Phyllonorycter ruizivorus

Phyllonorycter ruizivorus is a moth of the family Gracillariidae. It is found on La Réunion island in the Indian Ocean.

Phyllonorycter ruizivorus
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Infraorder:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
P. ruizivorus
Binomial name
Phyllonorycter ruizivorus
de Prins, 2012

The length of the forewings is 2.8–2.91 mm. The forewings are golden ochreous with white markings consisting of a very short basal streak, two transverse fasciae, one costal and one dorsal strigulae and two terminal spots. The hindwings are light fuscous with a long greyish fringe.

The larvae feed on Ruizia cordata and Dombeya acutangula. They mine the leaves of their host plant. The mine is tentiform. The underside is slightly elongate or oval and more or less opaque creamy. Mines have been found in mid-June, September and early October.[1]

Etymology

The species is named after the genus of the host plant.

gollark: I do kind of wonder, sometimes, how credit card payment, well, doesn't run into horrible problems constantly.
gollark: Neat.
gollark: Oh, so you're doing software stuff for them and also designing... retail-y hardware a bit?
gollark: Well, I have somewhat working backups, so probably "wipe server, reinstall from USB stick, reload important stuff but probably keep external network access down for a bit".
gollark: I mostly just try and keep software up to date, shove sandboxes on network-facing services, and hope vulnerability-scanning botnets or something don't catch up fast enough.

References


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