Diagnosis: fw divided into two, hw into three
plumes; vhw with a row of upright black scales along Cubital stem.
Diversity: Worldwide the five subfamilies contain 73 genera and
about 1,000 species; North America has three subfamilies, 20 genera and
145 species; nine species comprising 6 genera and two subfamilies are
known from North Dakota.
Checklist numbers: 6089- 6234.
Biology: Larvae exhibit a variety of habits– borers in roots,
stems, seeds or seed pods, or external leaf feeders. Adults rest with
wings spread laterally but ‘rolled’ with the hw inside the fw. This
position bears a resemblance to a crucifix and the moths (in Latin
America) are known as Jesus Christ moths.
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Further reading:
Dugdale, John S. et al.
Chapter 13. The smaller microlepidoptera grade superfamilies, pp. 217-
232 in Kristensen, Neils P. ed. 1999. Lepidoptera, moths and
butterflies. Part 35, Vol. 1 in Handbook of Zoology. Maximilian
Fischer ed. Walter de Gryter, New York. 491 pp.
Forbes, William T. M.
Family 34. Pterophoridae, pp. 639- 652 in, Ibid. 1923.
Lepidoptera of New York and neighboring states. Part I. Primitive forms,
Microlepidoptera, Pyraloids, Bombyces. Cornell Agric. Exp. Sta. Mem. 68:
729 pp.
Scoble, Malcom J. 1992. The
Lower Ditrysia, Chapter 11, pp. 225- 289 in The Lepidoptera:
form, function, and diversity. Oxford Univ. press. 1982. 404 pp.
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