Published March 5, 2010 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Schreckensteiniidae Fletcher 1929

  • 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

39. Schreckensteiniidae – bristle-legged moths

Small (10–15 mm wingspan) moths with narrow wings. Th ey can be separated from other small, narrow-winged moths by the presence of large spines on the dorsal surface of the metatibia. Th ey have a characteristic pose in which the hind legs are elevated. This family has been variously placed in the Yponomeutoidea or Copromorphoidea; it is likely allied with the Epermenioidea but its exact placement is unresolved (Dugdale et al. 1999). Larvae are external feeders on a number of plants.

This is a small family (8 species, restricted to the Holarctic and Neotropical regions), with three species known in North America. One of these has been recently discovered in AB (Pohl et al. 2005). All three North American species were covered by Forbes (1923).

786 * R H Schreckensteinia festaliella Hübner, 1818 May – Jun m B g Blackberry Skeletonizer

T: Forbes (1923)

L: Pohl et al. (2005) C: NFRC

Epermenioidea

Notes

Published as part of Pohl, Greg, Anweiler, Gary, Schmidt, Christian & Kondla, Norbert, 2010, An annotated list of the Lepidoptera of Alberta, Canada, pp. 1-549 in ZooKeys 38 (38) on page 132, DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.38.383, http://zenodo.org/record/576629

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Additional details

Related works

Biodiversity

References

  • Pohl GR, Bird CD, Landry J-F, Anweiler GG (2005) New records of microlepidoptera in Alberta, Canada. Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society 59: 61 - 82.
  • Forbes WTM (1923) Th e Lepidoptera of New York and neighboring states, Part I. Primitive forms, Microlepidoptera, Pyraloids, Bombyces. Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station Memoirs 68: 1 - 729.