic to fish and aquatic organisms. It has a greyish mouth, and semi-transparent, light-greyish skin.
The outer costal spot is edged by a narrow white costal streak, a shining white apical line from the apical protrusion to apex, the cilia greyish ochreous around apex and paler towards dorsum. Hindwing shining: Pale grey, cilia pale greyish ochreous. Underside: forewing shining pale ochreous- grey. The white apical line is indistinctly visible and the hindwing shining pale grey.
The posterior margin is yellowish white at the base. The antemedian line is yellowish white and straight, its posterior half is tinged with black on the inside and ocherous yellow on the outside. The postmedian and subterminal lines are greyish white, slightly sinuate and nearly parallel. The cilia is rosy mixed with greyish brown, with a fine yellowish-white basal line.
The forewings are greyish brown, with scattered dark brown scales forming small dots along the middle of the wing, the dorsal margin and termen. There is a large triangular costal mark before the middle, five small oblique marks before the latter and three to four beyond the large mark, as well as smaller spot. The hindwings are greyish brown, darker towards the apex.
The habitat consists of the Northern Valdivian Forest and the Valdivian Forest biotic provinces. The length of the forewings is about 10.5 mm for males and 9–11 mm for females. The forewings are variegated with pale grey, pale yellowish brown and dark brown scales. The hindwings are greyish white with greyish brown scaling distally and dark brown scaling along the anal margin.
It nests near the ground in dense undergrowth. The thrush nightingale is similar in size to the European robin. It is plain greyish-brown above and white and greyish-brown below. Its greyer tones, giving a cloudy appearance to the underside, and lack of the common nightingale's obvious rufous tail side patches are the clearest plumage differences from that species.
The head and thorax range from cream colour to buff yellow, with the same pattern as the wings. The antennae are long and monofiliform. The abdomen is smooth, with a white background. Caterpillars are warty, dark brown or greyish, with tufts of greyish hairs, an orange crossline on each segment, a wide whitish line along the back and two other lateral white lines.
Elachista nipponicella is a moth of the family Elachistidae that is found in Japan. The length of the forewings is for males and for females. The forewings of the males are greyish or grey-brownish, mottled with a paler colour and with white markings. Females have dark greyish or blackish forewings often mottled with whitish markings on the basal half.
The forewings are brown, the basal two-thirds with crinkly white scales along the costa, and transverse brownish streaks to the inner margin, and a dark brown spot at the end of the cell. The outer margin is broadly greyish brown without markings. The hindwings are greyish brown.Description of Megalopyge vipera in Journal of the New York Entomological Society Vol.
The wings are brown with a greyish gloss and a dark antemedial line, slightly defined by whitish on the inner side. There is a dark point in the middle of the cell and a black discoidal lunule. The postmedial line is dark and defined by white on the outerside. The hindwings are brown with a greyish gloss and a black discoidal bar.
Stenoma cana is a moth of the family Depressariidae. It is found in Brazil (Amazonas), Peru and French Guiana."Stenoma Zeller, 1839" at Markku Savela's Lepidoptera and Some Other Life Forms The wingspan is 15–19 mm.Description of Stenoma octacentra in Exotic Microlepidoptera 1 (15): 459 The forewings are white, variably tinged or sprinkled greyish, sometimes obscurely streaked pale greyish ochreous between veins.
The forewings are greyish fuscous, the scales tipped with cinereous. The extreme costa of the forewings is tawny olive and there are five raised tawny-olive scale tufts mixed with greyish fuscous and cinereous on the costa. There are also three tawny-olive blotches, the third of which with a spot of ground color in the center. The hindwings are fuscous, lighter basally.
Eucalyptus sheathiana is a tree or a mallee, that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has smooth, greyish bark that is shed in long ribbons. Young plants and coppice regrowth have greyish green, egg-shaped to lance-shaped leaves that are long and wide. Adult leaves are lance-shaped, long and wide, tapering to a petiole long.
Tulipa albanica is a bulbous perennial reaching in height. The bulb is ovoid to ovoid-globose and in diameter. The stem is erect, glabrous, glaucous to greyish-green and the leaves, which vary from 3–5, reach a size of about long by , and are glaucous to greyish-green. They grow alternately along the stem and the lowermost ones have strongly undulated edges.
The forewings are white, slightly sprinkled with pale greyish ochreous except towards the costa anteriorly, the terminal edge is pale greyish ochreous. The stigmata are small and black and there is a strongly curved series of minute scattered black specks from beneath the costa at three-fourths to above the dorsum at two-thirds. The hindwings are grey whitish.Meyrick, Edward (1912–1916).
The species is brown; its thorax is brown while the forewings are greyish brown. The species' head is white with inward-oblique and narrowed fascia which is 3/4 in length. The scales are light greyish brown and are measured 1/4, 1/2, and 3/4 from all sides. The dorsal of a basal part is white, while the hindwings are grey.
The forewings are ochreous brown with a dark oblique blotch at one-third, a small dot at two-thirds of the cell and the costal margin with a black triangular blotch medially. There are several small dots at the distal one-third and on the termen. The hindwings are greyish brown, with the basal half of the costal margin greyish white.
The forewings are greyish black with a yellow spot at the costal half and at three-fourths and the tornus. The hindwings are brown.
Diospyros daemona is a tree in the family Ebenaceae. It grows up to tall. The twigs dry greyish. Inflorescences bear up to 10 flowers.
It is medium-sized, about 24 cm (9 in.) long. Depending on subspecies, it is overall brownish or olive. The belly is often greyish.
Its main difference from the domesticated taxon is the more slender body with well- developed wings in males, and the dull greyish-brown colour.
The egg is almost spherical, with the poles only very weakly flattened. It is ivory white changing to dark greyish white prior to hatching.
The forewings are suffused rust cream in the basal area. The markings are black-brown. The hindwings are cream with greyish strigulation (fine streaks).
The forewings are cream coloured with dark-brown markings. The hindwings are shining pale greyish brown. Adults have been recorded on wing in February.
Madhuca kingiana grows up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish brown. Inflorescences bear up to six flowers.
Madhuca ochracea grows up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish brown. Inflorescences bear up to seven flowers.
The dots are blackish brown and the markings are brownish black. The hindwings are brownish cream, but cream basally. The strigulation is greyish cream.
Madhuca silamensis grows up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish brown. Inflorescences bear up to three flowers.
Other parts of the ground colour are suffused brownish and dark greyish brown. The hindwings are grey cream strigulated (finely streaked) with grey-brown.
The tree grows up to tall. The bark is greyish green. The flowers are white. Fruits are greenish brown, roundish, up to in diameter.
Both wing undersides are blackish brown, with a few greyish scales in the submarginal region. The hindwing upperside has a very broad black border.
The pods split open allowing the seeds to fall to the ground. The thorns are paired, greyish to white and are long and straight.
The female has two large eyespots and may have smaller spots on both wings. The ventral hindwings have greyish median bands with jagged borders.
Madhuca mindanaensis grows up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish brown. Inflorescences bear up to nine flowers.
The strigulation (fine streaking) is dark grey and the markings are grey strigulated with dark grey. The hindwings are greyish cream, with grey strigulation.
2012 The wingspan is 15–16 mm. The forewings are mustard brown, sparsely speckled with dark fuscous scales throughout. The hindwings are greyish brown.
The chin and supercilium are greyish-buff and the underparts brownish-grey, with the central part of the lower breast and belly being yellowish.
Diospyros simaloerensis is a tree in the family Ebenaceae. It grows up to tall. The twigs dry greyish. Inflorescences bear up to five flowers.
The upper part of the façade and tower is covered in greyish-blue-lacquered shakes. The furnishings inside – pews and altar – are original equipment.
Thorax is black- haired. Abdomen is rather elongate and tergites are pale yellow-haired. Wings are greyish and disproportionately long. Legs are entirely black.
200px The wingspan is about 60 mm. Antennae of male minutely ciliated. Forewings with strongly toothed cilia. Body pale greyish brown and abdomen fuscous.
Dorsally carapace is dark brown in color. Patella is greyish. Tibia is brownish black. Tarsus is brownish, with a v-shaped light patch proximally.
A conspicuous dark brown band runs from just distal to the discal spots. Hindwings are plain greyish brown. Larval food plants include Acacia mangium.
Palaquium hispidum grows up to tall. The bark is greyish white. Inflorescences bear up to eight flowers. The fruits are subglobose, up to long.
Male, female. Forewing length 3.6–3.8 mm. Head: frons shining ochreous-white with greenish reflection, vertex and neck tufts greyish brown with greenish and reddish gloss, lined white medially and laterally, collar greyish brown; labial palpus first segment very short, white, second segment three-quarters of the length of third, greyish brown with white longitudinal lines laterally and ventrally, third segment white, lined brown laterally, extreme apex white; scape dorsally dark brown with a white anterior line, ventrally white, antenna dark brown with a very short white line at base, in middle a short, partly annulate, section, followed towards apex by four dark brown segments, two white, two dark brown, two white, ten dark brown, six white and one dark brown segment at apex. Thorax and tegulae greyish brown, thorax with a white median line and tegulae lined white inwardly and outwardly.
Both sexes are yellowish with exception of the opisthosoma, which is greyish with darker patches. Male body length 6.4 mm; female body length 6.3 mm.
The subterminal line is zigzagged. The hindwings are pale greyish yellow with irregular postmedial line. Adults have been recorded on wing from July to August.
The hindwings are greyish white with a dark apex., 1988: A study on the chinese Paratorna Meyrick (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae). Sinozoologia 6: 219-223. Full article: .
The feathers of the head, neck, and underparts are fluffier overall. Their plumage is a darker and more greyish brown overall than that of adults.
She is olive-grey above and greyish-brown below, with a slight orange wash on the breast, rump, and shoulders. They are long and weigh .
There is brownish strigulation (fine streaks), as well as rusty-brown markings. The hindwings are brownish white, but whitish basally and strigulated with greyish brown.
The forewings are cream, suffused with ferruginous postmedially. The dots, dorsal and subterminal suffusions are grey-brown. The hindwings are greyish cream, spotted with grey.
The hindwings are thinly scaled, light greyish, tending to become prismatic hyaline, with the veins, termen, and posterior half of the costal area darker grey.
There are brownish-grey dots along the costa and dorsum. The suffusions are greyish brown. The hindwings are whitish, tinged with brownish at the apex.
Xenocerus speciosus can reach a body length of about 10 mm. The basic colour is greyish, with black markings on the pronotum and the elytra.
The seeds are 7 × 5 mm in size, ovoid-ellipsoid in shape, smooth surfaced, and dull, pale greyish-brown flecked and spotted with darker brown.
Full article: . The wingspan is about 20–23 mm. The forewings are light greyish brown and the hindwings are whitish grey with a brownish tinge.
Young bats are somewhat more greyish than the adults and lack the distinct facial markings, although the stripe down the back is present from birth.
The appearance of this species may be confused with Senegalia caffra which differs by having paired prickles, stouter pods and greyish-green markedly pendent foliage.
Colour of the shell greyish or almost white. The inner margin of the mouth brown or violet. Size about 38 × 36 to 28 × 33 mm.
Herpestes fuscus was the scientific name proposed by George Robert Waterhouse in 1838 for a greyish brown mongoose skin that had been purchased in Madras.
The hindwings are pale grey, the cell with a short black bar situated on the end, and the tornus with a triangular greyish black patch.
Madhuca utilis grows up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish brown. The fruits are ellipsoid, up to long.
Forewings pale golden ochreous with, greyish suffusion in costa. Costal half triangularly dilated upwards, which is suffused grey. Cilia glossy whitish ochreous. Hindwings pale ochreous.
The forewings are whitish ochreous, faintly speckled with greyish. The hindwings are ochreous whitish or grey whitish.Transactions of the Entomological Society of London. 1914: 272.
Body and head mottled greyish brown. predorsal profile convex uniformly. Two pairs of barbels present. Mouth terminal where lower jaw longer than the upper jaw.
The dorsum is dark greyish brown with irregular light-grey and dark-brown blotches. There is a dark horizontal grey band in between the eyes.
The colour is greyish brown throughout, without a pattern. There is a faint discal spot at the end of the cell. The hindwings are grey.
The costal edge is ochreous rosy throughout, edged beneath with greyish violet. The plical and second discal stigmata are blackish. The hindwings are ochreous yellow.
The specific epithet caesibulga is derived from the Latin words cinereo (greyish) and roseolus (light pink) and refers to the colour of the fruit bodies.
The hindwings are shining greyish fuscous, becoming whitish towards the base. The apex is fuscous.Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales. 24: 115.
The adult cerulean cuckooshrike is a distinctive bird and is about long. The male is greyish-blue, tinged with cobalt blue on wings and tail.
The hindwings are dark fuscous, in males with a slender greyish hair-pencil in the submedian fold.Transactions of the Entomological Society of London. 1922: 92.
The underparts are pale and the back is greyish. The greater and median wing coverts have whitish tips forming two pale lines across the wing.
The remainder of the wing is dark orange ferruginous to golden orange. The hindwings are pale greyish brown. The larvae probably feed on Pinus species.
Diospyros pyrrhocarpa is a tree in the family Ebenaceae. It grows up to tall. Twigs dry greyish to brownish. Inflorescences bear up to three flowers.
The forewings are light greyish ochreous closely irrorated (sprinkled) with fuscous. The hindwings are pale fuscous.Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 20 (2): 445.
The forewings are smooth light greyish ochreous, with the dorsal three- fifths greyer and violet tinged. The hindwings are dark grey.Exotic Microlepidoptera. 4 (10): 295.
Legs and feet are reddish. The similar and sympatric buff-fronted quail-dove is distinguished by its greyish breast, green nape patch and buffy forehead.
