Asterivora chatuidea

Asterivora chatuidea is a moth of the family Choreutidae. It is endemic to New Zealand.

Asterivora chatuidea
Male syntype specimen
Female syntype specimen
Scientific classification
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Species:
A. chatuidea
Binomial name
Asterivora chatuidea
(Clarke, 1926)[1]
Synonyms
  • Simaethis chatuidea Clarke, 1926

Taxonomy

This species was first described by Charles E. Clarke in 1926 using 12 specimens collected in November at Vauxhall, Andersons Bay in Dunedin.[2] Clarke originally named the species Simaethis chatuidea.[3][2] Many of these specimens are now held at the Auckland War Memorial Museum.[4]

Description

The wingspan is about 8 mm for males and 9 mm for females. The head and thorax are dark fuscous irrorated with violet-whitish scales and the antennae are blackish annulated with white. The abdomen is dark fuscous, although the segmental margins are white and there are a few scattered white scales near the extremity. The legs are fuscous. The dark blue-violet forewings are suboblong, moderate, the costa gently arched, the apex obtuse, the termen nearly straight and oblique. There are three distinct white spots on the costa and there is a pale blue-violet transverse line, as well as some violet-white irroration towards the base. There is also a transverse, sometimes double, line running from the first white spot on the costa and another running from the central costal spot. This line is broken but often well angulated at the middle. There is some violet-white irroration scattered across the outer wing and a fine subterminal line. The hindwings are dark fuscous, but darker outwardly. There is an incurved white streak, sometimes double, running from the disc to the tornus.[2]

Distribution

This species is endemic to New Zealand.[5]

Hosts

The larvae of A. chatuidea are leaf miners and form distinctive damage on their host plants.[6] These include Helichrysum lanceolatum, Olearia quinquevulnera and Pseudognaphalium luteoalbum.[6]

gollark: That's... several hundred times the circumference of the Earth.
gollark: And flown 2570km.
gollark: And fallen 310km.
gollark: I've apparently gone 1000km or so by foot.
gollark: There's a potatOS broadcast tower.

References

  1. Gordon, Dennis P., ed. (2010). New Zealand inventory of biodiversity. Volume two. Kingdom animalia : chaetognatha, ecdysozoa, ichnofossils. Vol. 2. Christchurch, N.Z.: Canterbury University Press. p. 457. ISBN 9781877257933. OCLC 973607714.
  2. Clarke, Charles E. (1926). "New Species of Lepidoptera". Transactions and Proceedings of the New Zealand Institute. 56: 417–421. Retrieved 21 January 2017.
  3. Dugdale, J. S. (1979-07-01). "A new generic name for the New Zealand species previously assigned to Simaethis auctorum (Lepidoptera: Choreutidae), with description of a new species". New Zealand Journal of Zoology. 6 (3): 461–466. doi:10.1080/03014223.1979.10428386. ISSN 0301-4223.
  4. "Asterivora chatuidea". Auckland War Memorial Museum. Retrieved 2018-01-17.
  5. "Asterivora chatuidea (Clarke, 1926)". www.nzor.org.nz. Landcare Research New Zealand Ltd. Retrieved 2017-01-21.
  6. "Asterivora chatuidea (Clarke, 1926) Herbivore Report". plant-synz.landcareresearch.co.nz. Retrieved 1 August 2019.


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