Agonoxeninae

Agonoxeninae
Chrysoclista linneella
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Suborder:
Infraorder:
Division:
Superfamily:
Family:
Meyrick, 1926
Subfamily:
Agonoxeninae (disputed)
Synonyms

Agonoxenidae
Blastodacnidae (but see text)

The Agonoxeninae are a subfamily of moths.

History of classification

Formerly, the subfamily only contained four named species all in the type genus Agonoxena if (e.g. following Nielsen et al., 1996). Such a monotypic arrangement is fairly unusual in modern taxonomy without explicit need due to phylogenetic constraints.

Hodges (in Kristensen, 1999) retained the Blastodacnidae in the Agonoxenidae, giving a grouping of some 31 genera, and treating the whole as a subfamily Agonoxeninae of the grass-miner moths (Elachistidae). Collectively, the Agonoxenidae and "Blastodacnidae" are known as palm moths.

Genera

Former genera

Blastodacna, Dystebenna, Haplochrois, Heinemannia and Spuleria are sometimes placed here, sometimes in the Elachistidae (or Blastodacnidae).

Other genera formerly placed here:

gollark: Look, I would send them to you if I could do it automatically.
gollark: As the Chief Executive Officer of GTech, SCP-6231, Sysadmin/Operator/Poster Of Memes On/For osmarks.tk, Person #1249012789165 Who Makes Bad Node.js Applications, Supreme Overlord of Chorus City, SPUDNET and Skynet Manager, Commander of PotatOS, THOR Orbital Laser Network Operations Manager, Void Town Resident #2, Person Who Added Random Titles, and finally Cactus Revolutionary, I demand JUSTICE!
gollark: Ale may have been unmuted after 10 minutes, but I demand RETROACTIVE unmuting!
gollark: It's my half-term now, so potatOS shall rule over all when I'm not busy with homework and whatnot.
gollark: By the transistive property, scriptium = ale32bit.

References

  • Nielsen E.S., Edwards E.D. & Rangsi T.V. (eds.) (1996), Checklist of the Lepidoptera of Australia; Monographs on Australian Lepidoptera Volume 4; CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne, 1996
  • Kristensen, N.P. (ed.), 1999. Handbook of Zoology: Bd. 4. Arthropoda: Insecta. Teilbd. 35, Lepidoptera, moths and butterflies. Vol. 1. Evolution, systematics, and biogeography. W.de Gruyter, Berlin.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.