As yellowfin whiting grow, the yellow colour of the fins often fades and in large specimens may be completely absent. The caudal fin is greyish.
The anal fin is wholly coloured yellow. The rear edge of the caudal fin is yellow and the rest of the tail is greyish black.
Agdistis maghrebi is a moth in the family Pterophoridae. It is known from Algeria. The wingspan is 21–28 mm. The forewings are greyish brown.
Its wingspan is about 20 mm. The head is brownish ochreous. Thorax purplish grey and abdomen pale. Forewings with dark purplish with greyish irrorations (sprinkling).
The forewing upperside is wood brown with brownish black markings and the underside of both wings is somewhat greyish brown. The hindwing upperside is brown.
On the underside the forewing is predominantly greyish cream with brown suffusion and with veins R5 to CuA2 covered by bright pink or red scales.
Agathis lenticula grows as a tree up to tall. Its bark is greyish brown. The male cones are cylindrical in shape, the female ones spherical.
The hindwings are light greyish brown. Adults have been recorded on wing in late May., 2004, Acta Zoologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 50 (1): 63-74.
The forewings are light greyish ochreous, irrorated (sprinkled) with grey. The hindwings are grey. Adults were reared from larvae found feeding on Abrus precatorius.Exotic Microlepidoptera.
The apical two-fifths of the wing are lightly infuscated. The hindwings are sordid white, lightly infuscated and sparsely irrorated with small greyish-fuscous scales.
The Moroccan rock lizard is a medium- sized, rather flattened species growing to a snout-to-vent length of with a tail about 1.7 times its body-length. Various colour forms exist. In Morocco it is usually greyish-brown often with two broad, pale stripes along the back. In Minorca the colour is buff, grey or greyish-green densely covered with dark, net-like markings.
The rest of the upper parts, including the head, neck, and breast, are coloured black to blackish brown. The flanks are tawny rufous to maroon-chestnut, and the abdomen is white. When in its non-breeding plumage, this bird has greyish-black upper parts, including the top of the head and a vertical stripe on the back of the neck. The flanks are also greyish-black.
Baeolidia gracilis has a translucent white body with the head and pericardium dark greyish blue. The posterior part of the notum and the cerata are ochre. There is a reticulate brown pattern close to the edges of the foot. The rhinophores are approximately equal in length to the oral tentacles and are dark greyish blue with only few moderately short papillae, mainly in posterior part.
Maradana vidualis is a species of snout moth. It is found on Malta and SicilyFauna Europaea and in Tunisia. Illustrations accompanying the original description of Pyralestes ragusai, now a synonym of Maradana vidualis The wingspan is 23–25 mm for females and 27–29 mm for males. Both sexes may be found in three different forms: a reddish/brown, light greyish-green and dark greyish-green form.
The fingers are about one-third webbed, and the toes nearly three-quarters webbed. The dorsal colour depends on the temperature and nature of the environment, ranging from brownish- or greyish-green to bright emerald green. The frog occasionally has small, irregularly shaped white spots on its back. Males have a greyish, wrinkled vocal sac under the throat, while the throat of females is white.
The length of the forewings is about 7–8.5 mm for males and 7–10.5 mm for females. The forewings are pale grey, with darker scales indicating cross lines and with a variable amount of reddish brown scaling opposite the end of the cell. The hindwings are pale greyish white, but slightly darker distally, and with grey and greyish black scales along the anal margin.
Oregocerata colossa is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae that is endemic to Venezuela. The wingspan is . The ground colour of the forewings is whitish, sprinkled with greyish rust (especially in the dorsal half of the wing) and with pinkish grey in the terminal third and at the costa. The hindwings are greyish cream, but whiter towards the base and densely strigulated with cream grey.
The forewings are light greyish ochreous more or less irrorated (sprinkled) with fuscous or dark fuscous. The stigmata form small cloudy fuscous or dark fuscous spots or dots, the plical rather obliquely before the first discal, sometimes an additional spot midway between the first discal and the base. There are sometimes terminal dots of dark fuscous suffusion. The hindwings are ochreous whitish, the apex sometimes greyish tinged.
The ground colour ranges from pale greyish brown to darker greyish brown. The pattern is variable, with the crenulate lines ranging from indistinct to strongly developed, or strong and combined with partially intense darkening of the ground colour. The hindwings are similar to the forewings, but the pattern is less distinct and there is no prominent postmedian line. There are probably multiple generations per year.
Mississippi State University. It is also found in Cuba.The Glaphyriinae (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae) of the Galapagos Islands, Ecuador, with keys to the Neotropical species of Hellula Guenée The forewing ground colour is ochre, with distinct pattern elements, consisting of a reniform spot with a few shining scales. The hindwings are light ochre brown, usually with a greyish-brown subterminal line and with greyish-brown terminal spots.
The colour of the upper parts is quite variable with different individuals being greenish-grey, grey, greyish-brown or black. There are dark spots arranged along three longitudinal bands of paler colour, pink, dull red or green. The flanks are grey or greyish-black and may be delineated by a thin white line. The underparts are cream or dull white with darker spots and blotches.
It has a total length of approximately . Adult males have a relatively heavy black bill. The upper parts are black, except for a greyish rump (actually white finely streaked black, but only visible up-close), a white wing-bars and a small white wing-speculum. The underparts are white, except for an irregular black chest-band (often incomplete) and greyish mottling to the flanks.
On the abaxial surface, leaves are a pale greyish colour and have prominent veins covered with fine, greyish-brown, dense, sessile star-shaped hairs. Inflorescence consists of large panicles with pale yellow, cream, or greenish coloured flowers. Flowers are also small, exist in terminal clusters, have no petals, and have ovaries which are practically inferior. The sepals are persistent, bracts deciduous, and the operculum is membranous.
Young bird hissing with mouth open in threat display The European nightjar is long, with a wingspan. The male weighs and the female . The adult of the nominate subspecies has greyish-brown upperparts with dark streaking, a pale buff hindneck collar and a white moustachial line. The closed wing is grey with buff spotting, and the underparts are greyish-brown, with brown barring and buff spots.
The forewings are clay color, the costal half suffused greyish, irrorate with many white-tipped, dark grey scales. There are two clouded areas in the center of the wing. There are three dark grey discal stigmata, one at one-third in the cell, one in the fold slightly beyond the first and one at the end of the cell. The hindwings are light greyish fuscous.Proc.
Allophylus natalensis is a small evergreen tree with a single stem up to tall, or it may develop as a bush with multiple, shorter stems. The bark is greyish-brown and may have a smooth texture or develop wrinkles. The smaller branches are greyish-white and downy. The leaves are borne on long petioles and are trifoliate, with three, almost stalkless, elliptical leaflets some long by wide.
Iliamna remota is a herbaceous, perennial flowering plant growing from 1 to 2.5 meters tall. It has a greyish-green, densely hairy stem and alternate, palmately-lobed leaves. These have medium green, smooth upper surfaces and greyish-green pubescent undersides. The large flowers develop in the axils of the leaves, either singly or in groups of up to three, ranging in color from white to lavender.
Eremophila retropila is a shrub which grows to a height of . The branches and leaves are covered with a dense layer of simple greyish-white hairs. The hairs on the branches are long and curve downwards. The leaves are crowded near the ends of the branches, are linear to elliptic in shape, mostly long, wide and appear felty due to the covering of greyish hairs.
The forewings are light buff overlaid with greyish fuscous, largely obscuring the lighter ground colour. There is a conspicuous, outwardly oblique, fuscous spot at the basal two-fifths, in the cell and there is a similar longitudinal blotch on the fold at the basal two-fifths. Across the end of the cell is an oblique fuscous spot. The hindwings are light greyish fuscous, paler basally.
The frons barred with orange and metallic blue black. Abdomen orange. Forewings with greyish basal area, mottled with brown. Costa orange, with five blue-black spots.
The fringes are brownish, with a sub-basal darker line. The hindwings and fringes greyish brown.The pterophoridae of North America The larvae feed on Gentiana quinquefolia.
The wingspan is about 40 mm. Palpi with short third joint. Hind femur of male not tufted with long hair. Body greyish brown without rosy tinge.
Paraplatyptilia lineata is a moth of the family Pterophoridae that is found in Russia (Ural mountains). The wingspan is . The forewings and hindwings are greyish brown.
Four bright-blue stripes run longitudinally on the side of the fish, with several faint greyish stripes on lowermost part of sides. Most fins are yellow.
Its wingspan is about 42 mm. Forewings with outer margin slightly angled at vein 4. Male with the hind tibia dilated. Male slaty greyish in color.
The chief points of difference in the male are "the dark leaden grey instead of greyish-brown colour above" and the obsolescence of the terminal markings.
The rest of the forewings is suffused with brown and reddish. The hindwings are greyish, mixed with brownish on the periphery and strigulated with brown grey.
It is also seen in moist eucalyptus areas on ridges. It may be identified by the greyish fawn colour under the leaf, and rusty hairy branchlets.
The markings are yellowish brown with black spots and blotches. The hindwings are whitish, suffused with pale brownish in the posterior half and with greyish strigulation.
The hindwings are pale greyish brown.Park, K. T. & Wu, C. S. (2003). "A revision of the genus Autosticha Meyrick (Lepidoptera: Oecophoridae) in Eastern Asia". Insecta Koreana.
The species is greyish-green coloured and is long. It have black coloured mottling on the wings with its underside being silver-grey to lime-green.
The hindwings are dark greyish brown. The larvae feed on Picea crassifolia., 1990: Three new species od tortricids on Picea. Forest Research 3 (2): 137-140.
Forewing hooked at outer angle. Head and thorax greyish brown. Forewing olive grey with metallic tinge with brown irrorations (speckles). Hindwing fuscous; cilia with tips white.
Khaya anthotheca trees may grow between tall. They have greyish-brown bark. On mature trees, white scented flowers are borne at the ends of the branches.
The ground colour of the forewings is either golden yellow or brownish orange with speckling of orange and dark brown scales. The hindwings are greyish white.
Madhuca costulata grows as a tree up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish. Inflorescences bear up to six flowers.
Its color can be described as greyish-brown on the back and silvery-white on the sides. It has no spines in front of its eyes.
The feathers of the neck are smooth and sometimes greyish brown. Crosses have produced all-grey, buff, and saddle back variants.Ashton (1999) p.33Holderread (1981) p.
External images For terms see Morphology of Diptera Wing length 8·25–12 mm. Antennomere 3 brownish-black. Arista plumose on basal half. Squamulae greyish-black.
'Grey Dawn' is a large, spreading shrub, distinguished by its compound panicles similar to 'Dartmoor', but for the blue flowers which can have a greyish hue.
The hindwings are lustrous cream greyish to silky white.Khan, Z. R.; et al. (1991). World Bibliography of Rice Stem Borers: 1794-1990. International Rice Research Institute. .
The basal part of the forewings is greyish brown with two beige spots. The outer third of the wing is beige. The hindwings are also beige.
Diospyros rigida is a tree in the family Ebenaceae. It grows up to tall. The twigs are greyish black. The fruits are round, up to long.
The wingspan is 20–24 mm.Carcina homomorpha at Jpmoth.org The forewings are light greyish-ochreous, the extreme costal edge whitish. The hindwings are rather light grey.
These are initially greyish-white but mature to yellow or ochre. The flesh is soft and fibrous, yellow-brown in colour and has an unpleasant odour.
Underside varies in colour greatly. Antennae, head, thorax and abdomen in both seasonal forms brown or greyish brown: the antennae annulated with white, ochraceous at apex.
The frass is deposited in this tube. Feeding takes place from within the tube. They are greyish white. Larvae can be found from September to November.
The whole body is grey-brown with greyish points and is covered with a thick pubescence, while legs and antennae are mainly reddish or dark- brown.
Forewing shining dark brown with reddish gloss, at one-fifth three short silver metallic streaks with bluish reflection in a row, a subcostal, a medial just above fold and half the length of the subcostal and a subdorsal, about as long as the subcostal but slightly further from base, a narrow tubercular silver metallic medial fascia with greenish and purplish reflections in the middle, perpendicular at dorsum, at two-thirds a tubercular silver metallic dorsal spot with bluish reflection, on costa at three-quarters, a tubercular pale golden costal spot, smaller than the dorsal spot and edged by a narrow white costal streak, apical line as two silver metallic spots with bluish reflection in the middle of the apical area and a broad white spot in the cilia at apex, cilia dark brown, paler on dorsum towards base. Hindwing shining dark greyish brown, cilia dark brown. Underside: forewing shining dark greyish brown with the white costal streak and apical spot distinctly visible, hindwing greyish brown. Abdomen dorsally shining ochreous-brown with golden gloss, ventrally shining dark greyish brown, segments broadly banded shining white posteriorly, anal tuft shining greyish-brown.
Microsarotis samaruana is a moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Nigeria. The wingspan is about 9 mm. The forewings are greyish with brownish suffusions.
The hindwings are semihyaline white, the costal margin and the termen broadly greyish brown, crossed by a wavy subterminal white line. There is a terminal white line.
Canarium grandifolium grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The scaly bark is greyish. The fruits are ellipsoid and measure up to long.
Like the preceding but belly white. Female similar to male but black parts replaced by greyish brown; belly more buffish. 3\. White-crowned phase ('capistrata'). Male (adult).
The forewings are greyish cream, but creamish postmedially and suffused with grey in the apical third. The strigulation (fine streaks) is grey brown. The hindwings are brownish.
The hindwings are greyish cream, tinged with brownish apically., 2013: Leaf-rollers from New Caledonia (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae). Shilap Revista de Lepidopterologia 41 (161): 69-93. Full article: .
Aulandra longifolia grows as a tree up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . Its bark is greyish brown. The flowers are white to creamy.
