OF BIOSECURITY CONCERN

For more information, visit: Biosecurity Concern

Classification

Gelechioidea Agonoxenidae (borers, miners, webbers) 95 approximate described species Agonoxeninae

Chief Distribution

Cosmopolitan

Major Hosts of Concern

Arecaceae, Rosaceae

Further Diagnosis

This family, closely associated with Elachistidae, is distinguished by the lateral condyles on abdominal segments 5/6 and 6/7 puparia. Character serves as a polymorphy in Elachistinae and the ventral surface of A9 often has two submesal areas of recurved setae. Macro morphological characters for gelechioids are all symplesiomophies, however, there are synapomorphic micro morphological characters, includinggenitaliaand pupal characters, for further delimitation. These techniques are not always viable, nor are the puparia always available, and in these instances it is preferable to identify straight to species.

Head smooth scaled; exaggerated oblique frons; flattened labial palpi; absent antennal pecten; long piliform scales present on mid and hind tibia; forewing discal cell closed; R5 and M1 stalked with R5 terminating at costa, absent M3, M2 stalked or connate, CuP present; CuP and A in hind wing are small or absent, row of stout and recurved setae on anterior margin of hind wing (may appear as extension of Sc); ♂ uncus and socii absent, gnathos slender arms with a medial spined (rows of short spines) knob, valvae with hair-pencil on outer surface; short and curved aedeagus, cornuti absent; ♀ papillae anales large with short apophyses, the signum are a pair of dentate plates on an oval shaped corpus bursae (Common 1990, Kristensen 1999).

Resources

Atlas of Living Australia. National Research Infrastructure for Australia, NCRIS. http://www.ala.org.au/

ABRS 2009. Australian Faunal Directory. Australian Biological Resources Study, Canberra. http://www.environment.gov.au/biodiversity/abrs/online-resources/fauna/afd/index.html

Barlow HS (1982) An introduction to the Moths of South East Asia, The Malayan Nature Society, Kuala Lumpur.

Butterflies and moths of North America, collecting and sharing data about Lepidoptera. National Biological Information Infrastructure (NBII) Program and the USGS Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center. http://butterfliesofamerica.com/links.htm

CSIRO Australian National Insect Collection Database. http://anic.ento.csiro.au/database/

CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences. Australian Moths Online. http://www1.ala.org.au/gallery2/main.php

Herbison-Evans D, Crossley S. Families of Moths in Australia. http://lepidoptera.butterflyhouse.com.au/moths.html

iBol Terrestrial Biosurveillance, Lepidoptera barcode of life. http://www.lepbarcoding.org/

Natural History Museum, The Global Lepidoptera Names Index. http://www.nhm.ac.uk/research-curation/research/projects/lepindex/search/index.dsml

Plant Health Australia (2012) Combined High Priority Pest List from Industry Biosecurity Plans. In National Plant Biosecurity Status Report, last accessed June 2015. http://www.planthealthaustralia.com.au/biosecurity/emergency-plant-pests/pest-categorisation/categorised-pests/

The Barcode of Life Data Systems http://www.boldsystems.org/

References

Common IFB (1990) In Moths of Australia, Melbourne University Press, Carlton, Victoria.

Kristensen NP (ed) (1999) Lepidoptera, Moths and Butterflies: Evolution, Systematics and Biogeography (vol. 1). Handbook of Zoology, Walter de Gruyter, Berlin.

Northern Australia Quarantine Strategy (2015) Entomology Internal Target List. Australian Government Department of Agriculture.

Operational Science Program (2015) Entomology Internal Target List. Australian Government Department of Agriculture.