Heliozelidae
Authors/Creators
- 1. Northern Forestry Centre, Natural Resources Canada, Edmonton ,, Canada
- 2. University of Alberta Strickland Entomology Museum ,, Canada
- 3. Canadian Food Inspection Agency, Ottawa, Canada
- 4. Calgary ,, Canada
Description
Minute (4–10 mm wingspan) day-flying moths, with a scaled proboscis and metallic scales on the body and wings. Females have piercing ovipositors. Th ey resemble several other families of small moths, but can be distinguished by wing vein characters. Larvae of most species mine the leaves of trees, shrubs, and vines; a few are stem or petiole miners. When mature, the larvae cut a disk from the host plant in which to pupate; hence the common name.
Approximately 100 species of heliozelids are known worldwide; many remain undescribed, especially in the tropics. Thirty species are known from North America; one of these was recently discovered in AB. The group is poorly known taxonomically in North America; the only modern reference is Lafontaine (1973), which covers three species.
13 * U Antispila aurirubra Braun, 1915 T: Braun (1915)
L: None C:?JJDC,?POHL
L May – L Jun – B g
Notes
Files
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Linked records
Additional details
Identifiers
Related works
- Is part of
- Journal article: 10.3897/zookeys.38.383 (DOI)
- Journal article: http://zenodo.org/record/576629 (URL)
- Journal article: http://publication.plazi.org/id/FF8B8A2E9F2CA426E62BFFD7FFC6AF1B (URL)
Biodiversity
- Kingdom
- Animalia
- Phylum
- Arthropoda
- Order
- Lepidoptera
- Family
- Heliozelidae
- Taxon rank
- family
References
- Lafontaine JD (1973) Eastern North American species of Antispila (Lepidoptera: Heliozelidae) feeding on Nyssa and Cornus. Th e Canadian Entomologist 105: 991 - 994.
- Braun AF (1915) New genera and species of Tineina. The Canadian Entomologist 47: 188 - 197.