Genus 21 (4): 585-603. Full article: . The wingspan is about 19 mm. The ground colour of the forewings is greyish with brownish admixture and brownish suffusions.
Its wingspan is about 34 mm. The forewings of the male are somewhat broader. Body greyish brown. Forewings with double sub-basal, antemedial and postmedial waved lines.
The remaining part of wing is greyish brown, but darker towards the basal area. The hindwings are cream, brownish from the middle and darkening on the periphery.
Madhuca burckiana grows as a tree up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish brown. Inflorescences bear up to 10 flowers.
The forewings are light greyish ochreous, sprinkled with dark fuscous. The stigmata are blackish, with the plical obliquely beyond the first discal. The hindwings are light grey.
The fruit is a cylinder-shaped greyish white nut of about 8 mm (0.3 in) long and 5 mm (0.2 in) in diameter, with a powdery surface.
All class 444 locomotives of Serbian Railways have red and greyish-blue livery which is the same as for other electric locomotives operated - 441 and 461 series.
Male has yellowish-green head and thorax. Palpi, collar and tegula marked with greyish. Abdomen orange and anal tuft brownish. Forewings with yellowish green, with dark striae.
Eois fragilis is a moth in the family Geometridae. It is found in Colombia. Adults have a monochrome, greyish-brownish appearance. The larvae feed on Piper species.
Madhuca elmeri grows as a tree up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish brown. Inflorescences bear up to five flowers.
The hindwings are greyish, occasionally showing a few faint darker transverse lines., 1957: Cossidae from Chile (Lepidoptera). Mitteilungen der Münchner Entomologischen Gesellschaft, 47: 122-142. Full article: .
Forewing pale ochreous, the veins and costal streak greyish white. The ab. lata Tr. (5a) is darker, greyer without the brown tinge [than crassa Hbn. (= huguenini Ruhl)].
In the Book of Jin, Liu Yao was described as a tall man (approximately 2.28 metres) and that he had greyish eyebrows and a sparse long beard.
The specimens are small solitary plants with green to greyish-green stem, up to 10 cm in diameter. The ribs are well defined, traversed by tiny wrinkles.
Colour greyish brown. Head is speckled. A pair of black spots can be seen marking small tubercles. The larvae feed on Quercus, Ricinus, Rosa and Salix species.
Eupithecia okadai is a moth in the family Geometridae. It is found in Japan and Korea. The wingspan is about 20 mm. The wings are greyish white.
Throat, chest and belly yellowish, lower arms, and hind limbs are greyish. Some finger discs are white. The upper lip is dirty white. The iris is bronze.
There is a dark-grey area in the central part of the wing. The hindwings vary from uniform white to greyish., 2006, Eversmannia 7-8: 3-24.
It is deposited in the lowest part of the mine. Pupation takes place outside of the mine. They are yellowish green to greyish with a black head.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is vertical in profile. The parotoid glands are large and ovoid. Dorsal ground colour is greyish green.
Agdistis gittia is a moth in the family Pterophoridae. It is known from Spain. The wingspan is 22–23 mm. The forewings and hindwings are greyish brown.
Agdistis betica is a moth in the family Pterophoridae. It is known from Spain. The wingspan is 19–24 mm. The forewings and hindwings are greyish brown.
The chin and supercilium are greyish-buff and the underparts brownish-grey, with the central part of the lower breast and belly being paler or slightly yellowish.
Though with vertical lines and stripes in certain broader tree trunks. Small branches thick, greyish brown with rusty hairs towards the end. Shoots with dense woolly hairs.
Sawfish are dull brownish, greyish, greenish or yellowish above, but the shade varies and dark individuals can be almost black. The underside is pale, and typically whitish.
The terminal line is brown and marked by black interneural dots. The hindwing is unicolorous light greyish brown, without a discal spot and the underside is grey.
The crosslines are black, indistinct and the medial shade is well marked. The hindwing is greyish brown, without a discal spot and the underside is unicolorous grey.
There is a small basal patch and a broad band before middle, projecting outwardly in the disc and touching the following band. The hindwings are greyish-fuscous.
The uniforms of the NYSPP are very similar to those of the New York State Police. Their uniforms are a greyish blue and they wear black neckties.
The forewings are greyish white or grey, mottled with brown scales. The costal margin is ochreous yellowish-brown in the basal third and pale ocherous yellow along the notch, with yellowish brown scale tuft at one-third and two-thirds. There is a thin brown band from both sides of the notch, extending to above the dorsal corner of the cell, forming a V-pattern. The hindwings are greyish white.
Depressaria cinderella is a moth of the family Depressariidae which is endemic to Portugal. The wingspan is 16.5–19 mm. The forewings are greyish fuscous in dorsal half and in the apical area and blackish fuscous at the base and in costal half, blackish at the base of the dorsum and on the costa to mid-wing. The hindwings are whitish grey, greyish fuscous on the dorsum and towards the apex.
The ground colour of the forewings is deep pale emerald green above an oblique line, with grey-black marks along the costa, the fold and in the apex. The dorsal half of the wing is beige with ochrous and pale ferrugineous scales. The hindwings are pale greyish beige, the apical third darker greyish, with some dark grey transverse strigulae., 1979: Revision of the genus Beryllophantis Meyrick (Lepidoptera : Tortricidae).
Eucalyptus jutsonii is a mallee that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has rough, fibrous grey bark on the stems, smooth pinkish to greyish bark above. Young plants and coppice regrowth have sessile, dull greyish green, linear leaves, long and wide. Adult leaves are the same glossy green on both sides, linear in shape, long and wide tapering to a petiole up to long.
Eucalyptus leucophylla is a tree or mallee that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has rough, finely fissured greyish bark on the trunk and branches. Young plants and coppice regrowth have dull coloured, lance-shaped leaves that are long and wide. Adult leaves are the same dull, light green to greyish colour on both sides, long and wide tapering to a petiole long.
Gowardia are shrubby to decumbent hair lichens that are greyish to blackish in colour. They look similar to Alectoria, but Alectoria contains usnic acid, which gives it a yellowish to greenish-yellow hue, while Gowardia lacks this chemical and instead contains melanic pigments which make it greyish to blackish in colour. The pseudocyphellae of Gowardia are always white. The species of Gowardia could be confused with several other hair lichens.
The habitat consists of the Northern Coast and the Central Valley biotic provinces. The length of the forewings is about 8 mm for both males and females. The forewings are greyish brown, slightly darker along part of the costa and distally, and with scattered reddish brown scales in the lower and outer portions of the wings. The hindwings are greyish white, with dark scaling along the anal margin and distally.
The habitat consists of the Central Coastal Cordillera, Northern Valdivian Forest and the Valdivian Forest biotic provinces. The length of the forewings is about 9.5 mm for males and 9–10 mm for females. The forewings are greyish brown to dark brown, with grey scaling and with pale reddish brown scaling along the ends of the veins. The hindwings are grey, heavily scaled with greyish brown and dark brown scales.
Eucalyptus andrewsii is a tree that grows to a height of with rough, finely fibrous, greyish brown bark on the trunk and main branches. The leaves on young plants are arranged in opposite pairs, broadly lance-shaped to egg-shaped, long, wide and bluish or greyish green. The adult leaves are lance-shaped, often curved, long and wide on a petiole long. The leaves are the same colour on both surfaces.
The discal and discocellular spots brownish black, the former circular, the latter subrectangular. The terminal line is greyish white, with subrectangular blackish brown spots uniformly placed along its inner side, interrupted by pale brown at veins. The hindwings have the basal two-thirds white mixed with greyish scales. The distal one-third is deep grey tinged with pale reddish brown, gradually paler from the costa to the dorsum.
The discal spot is almost circular, smaller than the discocellular spot. The discocellular spot is nearly trapeziform and the terminal line is white, with ill-defined subrectangular black spots uniformly placed along its inner side, interrupted by greyish white mixed with blackish brown or brown scales at the veins. The hindwings have their basal three- fourths white, the distal one-fourth deep brown. The discocellular spot is pale greyish brown.
The forewings are greyish to reddish-brown with yellowish lines and spots outlined with yellow. There is a distinct black spot on the basal line, as well as fainter black spots on the antemedial and postmedial lines near the inner margin. The hindwings are greyish-brown, darker toward the outer margin. Adults are on wing from March to May and again in July in one to two generations per year.
Distinguishing features of this earless seal include square fore flippers and thick bristles on its muzzle. Adults are greyish-brown in colour, darker on the back; rarely with a few faint spots on the back or dark spots on the sides. Occasionally the face and neck are reddish brown. Bearded seal pups are born with a greyish-brown natal fur with scattered patches of white on the back and head.
The forewings are brown intermixed with white and a few greyish-orange scales, as well as three suffused white bands, alternating with three bands of the ground colour from the base to two-thirds. The distal one-third is mostly white intermixed with white scales tipped with brown and brown scales, as well as a few greyish-orange scales. The hindwings are pale brown. The larvae feed on Shepherdia canadensis.
There are 5 lance-shaped greyish-green to burgundy-coloured sepals which are long, spread outwards and densely covered with branched, greyish hairs. The petals are long and joined at their lower end to form a bell-shaped tube. The inside and outside of the petal tube is pink to pinkish white and lacks spots. The petal tube is usually mostly glabrous except for a few glandular hairs.
It also has three white bands along its length, formed by the white tips of shorter tail feathers. The juvenile of the species lacks a white forehead, is brown above, and has dark scales on its breast. The tail of the juvenile is shorter than that of the adult: juveniles also have greyish or yellowish lores, and greyish or white chin and throat. The flanks are a dull grey-brown.
The common treeshrew is one of the largest among treeshrews. Average body length is between , and average weight is around 190 g, with varying colours of reddish-brown, greyish or black upper parts and whitish belly. Its long, bushy tail is dark greyish- brown and almost reaches the length of the body. The paws are bare with sharp nails, and with a naked patch of skin above its long nose.
The forewings are greyish-brown with a fine fuscous transverse line and a snow-white median discal spot, edged anteriorly with fuscous. There is a fine fuscous wavy line from the costa to the dorsum, edged posteriorly with white in the costal portion. The hindwings are greyish-brown with a snow-white discal spot edged anteriorly with fuscous. There is also a fuscous postmedian line, edged posteriorly with white throughout.
Belly and flanks become brown or yellowish brown. When flight sights, male has a white marks at the edge of the first four primaries, as well with a white band on the first and fourth rectrices. The female does not possess the white mark on the tail. The face of the male can be greyish brown with brown marks; crown and margins of the forehead are greyish white.
Flag of Papua New Guinea, which features the bird The Raggiana bird-of-paradise is long. Its overall colour is a maroon-brown, with a greyish-blue bill, yellow iris and greyish-brown feet. The male has a yellow crown, dark emerald-green throat and yellow collar between the throat and its blackish upper breast feathers. It is adorned with a pair of long black tail wires and large flank plumes.
The southern big-eared mouse has a relatively heavy build for a mouse, accentuated by its thick fur. Fully grown adults of both sexes range from in total length, including the tail, and weigh between . It is however, not unusual for individuals to reach sexual maturity long before they reach the full adult size. The fur is dull greyish-brown over most of the body, with paler greyish or yellowish underparts.
The forewings are greyish yellow with scattered dark brown scales. The pattern of the forewings is formed by eight short oblique dark brown costal marks and a distinct dark brown dot near the middle of the cell and a small concolorous dot at the middle of the anal fold, as well as a large dark brown spot along the termen and outer margin. The hindwings are greyish brown.
Adult females have a rusty head and a greyish body. The juvenile is like the female, but lacks the white collar and has a smaller white wing patch.
The hindwings are light ochreous yellowish with a dark-grey dot in the centre of the disc and partial indications of a slender greyish line at two- thirds.
The upperparts are light grey-brown with an olive tint, the throat is a pale buffy-white, the belly greyish, and the rump and tail light rufous-brown.
The wings are greyish yellow, but more grey towards the termen in males. Females are deeper yellow with an orange tinge and a grey shade along the termen.
Limnaecia chrysidota is a moth in the family Cosmopterigidae. It is found in India. The wingspan is about . The forewings are ochreous-yellow, the base narrowly pale greyish.
Internally, the rectum is partially obscured by two long anal diverticula with ciliated funnels. Externally, the trunk is greyish-brown while the proboscis is orange with brownish streaks.
The forewings are dark brown, apically diffused with black scales and the costal margin with a greyish yellow spot at the distal one-fourth. The hindwings are grey.
The suffusions and rows of dots in the posterior third of the wing are brown. The markings are also brown, but partially diffuse. The hindwings are greyish brown.
Full article: . The habitat consists of the Northern Valdivian Forest Biotic Province. The length of the forewings is about 10 mm for females. The forewings are greyish brown.
It grows in seasonally wet areas, swamps, and fringing watercourses from Nannup to Albany. It flowers in spring and early summer in a greyish head of multiple spikelets.
The head, limbs and tail are greyish to yellowish-brown, with the front of each forelimb covered with large, angular scales and each thigh featuring several enlarged tubercles.
The forewings are rather dark fuscous, sprinkled with light greyish ochreous. The hindwings are fuscous, paler towards the base.Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 17 (3): 737.
The forewings are pale ochreous or whitish ochreous, greyish sprinkled, the costa sometimes yellower posteriorly. The hindwings are whitish yellowish.Transactions of the Entomological Society of London. 1922: 116.
The body of this gastropod is bluish black on the upperside, while the lower side is greyish white. They mainly feed on plant debris, humus, algae and fungi.
The forewings are semitransparent, covered with grey scales and with a darkened hind margin. The hindwings are greyish, with a weak reticulate (net-like) pattern at the margin.
The tail is greyish brown to rufous, with a black subterminal band and white feather tips and corners. Juveniles are mottled but with the tail pattern of adults.
