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A Key to the superfamilies of the Lepidoptera
with special reference to North and South Dakota


 

The character which unites the Yponomeutoidea (difficult to see without a microscopic slide preparation and secondarily lost in some groups) is the possession of pleural lobes on abdominal segment 8. 

 


Family Plutellidae, Diamondback moths, have hws  with Rs, M1, M3, and CuA1 all arising from the discal cell, the vertex has an erect vestiture and ocelli are present.  Worldwide there are about 100 species, 12 of which occur in North America.

 

 

Plutella xylostella (Linnaeus), habitus (left), head (right),
ocellus indicated by arrow.

 

Family Ypsolophidae (including Ochsenheimeriidae) either have Rs and M1 of the hw stalked, or have an intercalary cell (anal loop) on the fw of at least 1/3 of the wing length, the vertex has an erect vestiture and ocelli are present.  At least 130 species worldwide.  Most of the 39 North American fall into the nominate genus Ypsolopha

 

 

Ypsolopha cf. dentiferella Walsingham


Family Acrolepiidae
have ocelli, an erect vestiture on the vertex and veins M3,
and CuA1 of the hw stalked. There are 95 species worldwide and 8 in North America.
 
 

Family Heliodinidae, Sun moths have tufts of metallic fw scales, 5 post-apical veins arising from the fw discal cell, ocelli, and a smooth scaled vertex.  At least 16 genera and 70 species world wide with another 20 or so additional  mono-basic genera that have been assigned here by various authors.  Seven genera and 31 species are known from North America.  Heliodinidae also key out at couplet 9b.

 

 



Lithariapteryx abromiaeella (Clemens)

 
Family Glyphipterigidae, Sedge moths, have large ocelli, a smooth scaled vertex, and the fws nearly always with white crescents along costal and inner margins, in addition to the metallic bands, fws have 6 post-apical veins.  There are 384 species worldwide, 40 species in five genera in North America.

 

Diploschizia impigritella (Clemens)

 

Family Yponomeutidae, (including Argyrestheinae) Ermine moths, lack ocelli, most species possess a large accessory cell on the fw. Worldwide there are about 600 species. In North America the 82 species fall into 11 genera and four subfamilies

From left to right: Atteva punctella (Cramer) showing accessory cell and CuA2, head of same, (note lack of ocelli), habitus of same, at far right: Yponomeuta multipunctella Clemens

    

       
              

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Family: Lacturidae (Superfamily Zygaenoidea) will key here.  Fws with evenly arched costal margin, veins beyond discal cell lined with black.  See couplet 12a.

Note: two additional families of Yponomeutoidea that key to other couplets are:

Lyonettidae- lanceolate to linear winged moths, fw with a vein running to attenuated apex; ocelli absent, vertex with erect or smooth scales.  See couplet 9c.

Bedellidae- lanceolate winged moths, fw with a vein above and below apex; ocelli absent, vertex with erect scales.  See couplet 9c.

 

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Last updated: 06/20/07

Dr. Gerald M. Fauske
collection manager, NDSIRC
research specialist, NDSU
216 Hultz Hall
Fargo, ND 58105
E-Mail: Gerald.Fauske@ndsu.nodak.edu

 
Published by the Department of Entomology 


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