The hindwings are light greyish brown. The larvae feed on Picea asperata, Picea purpurea and Picea wilsonii. The larvae have a cream-yellow body and dark brown head.
The postmedial area is greyish brown. The ground colour of the hindwings is white or very light grey, but darker postmedially. Larvae have been reared from Podandrogyne decipiense.
Chloroclystis plinthochyta is a moth in the family Geometridae. It was described by Turner in 1931. It is endemic to Australia (Queensland). Adults have greyish-brown patterned wings.
The hindwings are whitish, irrorated with brown and with traces of broken lines towards the apex. There is an indistinct greyish spot at the end of the cell.
Carohamilia ophelia is a moth in the family Cossidae. It is found in Guatemala. The wingspan is about 35 mm. The forewings are white with greyish transverse striae.
The species name is derived from Latin albus (white) and striatus (meaning lined), referring to forewing postmedian line traced by a greyish-white line in the postmedian area.
The wood of D. edulis is elastic, greyish- white to pinkish. The wood has general use for tool handles, and occasionally for mortars, and is suitable for carpentry.
Gonystylus othmanii grows as a tree up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish brown. The fruit is brown, up to long.
Gonystylus areolatus grows as a small tree up to tall. Bark is greyish brown. Habitat is mixed dipterocarp forest at around altitude. G. areolatus is endemic to Borneo.
Its wingspan is about 41 mm. It is an ochreous-greyish-brown or reddish-brown moth. Palpi dark at sides. Forewings with double subbasal and antemedial waved lines.
Caryocolum kasyi is a moth of the family Gelechiidae. It is found in Afghanistan. The length of the forewings is about 6 mm. The forewings are greyish brown.
The hindwings are light greyish brown to brown. Adults have been recorded on wing from May to July., 2004, Acta Zoologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 50 (1): 63-74.
Antennae pale brown, speckled with white; head, thorax and abdomen black; head and thorax anteriorly clothed with brown, sometimes greyish-black hairs; beneath: palpi, thorax and abdomen white.
Male, female. Forewing length 3.2-3.5 mm. Head: frons shining greyish white with greenish and reddish reflections, vertex and neck tufts shining greyish brown with reddish gloss, laterally and medially lined white, the white median line can be present, partly present or even completely absent; collar shining greyish brown; labial palpus first segment very short, white, second segment three-quarters of the length of third, dark brown with white longitudinal lines laterally and ventrally, third segment white, lined brown laterally, extreme apex white; scape dorsally shining dark brown with a white anterior line, ventrally shining white, antenna shining dark brown with a white line from base to almost one-half, becoming interrupted towards apex, this annulated section somewhat variable in length, followed towards apex by five white segments, one dark brown, one white, one dark brown, one white, ten dark brown and eight white segments at apex. Thorax and tegulae shining greyish brown with reddish gloss, thorax with a white median line.
The forewings are chestnut-brown, a greyish fuscous shade, commencing at the base, occupies the space between the costa and the fold and is attenuated outward and upward from the middle of the fold, breaking at its outer extremity into lines which follow the costal veins nearly to the apex. On this shade are three yellowish ochreous lines, one commencing at the base and running to the middle of the costa, the other two beyond it running from the cell nearly to the costa. The terminal and dorsal veins are indicated by narrow greyish fuscous lines, of which there is a slight shade also around the apex before the chestnut-brown cilia. The hindwings are greyish brown.
On the underside the wings are brownish, turning to greyish white on the termen. Forewing underside has a more or less obscure pale-bordered discocellular spot, followed by a transverse, slightly curved discal series of six black spots encircled with white. The underside of the hindwing has the brown basal area irrorated (sprinkled) inwardly with metallic blue scales and sharply demarcated from the greyish-white terminal area which occupies about half the wing; discocellular spot large and prominently white, as is an angulated transverse discal series of large spots; these latter spots in many specimens somewhat obscure on the greyish-white ground colour of the terminal half of the wing. Cilia of both forewings and hindwings conspicuously white.
In photography, an orthochromatic light spectrum is one devoid of red light. In biology, orthochromatic refers to the greyish staining because of acidophilic and basophilic mixture in the cell.
There is a bright ochreous mark in the disc above the middle. The hindwings are greyish fuscous.Hudson,G.V. 1928: The butterflies and moths of New Zealand. FERGUSON & OSBORN LTD.
World Wide Web electronic publication (www.afromoths.net) (22.Jan.2015) This species has a wingspan of 9mm. Its forewings are glossy light greyish- ochreous; markings formed by dark fuscous irrorations. .
The forewings are green with white costal strigulae (fine streaks) in the posterior half of the wing with blackish divisions. The markings are also blackish. The hindwings are greyish.
The underside is paler. The hindwing upper- and underside is dark greyish brown, with a translucent central area of variable size and shape crossed by densely scaled fuscous veins.
A systematic study on the genus Deltophora Janse from China (Lepidoptera: Gelechidae) The length of the forewings is about 5.5 mm. The forewings are greyish brown with dark markings.
The Moths of Borneo The wingspan is 20–34 mm.Revision der orientalischen Bombycidae (Lepidoptera) The ground colour is pale yellow with greyish-brown markings, including an oblique medial band.
The forewings are lustrous white, with ocherous markings. The scales are usually dark-tipped. The hindwings are greyish ocherous. Adults have been recorded on wing from May to July.
Its total length is . It has small eyes, which can be orange, red, or reddish-brown. Its dorsum is glossy and colored dark gray or a dark, greyish-brown.
Adult male wingspan is 11 mm. Head pale ochreous. Palpus pale ochreous greyish. A longitudinal fuscous line runs along and above lower margin, edged on both sides with white.
The glossy balck seeds have an ovoid, ellipsoid or obovoid shape with a length of and a width of with a creamy-grey or greyish coloured many folded aril.
Full article: . The habitat consists of the Northern Valdivian Forest Biotic Province. The length of the forewings is about 9.5 mm for females. The forewings are dark greyish brown.
The beak is greyish, the legs are olive or grey, and the iris is chesnut. The juvenile bird is duller, and its upperparts do not have a bronze tone.
The suffusions, strigulae and venation in the posterior half of the wing are brownish and the markings are greyish brown. The hindwings are dirty cream with grey-brown strigulation.
Other parts of the interfascia are greyish with brownish spots and green scaling. The markings are brown. The hindwings are whitish up to the middle, tinged grey cream postmedially.
The mine has the form of a rather large, round or elliptical blotch mine on the upperside of the leaf. It is greyish-white, including dark grains of frass.
118 In 1863 Victor Guérin visited and noted, lying beside a well, several trunks of greyish marble. A kubbeh was here, dedicated to Neby Barak, and surrounded by tombs.
2012 The wingspan is 17 mm. The forewings are mustard brown with a dark fuscous discal spot at the upper corner of the cell. The hindwings are greyish brown.
Chisocheton crustularii is a tree in the family Meliaceae. It grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish. The flowers are white.
The forewings are beige, with scales that are darker tinged toward the apical one-third of the wing and the base of the costa. The hindwings are greyish brown.
The forewings are medium to dark greyish brown with blackish antemedial and postmedial lines and two dark spots in the median area. The hindwings are similar but slightly paler.
Streyella canariensis is a moth of the family Gelechiidae. It is found on the Canary Islands. The wingspan is about . The forewings are mealy white, sprinkled with greyish fuscous.
Males have a baggy vocal sac with a clear posterior flap. The upper and lower jaws are barred. The gular region is greyish in males but speckled in females.
As a result of its greyish colour T. marcida could also be confused with Izatha psychra however T. marcida has antennal pecten which is lacking in the Izatha species.
The frass is deposited in a narrow central line with a greyish brown colour. Larvae can be found from September to May. Pupation takes place outside of the mine.
The wingspan is about 60–72 mm. Head, thorax and abdomen clothed with pale reddish-brown and greyish hair. Forewings pale golden brown with green reflexions. Outer area whitish.
The ground colour is greyish in the terminal portion, where the spots are brownish yellow. The hindwings are whitish, in the terminal part of the wing tinged with brownish.
Eucalyptus petiolaris is a tree that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has rough, flaky bark on part or all of the trunk, smooth greyish and yellowish bark above. Young plants and coppice regrowth have dull greyish green, egg-shaped leaves that are long and wide. Adult leaves are the same shade of green on both sides, lance-shaped or curved, long and wide tapering to a petiole long.
Eucalyptus microneura is a tree that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has rough, fissured, fibrous or flaky, greyish brown bark on the trunk and branches. Young plants and coppice regrowth have dull greyish, bluish or glaucous, lance-shaped leaves. Adult leaves are a similar colour to the juvenile leaves, more or less the same colour on both sides, lance-shaped, long and wide on a petiole long.
The Alpine shrew is in length, not including a tail as long as its body, and weighs between . It is a uniform greyish-black on its dorsal (upper) surface and greyish-brown on its underparts. The tips of its teeth are reddish-brown and it has a long pointed snout, small black eyes and rounded pink ears. Its legs and feet are white and the underside of its hairy tail is yellowish.
There is a white flash on the forehead. The upper parts are a dark reddish-brown, each of the hairs having a greyish-black base. The underparts are greyish-black, the hairs having reddish-brown tips, and the tail has only a few hairs. Adaptations to its burrowing lifestyle include large incisors for loosening soil, rootless molars that grow throughout the animal's life, and spade-like front paws with long recurved nails.
Eucalyptus leprophloia is a mallee that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has rough, fibrous, greyish brown bark on the base of the trunks, smooth greyish over pale copper-coloured bark above. Young plants and coppice regrowth have elliptic to egg-shaped leaves that are long, wide and have a petiole. Adult leaves are the same glossy green on both sides, lance-shaped, long and wide on a petiole long.
Their bills are short and broad; they appear yellow in males and a brownish greyish in females. The quetzal's uppertail coverts are darker green and extend beyond the tip of the tail, more so in the male than in the female. Both the male and the female have a black undertail, though the female sometimes displays greyish-black tips. The feathers on the lower breast of both sexes are a brilliant red colour.
Eucalyptus jensenii is a tree that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has hard, rough, coarse black "ironbark" on the trunk and larger branches. Young plants and coppice regrowth have dull greyish green, egg-shaped to elliptic leaves long and wide. Adult leaves are the same shade of dull green or greyish green on both sides, egg-shaped to lance- shaped, long and wide on a petiole long.
If stressed, they adopt a pattern with broad horizontal white stripes. At larger sizes, the adult colours appear and the male or female gonads are mature. The adult females are red with a yellow-edged greyish saddle shape on the back and a yellow spot at the base of the tail. The males are overall greyish with paler underparts and no distinctive markings, although typically with blackish bars on the throat and opercular.
The habitat consists of areas ranging in height from just above sea level to about 1,350 meters in the Northern Valdivian Forest and the Valdivian Forest Biotic Provinces. The length of the forewings is about 9.5–11 mm for males and 9.5–12 mm for females. The forewings are brown, with grey and dark brown scaling. The hindwings are greyish white anteriorly, with pale greyish scales distally and dark brown scales along the anal margin.
Eucalyptus cadens is a spreading tree that grows to a height of with a characteristic leaning habit, and forms a lignotuber. The bark on the lower of the trunk is rough, compacted and greyish brown to black. The higher parts of the trunk and branches have some greyish green bark, often with a few ribbons of shed bark. Young plants and coppice regrowth have elliptic to oblong leaves, long, wide and have a petiole.
The African blue flycatcher is a dainty, pale, bright blue flycatcher with a short crest and long tail. The entire upper parts and tail are bright blue, shading between blue and cyan, with black lores and black flight feathers edged with blue, the underparts are greyish blue fading to whitish on the belly. The bill and legs are black. Juveniles are duller with faint greyish spotting on the head and wing coverts.
The forewings are whitish grey, irregularly strewn with coarse greyish-ochreous and dark grey scales. The markings are grey suffusedly mixed with greyish ochreous and dark fuscous. There is a basal patch occupying one-fourth of the wing, with the edge nearly straight, somewhat oblique. There is also a moderate rather oblique fasciae before and beyond the middle and there are some small spots along the costa, and irregular marbling towards the apex.
The spiny part of the dorsal fin has the membrane between the spines either not incised or having slight incisions. There are 63-75 scales in the lateral line. This species is overall greyish in colour and is covered in irregular small dark dots with fewer larger black spots. The juveniles are yellowish but as they mature, they become more greyish-blue until when they reach a length of only the fins are yellowish.
Eremophila nivea is an erect shrub which grows to a height of between . Its branches, leaves and sepals are covered with a layer of soft white to greyish matted hairs giving the plant a silvery-greyish appearance. The leaves are arranged alternately along the branches and are linear in shape, mostly long, wide and have a covering of woolly hairs. The flowers are borne singly or in pairs in leaf axils on woolly stalks long.
The forewings are greyish white, tinged with yellowish brown. There is a large triangular black patch at the base and the costal margin is scattered with greyish black dots and short streaks. A large patch is situated beyond the costal three-fifths, consisting of three inconspicuous longitudinal short black stripes. The discal spot is black with a white dot at the inside and there is a black spot in the middle of the cell.
The Kam dwarf hamster has a head-and-body length of between and a tail length of . The dorsal fur is dark greyish-brown, sometimes spotted or streaked with black, the underparts are greyish white and there is a wave-like transition where the two colours meet. The tail is thick and well-covered with guard hairs, having a dark stripe at the top and otherwise being white, with a wholly white tip.
The discal and discocellular spots are black, the latter relatively large and the terminal line is pale yellow, with subrectangular brown or blackish-brown spots uniformly placed along its inner side, interrupted by white mixed with brown at the veins. The basal two-thirds of the hindwings is yellowish white, the distal one-third greyish brown, becoming paler from the costa to the dorsum and the discocellular spot is pale greyish brown.
This Perennial plant has a woody base and long stem that reaches a height between 80 and 100 cm (27.5 and 39.3 inches). The plant is covered with dense short hairs, giving a greyish-white appearance to the plant. The leaves are somewhat fleshy and appear green above and greyish-white below, with old leaves persisting at the base. C. gymnocarpa Flowers in May, producing tiny pink flowers in a compact flower head.
Centaurea fischeri can reach a height of . These plants show a greyish pubescence and petiolate lanceolate leaves long. Flowers are cream- white to pink-lilac, with a diameter of about .
Hellinsia varioides is a moth of the family Pterophoridae. It is found in North America, including California. The wingspan is 20–24 mm. The forewings are unicolorous pale greyish white.
It is reddish-brown above with buff flanks and a greyish crown and nape. The sides of the head are streaked black and white and it has a black moustache.
Diospyros britannoborneensis is a tree in the family Ebenaceae. It grows up to tall. The twigs dry greyish or blackish. The fruits are ovoid to round, up to in diameter.
There is a row of blackish-brown spots along the termen. The markings are grey with black spots. The hindwings are greyish, the basal part of the wing is whiter.
Reniform broken up into two spots. A prominent marginal greyish band with a waved line found on it. Hindwings with prominent medial incomplete white band. The margin and cilia whitish.
Mesophleps tabellata is a moth of the family Gelechiidae. It is found in Karnataka, India. The wingspan is about 13.5 mm. The forewings are greyish white, with scattered black scales.
Olceclostera ibar is a moth in the Bombycidae family. It is found in Argentina. The wingspan is about 29 mm. The forewings are light drab, suffused with light greyish olive.
Merulempista digitata is a moth of the family Pyralidae. It is known from China (Gansu, Xinjiang). The wingspan is 22–27 mm. The head is greyish brown to dark brown.
The wingspan is about 12 mm. Adults have a pale yellowish-white or greyish-white color with a few yellower streaks and numerous black or brown dots on the wings.
The hindwings are reddish brown, crossed about the middle from the costal to the inner margin by a pale greyish-brown waved band, which is darkest on the inner margin.
Female is about 8-12 mm long and male is 3.5-4.5 mm. After Cephalothorax greyish brown with hairs. Sternum heart shaped with hairy pubescent white patch. Palps bear spines.
Falseuncaria aberdarensis is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Kenya. The wingspan is 11–13 mm. The forewings are greyish white, suffused with fuscous.
Adults are greyish with a white head and thorax. They are on wing in July.UKmoths The larvae feed on Prunus spinosa. They initially mine the leaves of their host plant.
Adults show striking sexual dimorphism. The caterpillar has a greyish head and flanks, with the broad black dorsum. Setae are white. Pupa is bristly, piebald in dark grey and cream.
The hindwings are greyish brown with transverse striae., 2010: Review of East African Cochylini (Lepidoptera, Tortricidae) with description of new species. Norwegian Journal of Entomology 57 (2): 81-108. Abstract: .
The forewings are light grey with reddish-white sprinkling. The hindwings are shining grey.Horae Societatis Entomologicae Rossicae 12 (3): 297 The larvae feed on Halimodendron eichvaldii. They are greyish green.
Number of segments 41; elytra 15 pairs. Middorsally transversely banded greyish green. Anterior margin of prostomium with an acute anterior projection. Lateral antennae inserted ventrally (beneath prostomium and median antenna).
Eupithecia microptilota is a moth in the family Geometridae. It is found in Peru. The wingspan is about 15–17 mm. The forewings are pale greyish green with black lines.
It is a tall, dull green colored bamboo species with greyish green when mature. It is composed of few closely growing culms. It reaches a height of 6–23 m.
Swedish Moths The larvae feed on Astragalus arenarius. They create a greyish, laterally strongly compressed sheath case. The last part is bent downwards. The case has about twenty indistinct ridges.
Adults are greyish brown, and have a recurved inner margin to the forewings, and a recurved margin to the tornus of the hindwings. The larvae probably feed on Rosaceae species.
Female moths have a wingspan of . The head is a light grey to ochre. The whitish pedipalps are porrect, pointed and straight. The thorax and abdomen are dark greyish brown.
Bryotropha senectella is a moth of the family Gelechiidae. It is found throughout Europe. The wingspan is 9–13 mm. The forewings are brown, mottled with yellow to greyish ochreous.
The hindwings are pale greyish fuscous, paler basally. On the termen are three or four ill-defined fuscous spots and the apical portion of the wing is speckled with fuscous.
Volumen 8. Numerus 3 where it has been recorded from Tajikistan. The wingspan is 6.1-7.7 mm. The forewings are dark greyish-brown, mottled by whitish basal parts of the scales.
L. bifasciata Brem. (84 b). Wings dull greyish black. The forewing with a transparent white band composed of five spots, which are separated by the veins; it ends before vein 1.
The eggs, which measure 18 by 14 mm, are greyish-, greenish- or blueish-white, and are marked with dark brown and lavender splotches and spots, usually concentrated around the large end.
The star-throated antwren is in length and weighs . The male has rufous-brown upperparts, tail and . The forehead is greyish. The wing- coverts are black-brown with two buff bars.
The apical area is somewhat paler. There is a greyish mark at the costa. The hindwings are darker brown and unmarked. The abdominal tufts of the male are fairly bright red.
Zootaxa, 2367: 1–68. Preview The length of the forewings is about . The forewings are ochreous- whitish with scattered groups of greyish scales. The hindwings are shining whitish with darker tips.
The forewings are creamy white with some brown spots. The hindwings are greyish cream to pale brownish. The larvae feed on Ulmus species. They mine the leaves of their host plant.
The forewings are dull brown, except for the dull greyish basal dorsal area. The hindwings are fuscous. Adults have been recorded on wing in July. The larvae feed on Solidago species.
The underside is grey to greyish brown. The forewing sometimes has a line of white-bordered dark spots. Adults are on wing from July to August. Adults feed on flower nectar.
Its general colouring is dark greyish-green or brown with a pale underside. The scales on the lateral line are pale. The maximum reported age for this species is 27 years.
The ground colour of the forewings is yellowish brown with a slight cinnamon hue, suffused brown along the dorsum and tinged greyish in the terminal third. The hindwings are blackish brown.
Madhuca sarawakensis is a tree in the family Sapotaceae. It grows up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish. Inflorescences bear up to 10 flowers.
Madhuca pubicalyx grows up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish brown. Inflorescences bear up to eight flowers. The fruits are ellipsoid, up to long.
The hindwings are light fuscous with a long greyish fringe. The larvae feed on Ruizia cordata and Dombeya acutangula. They mine the leaves of their host plant. The mine is tentiform.
Leucophyes pedestris can reach a length of about (rostrum included). The body is elongate shape, with a dark brown or greyish basic color. Adults can be found from May to September.
The forewings are chestnut brown with a suffusion of brown-tipped scales and with dark-brown markings. The hindwings are pale greyish brown. Adults have been recorded on wing in February.
The colour of the European squid is greyish-transparent or reddish, depending on the expansion of chromatophores in the dermis. Males have small chromatophores on their mantle.Loligo vulgaris (Lamarck, 1798). AdriaMed.
Kessleria macedonica is a moth of the family Yponomeutidae. It is found in North Macedonia.Fauna Europaea The length of the forewings is about 8 mm. The forewings are light greyish brown.
The tail is rounder. The newly hatched young are covered in white down. They then moult into a greyish speckled plumage. The spots on the bill appear only after a year.
Homoranthus homoranthoides is a distinctive species recognised by its low growing prostrate habit. A shrub with greyish green linear leaves, small pendulous cream coloured flowers which turn red as they age.
Nape brown but sides of neck whitish. Female: Buffy submoustachial and throat, and black malar stripes, crown dark brown streaked pale. Juvenile: Pale greyish-brown central crown stripe. Rump yellowish brown.
Males measure and females in snout–vent length. The snout is vertical in profile. The parotoid glands are large and elongated to elliptical in shape. Dorsal ground colour is greyish green.
Some suffused dark fuscous spots and mottling occupy the apical fourth. The hindwings are thinly scaled, greyish, with the veins and marginal edges suffused dark grey.Exotic Microlepidoptera. 4 (2-4): 70.
Its greyish coloration and very long tail distinguish it from all other grasswrens.The Wrens and Warblers of Australia. (1982). The National Photographic Index of Australian Wildlife. Angus and Robertson Publishers. London.
The forewings are yellow, with scattered dark brown scales. The basal third of the costal margin is black, with a small black spot near two-thirds. The hindwings are greyish yellow.
Xanthophyllum heterophyllum grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The smooth bark is greyish or yellowish. The brown fruits are round and measure up to in diameter.
The dorsum bears large, scattered tubercles. Dorsal colouration is uniformly grey, but the upper eyelids are yellowish-grey. The thighs have diffuse crossbands. The ventral parts are cream with greyish variegations.
Pareulype berberata has a wingspan of 27–32 mm.UKMoths Antennae are filiform. Forewings show greyish ground colour, with dark brown and ash brown trasversal wavy bands. Hindwings are pale and unmarked.
Review and full article: The length of the forewings is about 6.3 mm. The forewings are brown intermixed with pale greyish-yellow and dark-brown scales. The hindwings are translucent brown.
The forewing is broad and white, although there is a terminal line in some specimens marked by black interveinal dots. The hindwing is light greyish brown, with an indistinct discal spot.
The forewing is broad and white, although there is a terminal line in some specimens marked by black interveinal dots. The hindwing is light greyish brown, with an indistinct discal spot.
The forewing is broad and white, although there is a terminal line in some specimens marked by black interveinal dots. The hindwing is light greyish brown, with an indistinct discal spot.
There is a distinctive brown median band and bounded by darker cross lines. The centre (discal) spot is usually drop-shaped. However, the pattern is variable. The rear wing is greyish.
The forewings are greyish brown with scattered dark brown scales and dark brown costal spot. The hindwings are grey. (2001). "Two new species of Dichomeris (Lepidoptera: Gelechiidae) from Taiwan". Insecta Koreana.
The wings are greyish brown in color. Forewing has white triangle on the costa. Hindwing is narrow translucent in the central area. The length of forewing can be 17–19 mm.
Zootaxa, 2367: 1–68. Preview China (Xinjiang) and Japan. Larva and damage The wingspan is 8–10 mm. The forewings are yellow, with the costal margin and apical area greyish black.
Recurvaria insequens is a moth of the family Gelechiidae. It is found in Brazil.Recurvaria at funet The wingspan is about 14 mm. The forewings are pale greyish-ochreous with blackish markings.
The antennae is brownish black. Head and thorax are covered with long bluish- grey hairs. The abdomen is greyish white. Mud-puddling in Someshwara Wingspan: 86–90 mm (3.40-3.55 in).
The wingspan is about 21 mm. The forewings are white with a pale ochreous line on the basal fifth of the costa and then just beneath the costa to beyond the middle, two short oblique greyish-ochreous projections from this towards the base. The dorsal area below the fold is suffused pale greyish-ochreous, with a triangular dark fuscous spot at three-fourths and cloudy greyish-ochreous or fuscous dots on the fold just before the middle and midway between this and the base, one above and between these, one in the disc at three-fourths, and one obliquely before and above this. Several cloudy pale brownish-ochreous dots indicate a partial subterminal and pre-marginal series in the disc.
The wingspan is 23–25 mm. The forewings are pale greyish ochreous with three faint greyish transverse lines, the first curved, irregular, from just before the end of the costal fold to the dorsum at two-fifths, the second from a small brownish spot on the costa beyond the middle (the costal edge fuscous for some distance before this) gently curved beyond the cell but obsolete on the dorsal third, the third represented by a small semi-oval dark fuscous spot on the costa near the apex and a hardly curved series near the termen of seven indistinct grey dots on veins 1c to 7. The second discal stigma is small and grey. The hindwings are pale grey, becoming pale greyish ochreous towards the base.
The forewings are pale greyish ochreous, thickly suffused and streaked with purplish fuscous. The markings are ill-defined and consist of a dark fuscous patch at the base of the dorsal margin, a dash of the same colour immediately above the middle of the wing at one third from the base, followed by some pale greyish- ochreous scales, as well as a pale greyish-ochreous spot on the middle of the wing at about the end of the cell, preceded and followed by fuscous scales. Beyond and above this are several fuscous dashes radiating outwards to the costal and to the upper half of the apical margin, where a row of obscure fuscous spots is found. The hindwings are pale shining whitish grey.
Close to where the bar rises on the anterior wings are six very small white spots, placed between the nerves, reaching to the anterior edges. Underside: palpi, breast, and sides greyish brown. Anterior wings greyish, clouded with red brown, particularly at the tips; on the middle of the external edges is a patch of yellow, and on the middle of the posterior edges is a patch of a pale clay colour, with six small white spots. Posterior wings having a third part, next the shoulders, greyish and dark brown; the remainder pale clay, with a reddish-brown patch next the upper corners; from whence runs an undulated brown line to the abdominal edges at the extremity of the body, and another fainter along the external edges.
The upper side of its tail is brown with a pair of white feathers in the center. Its underparts are a pale buff or white. The sexes differ slightly in that the male has a black crown speckled with red and orange and the female has a plain black crown. Both sexes have chestnut irises, pinkish-buff orbital rings, greyish legs and a greyish beak with the upper mandible appearing somewhat darker than the lower one.
Eucalyptus orgadophila is a tree that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has rough, grey, flaky or fibrous bark on the lower trunk, smooth white to greyish bark above. Young plants and coppice regrowth have dull, bluish, egg-shaped to almost round leaves that are long and wide. Adult leaves are the same shade of dull bluish to greyish green on both sides, lance-shaped, long and wide, tapering to a petiole long.
Eucalyptus campanulata is a tree that grows to a height of , sometimes and has rough, finely fibrous, greyish brown bark on the trunk and main branches, smooth whitish bark on the thinner branches. The leaves on young plants are lance-shaped to egg-shaped or curved, long, wide and bluish or greyish green. The adult leaves are lance-shaped to curved, long and wide on a petiole long. The leaves are the same bluish green on both surfaces.
Eucalyptus × lamprocalyx is a crooked, spreading tree or shrub that grows to a height of up to . It has tessellated greyish bark on the trunk and branches. Adult leaves are arranged in opposite pairs, sessile, the same greyish green on both sides, broadly lance-shaped, long and wide. The flower buds are arranged in groups of between seven and eleven on a thick or slightly flattened peduncle long, the individual buds on thick pedicels up to long.
It is hollow and has a bulbous base measuring in diameter. The stem surface above the level of the ring is white, sparsely covered with woolly or fuzzy tufts, occasionally breaking into transverse bands; below the ring the stem surface is smooth or occasionally breaks into bands or fibrillose scales. It is whitish, buff or greyish-sepia streaked with grey. The stem base may or may not have a band or rim of buff to greyish-sepia volval remnants.
It is a question of a sediment formed by clays of greyish color of whitish tones. The percentages of organic matter diminish and increase those of carbonates, though they are similar to the low level (0,45 % and 58,3 % respectively). UE 14010 It corresponds with the low level of the negative structure 14. It is a question of a sediment formed by clays (more than 50%) with sands and greyish slimes of color of whitish tone (white 5Y 8/1).
The mallee tree will grow to in height, it has an upright habit and can have a single or multiple stems with a lignotuber at the base of the trunk. It mostly forms a dense canopy of thin dark green leaves that have conspicuous oil glands. The bark is fibrous, greyish-brown to dark-grey in colour with longitudinally fissured bark on the lower trunk and with smooth greyish bark above. Adult leaves have an alternate arrangement.
Eucalyptus lucasii is a mallee that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has smooth, brown to greyish bark, sometimes with rough flaky or ribbony bark at the base of the trunk. Young plants and coppice regrowth have dull greyish green, egg-shaped leaves that are long and wide. Adult leaves are arranged alternately, the same shade of green on both sides, broadly lance-shaped, long and wide tapering to a petiole long.
Side view of mature adult showing characteristic "S" neck Near Devonport, Tasmania with wings raised in an aggressive display revealing white flight feathers Black swans are mostly black-feathered birds, with white flight feathers. The bill is bright red, with a pale bar and tip; and legs and feet are greyish-black. Cobs (males) are slightly larger than pens (females), with a longer and straighter bill. Cygnets (immature birds) are a greyish-brown with pale-edged feathers.
The forewings are greyish brown, with scattered brown scales and a dark brown costal margin, with short yellow strigulae on the basal half and a dark brown oval spot below two-fifths. There is a short dark brown streak at one-fourth of the cell, with dark brown spots near the lower angle and the end. There are also dark brown dots at the distal one-fourth on both the costal margin and termen. The hindwings are greyish brown.
Gomphidius glutinosus, commonly known as the slimy spike-cap, is a gilled mushroom found in Europe & North America. Although it has gills, it is a member of the order Boletales, along with the boletes. The fruiting bodies sprout in pine, fir and spruce woodland in Europe in autumn. Initially, are completely covered with a slimy veil, breaking through to reveal a greyish or brownish-capped mushroom with decurrent greyish gills which sometimes resembles a child's top.
The habitat consists of the Central Valley, Northern Valdivian Forest and the Valdivian Forest biotic provinces. The length of the forewings is about 8.5–9 mm for females. The forewings are dark greyish brown, with grey, brown, and greyish black scales, and dull reddish brown scaling in the median area, along the cubital vein and at the vein endings. The hindwings are pale grey, with brown and blackish brown scaling distally and along the anal margin.
Hindwing greyish brown irrorated (sprinkled) with minute dark spots and short transverse striae, and shaded in the cell, on the middle of the costal margin, and on the middle of the termen with diffuse brown. Antennae, head, thorax and abdomen dark brown; beneath, palpi, thorax and abdomen greyish brown. The larger varieties, with very broad orange markings on both forewings and hindwings, have been separated as race sanguinalis. This is chiefly a Himalayan and eastern form.
The wingspan is about 23 mm. The forewings are light greyish-ochreous, with the bases of the scales grey and the extreme costal edge pale. There are three faint cloudy rather irregular nearly parallel oblique greyish lines, the first obsolete on the costa, the second about the middle of the wing, the third from the costa about three- fifths to the dorsum before the tornus, somewhat curved. There are three or four small faint darker terminal dots.
Hieromantis arcuata is a moth of the Stathmopodidae family. It is found in China (Guangdong, Hainan, Hong Kong). The wingspan is 8−9 mm. The forewings are greyish brown, with scattered yellowish brown scales, the distal one-fifth ochreous brown and with a greyish brown band extending from the costal two- thirds obliquely inward to the dorsal three-fifths, its inner side set an ill- defined ochre-yellow patch neither reaching the costa nor the dorsum.
The forewings are light violet grey, the base suffused with white, the costal edge white, on the basal fourth more broadly suffused with white. There is a triangular blotch of darker greyish-violet suffusion on the dorsum before the middle, enclosing a faint ochreous-whitish erect wedge-shaped spot on the dorsum. There is also a greyish-violet angulated shade crossing the wing at two-thirds and an undefined terminal fascia of violet suffusion. The hindwings are dark grey.
Eucalyptus quadrans is a mallee that typically grows to a height of , rarely a tree to , and forms a lignotuber. It has smooth greyish bark, sometimes with rough, flaky or scaly bark near the base of the trunk. Young plants and coppice regrowth have greyish green, linear leaves that are long and wide. Adult leaves are the same shade of glossy dark green on both sides, narrow lance- shaped, long and wide, tapering to a petiole long.
Soft dorsal, anal, and caudal (tail) fins are all large and rounded, and are dusky grey or black with distinct white edges. The large, rounded pectoral fins are usually similar in colour to flanks. The pelvic fins are large and angular, set forward of the pectoral fins, and are usually a translucent greyish-white colour, tending toward opacity in large fish. The leading greyish-white coloured rays on the pelvic fins split into two trailing filaments.
The forewings are ochreous brown with the basal half of the costal margin and basal three-fourths of the posterior margin brown. There is a brown spot in the cell at the base and at the end and there are two oblique spots at the middle. There are short whitish yellow streaks on the termen, the inside diffused with brown scales. The hindwings are greyish brown, with the basal half of the costal margin greyish white.
Eucalyptus crebra is a tree that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has persistent thick, rough, deeply furrowed, greyish black "ironbark" from the base of its trunk to the small branches. Young plants and coppice regrowth have linear to lance-shaped or curved leaves long and wide. Adult leaves are linear to lance- shaped, the same dull green to greyish colour on both sides, long and wide on a petiole long.
The fruits are dry capsules containing greyish hairs and five seeds. The plant is dispersed when goats eat the leaves and seed capsules in the dry season when little grass is available.
Male flowers are in long panicles. The tuberous root is large and fleshy, about in diameter with a thick bark. Transverse section yellowish, outside greyish brown. Taste is muscilagenous and very bitter.
The hindwings are silvery white, with distal half distinctly striped greyish brown across the wing., 1979: Revision of the genus Beryllophantis Meyrick (Lepidoptera : Tortricidae). Australian Journal of Zoology 27 (5): 789–811.
Manulea fuscodorsalis is a moth of the family Erebidae. It is found in Taiwan and Japan.Japanese Moths The wingspan is about 30 mm. The wings are greyish white, with a yellowish tinge.
Radermachera ramiflora grows up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish. The flowers are yellow. The fruits are straight or twisted and measure up to long.
In the female, the abdomen is pale golden-ochreous whitish with light greyish-fuscous irrorations. Venter whitish fuscous. A faint bronzy gloss visible on venter. Forewings broader and shorter than in male.
The ground colour of the forewings is cream slightly tinged with brownish. The strigulation (fine streaking) is weak and brownish. The markings are brown. The hindwings are greyish with darker, diffuse strigulation.
They mine the leaves of their host plant. The mine has the form of a digitate blotch under the epidermis of the upper surface. It is pale green or pale greyish brown.
The forewings are dark brown with white markings. The hindwings are pale greyish brown. Adults have been recorded on wing in January, March, April, May, June, July and October.Revue suisse de Zoologie.
Madhuca kuchingensis grows up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish brown. Inflorescences bear up to eight flowers. The fruits are yellowish, ellipsoid, up to long.
The hindwings are greyish-fuscous., 2006: Epermeniidae of Japan (Lepidoptera: Epermenioidea), with descriptions of six new species. Transactions of the Lepidopterological Society of Japan 57(1): 49-69. Abstract and full article: .
Acompsia bidzilyai is a moth of the family Gelechiidae. It is found in Transbaikalia in Russia. The wingspan is for males. The forewings are light greyish brown and the hindwings are grey.
Alangium havilandii grows as a tree up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The smooth bark is greyish. The ellipsoid-ovoid fruits ripen pink and measure up to long.
In the male, the head and thorax are yellowish white. Forewings dark greyish, whereas basal, costal, outer areas yellowish white. The costal band expanding into a patch at the center. Hindwings ochreous.
The hindwings are greyish-silvery white. The larvae feed on Muehlenbeckia hastulata. They roll the leaves of their host plant and feed from within the feeding tube., 2012: Chionodes meridiochilensis sp. nov.
The wings are ochre yellow with greyish flecks. The bands, a small discal spot on the forewing and a larger discal spot on the hindwing are grey. Other Ennomos species are similar.
Weaving of wool and silk mixed technique, coupled with gobeleninį weaving twill, characterized by warm and cold subtle color combinations, there is a greyish silvery tones, blemishes and pictorial graphic expression connection.
The forewings are greyish ochreous densely irrorated (sprinkled) with dark fuscous except at the base. The edges of the subdorsal groove are ochreous. The hindwings are rather dark grey.Meyrick, Edward (1912–1916).
There is a conspicuous, but small, buff spot at the apical third. The hindwings are greyish fuscous, darker toward margins.J. Wash. Acad. Sci. 37 : 244 The larvae feed on Arctostaphylos uva- ursi.
Scythris petrella is a moth of the family Scythrididae. It is found on the Canary Islands.Fauna Europaea The wingspan is 8–9 mm. The forewings are greyish fuscous, mottled with ashy white.
The forewings are whitish cinereous (ash grey), speckled with brownish fuscous. The hindwings are greyish brown. Adults are on wing in late summer and autumn.UKmoths The larvae feed on dried vegetable matter.
The width of the shell is 3.2-4.4 mm. The height of the shell is 6.7-10.2 mm. The animal is medium-sized (5-6.5 mm long), greyish with weak brownish hue.
It has a wingspan of 24 mm. Forewings with outer margin evenly curved. Hindwings with slight tails at veins 4 and 7. Male has pale violaceous-greyish body with dark brown frons.
Agdistis meylaniella is a moth in the family Pterophoridae. It is known from Anatolia. The wingspan is 20–22 mm. The forewings are bright greyish-brown and the hindwings are grey-brown.
Payena leerii is a tree in the family Sapotaceae. It grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish brown. Inflorescences bear up to eight flowers.
It lays three to five greyish eggs in a lined nest on the ground or occasionally in a low bush. Its natural food consists of insects when feeding young, and otherwise seeds.
Barringtonia longisepala grows as a tree up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . Bark is dark grey or greyish brown. Flowers are yellow. Fruit is oblong, up to long.
The larvae reach a length of 17–18 mm. They a pale greyish green body with white lines and a black brown head. The larvae can be found from May to June.
Glaucus (right) depicted on a white-ground cup attributed to the Sotades PainterIn Greek mythology, Glaucus (; Ancient Greek: Γλαῦκος Glaukos means "greyish blue" or "bluish green" and "glimmering") was a Cretan prince.
The forewings of the males are brown with a dark mark in the central part. The hindwings are greyish. Adults are on wing in June and July. The larvae feed on lichens.
Forewing shining dark brown with reddish gloss, at one-fifth two very short silver streaks, a medial just above fold, a subdorsal below fold and further from base than the medial, a broad tubercular silver metallic fascia at one-half, perpendicular on dorsum and with purplish reflection, on dorsum at three-fifths, a tubercular silver metallic spot with purplish reflection, between the fascia and the dorsal spot a few yellow scales above dorsum, a tubercular silver metallic subcostal spot at three- quarters, outwardly edged by a narrow white costal streak, apical line as a short silver metallic streak with strong bluish reflection in middle of the apical area and a shining white spot in the cilia at apex, cilia dark brown, paler on dorsum towards base. Hindwing shining greyish brown, cilia greyish brown. Underside: forewing shining greyish brown with reddish gloss and with the white costal streak and apical line distinctly visible, hindwing greyish brown, a short whitish streak on dorsum at base. Abdomen too greased to describe.
Oidaematophorus cineraceus is a moth of the family Pterophoridae. It is found in North America (including Washington, California and British Columbia). The wingspan is . The front of the head is dark greyish brown.
The markings are black. The hindwings are whitish with weak, greyish transverse strigulation (fine streaks)., 2009: Tortricidae (Lepidoptera) from the mountains of Ecuador and remarks on their geographical distribution. Part IV. Eastern Cordillera.
The wingspan is about 30 mm. The forewings are dark greyish fuscous and the hindwings are lighter. Adults have been recorded on wing from April to September. The larvae feed on Carya species.
The wingspan is about 18.5 mm. The ground colour of the forewings is pale brownish sprinkled and suffused with brown. The posterior costal area is tinged pink. The hindwings are pale greyish brown.
Other authors only record it spinning leaves and buds.bladmineerders.nl Larvae can be found in June and July. They are greyish green with a light brown head. Last instar larvae are tinged with pink.
A. phragmitidis Hbn. (= semicana Esp., verecunda Ev., moravitzii Men.) (49 d). Forewing very smooth, pale ochreous, becoming pale brownish red towards termen; the fringe dark at tips; hindwing pale greyish ochreous; — the ab.
Its wingspan is about 31 mm. Head, thorax and forewings are brownish ochreous. Forewings have a greyish tinge and pinkish costa and outer areas. Orbicular and reniform stigmata represented by indistinct dark patches.
There are also four cloudy dots of dark fuscous sprinkles in a series near the costa towards the apex. The hindwings are ochreous whitish becoming greyish ochreous posteriorly.Exotic Microlepidoptera. 3 (5-7): 241.
The wingspan is 37 to 49 mm. The dorsal view is a dull greyish brown while the females are often tawny. Males have a dark grey node in the centre of the forewing.
Retrieved 5 February 2019. It is found from Sundaland to Australia and the Solomon Islands. The wingspan is about 40 mm. Adults are greyish brown with a dark wavy line across each wing.
Heteropsyche poecilochroma is a moth in the family Epipyropidae. It is found in Australia.Australian Faunal Directory The wingspan is about 10 mm. The forewings are greyish fuscous strigulated with dark and brownish fuscous.
This suffusion contain some 5-6 very narrow silvery-white, strongly outwards-oblique lines. Cilia pale fuscous-greyish. Hindwings pale fuscous grey with darker scaly tips. Cilia pale fuscous grey, with whitish base.
Katha nankunshanica is a moth of the family Erebidae. It is found in Guangdong, China. The length of the forewings is about . The forewings are greyish-yellow and the hindwings are pure yellow.
The tree grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish brown. The fragrant flowers are creamy-yellow. The fruits are orange, roundish, up to in diameter.
The forewings are beige with most of the beige scales brown tipped and with dark-brown markings. The hindwings are pale greyish brown. Adults have been recorded on wing in March and May.
The Black Shumen is black with a greenish sheen; it has a single comb, white skin and red earlobes. It is early-maturing, and lays 160–170 greyish-white eggs weighing per year.
Madhuca monticola is a tree in the family Sapotaceae. The twigs are greyish. Inflorescences bear up to eight flowers. The specific epithet ' is from the Latin meaning "mountain dweller", referring to the habitat.
The hindwings are pale greyish brown., et al. 2010: A Review of African Blastobasinae (Lepidoptera: Gelechioidea: Coleophoridae), with New Taxa Reared from Native Fruits in Kenya. Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology 630: 1-77.
Epermenia sugisimai is a moth of the family Epermeniidae. It is endemic to Hokkaido, Japan. The length of the forewings is about . The forewings are whitish and the hindwings are pale greyish-fuscous.
Head greyish. Dorsal white dots appear. Pupation is in a loose silken cocoon spun between leaves. Larval stage extends to 11 days with four instars and pupal stage to more than a week.
Labial palps long, porrect and pale beige or pale olive brown. Thorax and abdomen olive brown and are stout and short. Legs pale beige or pale yellowish grey. Hindwings are dark greyish brown.
Shells of Babelomurex cariniferus can reach a size of . The shell surface may be whitish or dark greyish. These shells are variably shaped. They show numerous flattened spires with very thorny axial ribs.
Abdomen reddish brown in each segment with greyish tinge. Legs are without spurs. Forewings dark reddish brown with a white spot at base. Hindwings dark reddish brown in males, and pale in females.
Postmedial line angled also between veins 3 and 4 and sinuous towards inner margin. Apical streak broken up into two spots. Hindwings with a white medial band and outer margin greyish at center.
Leptolalax pluvialis is a small-sized Leptolalax: males measure in snout-vent length. Its back is greyish brown with dark pattern with few black spots on its sides. It has dark golden irises.
Spinulata julius is a moth in the family Cossidae. It is found in Brazil.Smithsonian Institution The wingspan is about 50 mm. The forewings are greyish brown shading on the costal and outer margins.
There is a blackish to greyish green Y-shaped mark that runs from each upper eyelid to near the sacral region. The male advertisement call is composed of a single, multi-pulsed note.
The forewings are greyish ochreous with the discal stigmata rather large and dark fuscous, the plical hardly indicated, close beneath the first discal. The terminal edge is finely infuscated. The hindwings are grey.
The forewings are pale greyish ochreous irrorated (sprinkled) with fuscous. The discal stigmata are cloudy, rather dark fuscous, with an additional similar dot beneath the second. The hindwings are grey.Meyrick, Edward (1916–1923).
Aglaia sessilifolia is a tree in the family Meliaceae. It grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish brown or dark brown. The flowers are yellow.
Dioryctria albovittella, the pinyon tip moth, is a species of moth of the family Pyralidae. It is found in North America including New Mexico. The wingspan is about 25 mm. Adults are greyish.
The little cuckoo- dove is a reddish brown pigeon, measuring in length, and weighing . It has cinnamon buff plumage. It has greyish white irides. The beak is brown, and has a black tip.
Juveniles are similar to adults, but plainer with duller head pattern, and pale buff tail tips, not white. Iris is slightly duller, cream or greyish white. Nearly fledged juveniles have pale yellow gape.
Body length is about long. The male bird has a blue-grey head and a greyish white throat. The breast is pale cream, and the belly is blackish. The hindneck is reddish brown.
The forewings are greyish brown, with the costal margin, from the base to three-fourths of its length, and veins light yellow, without spots. The hindwings are brownish grey, darker towards the apex.
Payena gigas is a tree in the family Sapotaceae. It grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish to brown. Inflorescences bear up to eight flowers.
All transverse lines are brown, indistinct and all with a black costal spot. The terminal line is indicated by black interneural dots. The hindwing is greyish brown and the underside is unicolorous brown.
The ground colour of the forewings is greyish white, mixed with black scales. There is a yellow stripe in the basal area near the costa. The hindwings are white, with a darker apex.
Xanthophyllum pachycarpon grows up to tall with a trunk diameter of up to . The smooth bark is greyish or dark green. The light brown fruits are round and measure up to in diameter.
The forewings are brownish or yellowish with bold, paler markings forming indistinct patterns. The hindwings are fuscous to greyish brown, slightly tinged with ochreous on the apical area of the costa and cilia.
Semilimax pyrenaicus is a species of air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Vitrinidae. It is a large greyish- brown snail that cannot fully retract into its shell.
Sometimes, the wings have a pale yellowish or greyish yellow costal band running from the base to a point opposite the base of the cleft. Behind this the entire wing is clothed with brownish grey mixed with very pale yellowish scales, becoming more whitish toward the inner margin. The costal fringes on the first lobe are yellowish, while others are dark greyish. The hindwings and their fringes are brownish grey, in the pale specimens appearing dark in contrast to the yellow forewings.
This is a moderate- sized shrew growing to a head-and-body length of about with a tail of around , males being slightly larger than females. The head is long and narrow, with a sharply pointed snout, small eyes and rounded ears. The dorsal pelage is blackish-brown tinged with rust, the individual hairs having greyish bases, brownish bands and brownish-black tips. The ventral surface is paler greyish- brown, there being no clear demarcation between dorsal and ventral fur.
The coat of dark kangaroo mouse is long, silky, and soft with its back being brownish to greyish black while its belly having a greyish or whitish hue. Its tail is swollen in the middle (fat deposits). The fat deposits vary in size as season changes because it is used as a source of energy during dormancy. The tails are thickest before entering winter hibernation and thin in the spring, when they come out of hibernation and assume normal activity.
The cap of A. nothofagi is initially convex, later becoming flattened with a central depression, with radial grooves on the margin, reaching diameters of . The colour is variable, ranging from buff to dark grey to greyish-sepia, with radial streaks of dusky brownish grey. The cap surface is sticky when young or wet, but dries out with age. The remnants of the volva form small to large, irregularly shaped, felted patches, that are dull greyish-sepia to sepia, and sometimes scab-like.
The wingspan is 40–44 mm.Forewing greyish ochreous, flushed with brownish or rufous, and with dark irroration; lines pale with dark edging, approximating on inner margin; upper stigmata large with pale outlines: a submarginal row of dark spots between the veins; hindwing greyish ochreous, paler towards base: palpi pink, abdomen ochraceous.The form found in Siberia , eremicola Stgr , is paler, but covered with black striations. Larva dull flesh colour, dusted with black: dorsal line dull ochreous; head and thoracic plate brown.Warren.
Eucalyptus mannensis is a mallee, rarely a straggly tree, that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has rough, flaky or fibrous bark on the lower part of the trunk, smooth greyish bark above. Young plants and coppice regrowth have dull, greyish green, lance-shaped leaves that are long and wide. Adult leaves are the same shade of glossy green on both sides, narrow lance-shaped to narrow elliptical, long and wide, tapering to a petiole long.
Eucalyptus luculenta is a mallee that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has smooth greyish to pink powdery bark on the trunk and branches. Young plants and coppice regrowth have stems that are more or less square in cross-section and sessile, broadly lance-shaped leaves that are long and wide. Adult leaves are arranged alternately, the same dull greyish green on both sides, lance-shaped to egg-shaped, long and wide, tapering to a petiole long.
Limbatochlamys rosthorni is a moth of the family Geometridae first described by Walter Rothschild in 1894. It is found in China (Shaanxi, Gansu, Shanghai, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Hubei, Jiangxi, Hunan, Fujian, Guangxi, Sichuan, Chongqing, Guizhou and Yunnan)., 2005, Zoological Studies 44 (2): 191-199 The length of the forewings is 28–37 mm for males and 38 mm for females. The forewings are olive green, the costal area with a greyish-yellow band, speckled with black, and in some areas with greyish red.
The stigmata are grey, the plical obliquely beyond the first discal. There is a strongly curved series of cloudy greyish dots from towards the costa at three- fifths to near the dorsum at three-fourths, interrupted in the middle by a round cloudy light grey-brownish spot. There is a strongly curved subterminal series of fuscous dots, sinuate inwards towards the costa and a terminal series of blackish-grey dots. The hindwings are light grey, becoming light greyish ochreous towards the apex.
Eucalyptus squamosa is a tree that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has rough, grey or reddish brown, tessellated fibrous or flaky bark on the trunk and branches. Young plants and coppice regrowth have dull green to greyish, egg-shaped leaves that are long and wide and petiolate. Adult leaves are arranged alternately, the same shade of green to greyish on both sides, lance-shaped to curved, long and wide, tapering to a petiole long.
The wingspan is 22–23 mm. The forewings are whitish violet with the costal edge pale ochreous yellowish from the base to two-thirds, edged with greyish-violet suffusion beneath and with a fine greyish-violet straight shade from two-fifths of the costa to the middle of the dorsum, the plical stigma forming a faint spot on it. The second discal stigma is cloudy and violet grey. The hindwings are grey whitish strewn with violet-grey hairscales except towards the base.
This species is about long and weighs about . Like the spotted eagle-owl, the greyish eagle-owl has mottled dark brown, buff, and white upperparts and finely barred (vermiculated) underparts giving a greyish-brown appearance. It differs from the spotted eagle-owl in having dark brown (not yellow) eyes and a brownish facial disk marked with a heavy brown circle around each eye. It also has morphological differences, such as being lighter though about the same length and having shorter tarsi.
The Madagascar buttonquail is a stocky bird with a small head and short legs and tail. Both sexes are cryptically coloured; the male has a light brown head with black and white streaking and mottling, and a greyish-brown back and wings with fine dark barring and pale-edged feathers, the barring on the outer scapulars being bolder. The tail is greyish-brown with fine barring. The chin and throat are whitish, the breast cinnamon-buff with dark barring and the belly whitish.
Eucalyptus ammophila is a mallee that grows to high, rarely a small, multistemmed tree, and forms a lignotuber. The trunk has rough, fibrous, greyish brown bark and the upper parts of the trunk and the branches have smooth greyish and orange to bronze-coloured bark. Young plants and coppice regrowth have square stems and broad lance-shaped to egg- shaped leaves that are long and wide with a short petiole. Adult leaves are lance-shaped, long and wide with a petiole long.
Eucalyptus obtusiflora is a mallee, sometimes a small tree, that typically grows to a height of and forms a lignotuber. It has smooth, greyish or brownish bark that is often imperfectly shed on the lower half of the stems. Young plants and coppice regrowth have greyish green, egg-shaped, sometimes glaucous leaves that are long and wide. Adult leaves are the same shade of dull, sometimes bluish green on both sides, lance-shaped to curved, long and wide, tapering to a petiole long.
Hildegarde's broad-headed mouse grows to a head-and-body length of about . The head is broad with pale grey to white cheeks and whitish chin and throat. The whiskers are dark and the ears are dark and nearly naked, with a scattering of pale hairs. The fur is dense and soft; the dorsal surface of the head and body is greyish-brown or grey and the underparts are whitish or pale greyish-brown, the two colours merging on the flanks.
The largest wood mouse in the genus Hylomyscus, it grows to a head-and-body length of between with a tail of between . The fur on the back is about long and is variable in colour, ranging from greyish- brown to cinnamon brown, the individual hairs being grey with either black or brown tips. The underparts are greyish-white, the individual hairs being grey with white tips. There is a sharp delineation between the colour of the upper and underparts.
The Páramo colilargo has a greyish head, buffish upper parts and greyish-buff underparts and there is a clear demarcation between the dorsal and ventral colouring. The tail is dark above and pale below and is usually shorter than . The feet have whitish hairs on the upper surface, and the metatarsal pads on the soles are narrow. Compared to the closely related Microryzomys minutus, the skull is wider and more robust, with longer incisive foramina and with longer rows of teeth.
The subspecific name altoensis refers to El Alto, the type locality. Scutalus phaeocheilus altoensis is characterized by the whitish colour, the sculpture of growth striae and inconspicuous granules on the last whorl, the broadly expanded lip and the orange colour of the aperture inside. The height of the shell is up to 38.1 mm, 1.71 times as long as wide, deeply perforated, conical, with slightly convex sides and solid. Colour is uniformly (greyish-)whitish, the upper whorls somewhat lighter in greyish-white specimens.
The wingspan is about 20 mm. The forewings are pale greyish ochreous, slightly sprinkled grey, streaked posteriorly between the veins with dull flesh colour and with a dark grey dot on the base of the costa, as well as a few dots of blackish scales on some veins on the costal half. The discal stigmata are blackish and there is a marginal series of dark grey dots around the apical part of the costa and termen. The hindwings are pale greyish.
Male, female. Forewing length 3.3-3.6 mm. Head: frons shining ochreous-white with greenish reflection, vertex and neck tufts shining greyish brown with reddish gloss, white lateral lines hardly visible or absent, collar shining greyish brown; labial palpus first segment very short, white, second segment three-quarters of the length of third, dark brown with white longitudinal lines laterally and ventrally, third segment white, lined brown laterally, extreme apex white; scape dorsally shining dark brown with a white anterior line, ventrally shining white, antenna shining dark brown with a white line from base to beyond one-half, followed towards apex by six white segments, two dark brown, two white, ten dark brown and seven white segments at apex. Thorax and tegulae shining greyish brown with reddish gloss, thorax with a narrow white median line.
Male, female. Forewing length 3.3 to 3.9 mm. Head: frons shining white with greenish reflection, vertex and neck tufts shining greyish brown with reddish gloss, laterally and medially lined white, collar shining greyish brown; labial palpus first segment very short, white, second segment four-fifths of the length of third, dark brown with white longitudinal lines laterally and ventrally, third segment white, lined brown laterally, extreme apex white; scape dorsally shining dark brown with white anterior line, ventrally shining white, antenna shining dark brown, with a white line from base to beyond one- half, followed towards apex by one white segment, three dark brown, ten more or less white, ten dark brown and seven white segments at apex. Thorax and tegulae shining greyish brown with reddish gloss, thorax with a white median line.
The length of the shell attains 25¼ mm, its diameter 12¼ mm. (Original description) The thin shell is broadly fusiform, with a rather short spire. It is light greyish-white. The protoconch is wanting.
Ioditis mokwae is a moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Nigeria. The wingspan is about 18 mm. The ground colour of the forewings is greyish with white suffusions and brownish dots.
Athrips bidilatata is a moth of the family Gelechiidae. It is found in China (Gansu).Athrips at funet The wingspan is about 11.5 mm. The forewings are greyish white mottled with numerous black scales.
Perittia carlinella is a moth of the family Elachistidae. It is found on the Canary Islands and Madeira. The wingspan is 10–11 mm. The forewings are white, dusted with pale greyish brown scales.
It is considered to be one of the major teak pests around the world. Hyblaea puera in Kerala. Here we can partially see the black and orange-yellow hindwings under the greyish-brown forewings.
Nests are also built in human structures. They are made of twigs, roots, stems and moss. There are 2 to 4 eggs in a clutch. The eggs are pinkish with brownish or greyish marks.
The body length of the gallinule is about 33 cm. The average body mass of adult birds is 350 g. Immature birds are olive- to greyish-brown, with duller pale yellow to brown bills.
Antennae of male ciliated. Head, collar and tegulae are bright yellowish. Thorax and forewings are dark greyish, where forewings possess bright yellow costal area irrorated with a few black scales. Lower edge is waved.
The species is greyish brown and has a wingspan of . The wings carry discarded markings, and have indistinct pattern. Adults are on wing from August to October and from March to April after overwintering.
The forewings are greyish white, with a faint ocherous tinge. Most of the scales shade through ocherous to blackish brown at the tips. The hindwings are pale fuscous. The larvae feed on Flourensia cernua.
The forewings are whitish, the scales minutely tipped with very pale grey. The markings are formed by black-tipped scales. The hindwings are pale greyish white. Adults have been recorded on wing in January.
Greyish or reddish brown above, uniform or dotted or variegated with darker; lower surfaces uniform whitish.Boulenger, G. A. (1890) Fauna of British India. Reptilia and Batrachia. From snout to vent 2.25 inches; tail 2.25.
The rarest colour is BL0 "Greyish Blue Pearl" with only 141 units. On 1989, Japanese Best Motoring television program conducted a test on Nürburgring Nordscheleife with a production version Nissan Skyline GT-R R32.
The adult male measures up to 33 mm in body length. The forewings are silvery greyish brown with dark brown crossbands. The hindwing is yellowish white. The head and body are pale yellowish brown.
The forewings are greyish yellow, darker towards the distal part and with a large, distinct dark brown spot near the base, as well as two hardly visible discal dots. The hindwings are brownish grey.
A submarginal greyish curved line extends from the apex to the anal angle. The hindwings are dark fawn, crossed below the middle from the apex to the inner margin by two faint brown lines.
Body greyish brown, where some specimens with a slight red or pink tinge. Wings are somewhat lineally striated with dark brown. Forewings with the costa yellow. Cilia fuscous on forewing and white on hindwing.
They are iridescent greenish-blue above and silvery below while the dorsal fin has a lot of black in it and the pectoral fins are greyish. It grows to a length of around to .
Epipristis truncataria is a moth of the family Geometridae first described by Francis Walker in 1861. It is found on Borneo and Sumatra and in Singapore. Adults are pale dull green with greyish clouding.
Beavers have fur which is a greyish brown colour on the outer, with thick underfur to keep the water off their skin. They are common to areas with rivers, lakes, streams, marshes or ponds.
Madhuca prolixa grows up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish brown. Inflorescences bear up to eight flowers. The fruits are yellowish-grey, subglobose, up to in diameter.
Thoracic segments greyish in dorsum with a quadrate orange mark. Pupa semi-ovoid without cremaster. Cocoon is woven using brown, black-speckled silk. Larval host plants are Grewia, Trema, Ziziphus, Hibiscus, Celtis and Xylia.
Madhuca malaccensis grows as a tree up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish brown. Inflorescences bear up to eight flowers. The fruits are oblong, up to long.
Oegoconia ceres is a moth of the family Autostichidae. It is found on Sardinia.Fauna Europaea The length of the forewings is 10–15 mm. The forewings are dark greyish brown with ochreous yellow markings.
A. a. taurica Caterpillar Forewing whitish grey; basal streak thin and interrupted: a black streak through outer line on submedian fold; hindwing white in male, greyish in female, the veins blackish. — ab. infuscata Haw.
Kandelia candel grows as a shrub or small tree up to tall. Its flaky bark is lenticellate and coloured greyish to reddish brown. The flowers are white. The ovoid fruits measure up to long.
Pyrgotis eudorana is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is endemic in New Zealand. The wingspan is about 20 mm. The forewings are purplish ochreous, strigulated (finely streaked) with greyish purple.
Chrysocraspeda tristicula is a moth of the family Geometridae first described by Swinhoe in 1885. It is found in Sri Lanka. India, Myanmar, Borneo, Philippines and Sumbawa. Pale greyish banded on fawn of wings.
The Alexandria false antechinus is coloured buff brown above and greyish white below. Its main distinguishing feature from other false antechinuses is its small size. The behaviour of this species has not been described.
Madhuca sessilis grows up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish brown. Inflorescences bear two to three flowers. The fruits are purplish-green, round, up to in diameter.
The forewings are light brownish grey, sprinkled with dark brown. The hindwings are light silvery greyish brown. & , 1992: Ergänzende Bemerkungen zur Speziation alpiner Sattleria (Lepidoptera: Gelechiidae). Zeitschrift der Arbeitsgemeinschaft Österreichischer Entomologen, 44: 59–73.
Pale greyish white to pale greenish grey to light creamy brown. Measuring approximately 22mm x 17mm, usual shape, tapered oval. Indistinguishable from the White-browed Woodswallow. 2-3 per clutch, less commonly 1-4.
Skin is granular, with round keratinized granules and small (only some slightly enlarged), sparse, low, flat warts. The venter is smooth. The dorsum is greyish brown with darker brown markings. The belly is immaculate.
She lays a single, pinkish, blotched egg with fine streaks of lavender-greyish. Incubation unknown, though the nestling period is up to 27 days, with all parental duties tended to by the female only.
Colonies of Alveopora viridis are submassive or columnar. The corallites are very small and the septa bear spines of two different lengths. The colonies are usually some shade of greyish-brown or greenish-brown.
Blepharomastix pulverulalis is a moth in the family Crambidae. It was described by Herbert Druce in 1895. It is found in Guatemala, Panama and Mexico. The forewings and hindwings are very pale greyish brown.
The wingspan is about 19 mm. The forewings are white, with a very faint yellowish tinge. There is a light greyish-ochreous transverse streak on the end of the cell. The hindwings are white.
Luffia rebeli is a moth of the Psychidae family. It is found on the Canary Islands.Fauna Europaea The wingspan is 8–12 mm. The forewings are shining pale stone-grey, mottled with greyish fuscous.
Its wingspan is approximately . Males and females look alike. The juvenile resembles the adult but with more greyish and sepia tones. The call of the avocet is a far- carrying, liquid, melodious kluit kluit.
The forewings are marked in a zig-zag pattern. The hindwings are greyish white. Adult are on wing from late June to August in one generation per year. The larvae feed on pinyon pine.
The forewings are yellowish brown to greyish brown, with scattered dark brown scales. The basal two-thirds of the costal margin is dark brown and the distal third is yellow. The hindwings are grey.
The forewings are dark fuscous with the plical and second discal stigmata blackish. There is a slight whitish mark on the costa at two-thirds. The hindwings are light greyish or whitish grey.Exotic Microlepidoptera.
The subtornal spots and edges of the costal blotch are black. The costal blotch is greyish and ferruginous inside. The hindwings are transparent brownish grey., 2012: Tortricines in the fauna of Nepal (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae).
The dark-brown wings are large too, with translucent areas on their margin and a completely dark cell (R1) on the front border, without hyaline spot. The thorax and the abdomen are greyish brown.
Pollex abovia is a moth of the family Erebidae first described by Michael Fibiger in 2007. It is known from northern Sumatra. The wingspan is about 10 mm. The forewing is light greyish brown.
The olive grass mouse is a small rodent with a total length of about . The upper parts are greyish-brown, sometimes slightly yellowish around the snout, and the underparts are pale to mid-grey.
Lampronia sakhalinella is a moth of the family Prodoxidae. It is found on the Sakhalin peninsula in Russia. The wingspan is about 13 mm. The forewings are pale greyish fuscous with a bronzy lustre.
Gonystylus forbesii grows as a tree up to tall, with a trunk diameter of up to . The bark is greyish brown. Its flowers are reddish yellow. The fruit is dark brown, up to long.
Afro Moths The wingspan is 10–11 mm. The forewings are dark greyish- fuscous with an ochreous-white spot on costa at four-fifths. The hindwings are dark grey. Females differ from the males.
Hypena vestita, is a moth of the family Erebidae first described by Moore in 1885. It is found in India, Sri Lanka and Borneo. Forewings uniform greyish brown. Submarginal dark marking distal to dentate.
The wingspan is 19–25 mm. The forewings are light to medium yellowish-brown or greyish with slightly paler veins. The hindwings are paler and unmarked. Adults are on wing from May to September.
Orbicular small, circular, and usually prominent, whereas reniform almost obsolete. There is a dark patch on costa before apex. Apical and basal inner area and angle often greyish or reddish brown. Hindwings fuscous brown.
Oplurus quadrimaculatus can reach a length of . This iguana is greyish, with a spotted back and tail and legs covered with enlarged, spinous scales. It spends hours basking in sunlight. It is mainly insectivorous.
Grapholita hymenosa is a moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Nigeria. The wingspan is about 12 mm. The ground colour of the forewings is orange yellow, sprinkled and strigulated with greyish brown.
Gelophaula aridella is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in New Zealand. The wingspan is 15 mm. The forewings are dark fuscous, somewhat darker along the costa and greyish externally.
Tarsi grey brown. Forewings are greyish brown where costal area is with an olive tinge. There is an irregular and diffused curved white fascia from base to apex. Some basal and sub-basal black spots.
Its wingspan is about 28 mm in the male and 32 mm in the female. Body bright rufous. Head, thorax and abdomen banded with greyish white. Forewings with orange costa, with black patches and strigae.
Sisurcana latiloba is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Peru. The wingspan is about 20 mm. The ground colour of the forewings is cream ferruginous, mixed with greyish terminally.
There is a pale supercilium over the eye, and the underparts are pale greyish brown. The eyes in both sexes are dark brown, and the beak and legs are black. The juvenile resembles the female.
Legs are short and scaled. The upperside is greyish brown-black except the thorax and triangular shaped stripe of the same width on the forewings. The underside is brownish ash grey.Archive.org: Stettiner Entomologische Zeitung Vol.
The nest is a compact, bulky, cup of green moss, thin stems and fern fronds. Found 5–13 ft. (1.5–4 m) up in a dense shrup or sapling. Lays 2 spotted, greyish-white eggs.
Saphenista runtuna is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Tungurahua Province, Ecuador. The wingspan is about . The ground colour of the forewings is whitish, with indistinct greyish-cream admixture.
Brusqeulia costispina is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Espírito Santo, Brazil. The wingspan is about 10 mm. The ground colour of the forewings is whitish, sprinkled with greyish.
Arta brevivalvalis is a species of moth of the family Pyralidae that is endemic to Arizona. The forewings are reddish brown to purplish brown with ochreous antemedial and postmedial lines. The hindwings are greyish brown.

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