Striglina

Striglina
Striglina strigosa
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Thyrididae
Genus: Striglina
Guenée, 1877
Synonyms
  • Daristane Walker, 1859
  • Heteroschista Warren, 1903
  • Plagiosella Hampson, 1897
  • Plagiosellula Strand, 1913
  • Pycnopera Warren, 1898

Striglina is a genus of moths of the Thyrididae family described by Achille Guenée in 1877.

Description

Palpi upturned and thickly scaled. The third joint short. Antennae minutely ciliate in male, simple in female. Femora and tibia hairy. Forewing with veins 8 and 9 from cell, veins 9 and 10 from some way before the angle. Hindwing with vein 5 from just above lower angle of cell.[1]

Species

  • Striglina asinina Warren, 1899
  • Striglina augescere Whalley, 1971
  • Striglina bifida Chu & Wang, 1991
  • Striglina buergersi Gaede, 1922 (from Papua New Guinea)
  • Striglina cinnamomea (Rothschild, 1915)
  • Striglina clathrata (Hampson, 1897)
  • Striglina crassisquama (Warren, 1898)
  • Striglina eguttalis Gaede, 1917
  • Striglina ferula Whalley, 1971
  • Striglina guttistigma Hampson, 1906
  • Striglina indistincta Gaede, 1922 (from Papua New Guinea)
  • Striglina jacanda Whalley, 1971
  • Striglina lineola Guenee, 1877
  • Striglina meridiana Whalley, 1976
  • Striglina minutula (Saalmuller, 1880)
  • Striglina navigatorum (Felder & Rogenhofer, 1874)
  • Striglina nigranalis (Warren, 1903)
  • Striglina propatula Whalley, 1974
  • Striglina ramosa Whalley, 1971
  • Striglina rothi Warren, 1898
  • Striglina roseus Gaede 1932
  • Striglina rufuscens Gaede, 1922 ( from Assam)
  • Striglina scitaria (Walker, 1862)
  • Striglina strigifera (Strand, 1913)
  • Striglina strigosa (Moore, 1882) (from India)
  • Striglina suzukii Matsumura, 1921 (from Japan)
  • Striglina tibiaria (Walker, 1859)
  • Striglina tincta Whalley, 1971
  • Striglina trepida Whalley, 1971
  • Striglina venia Whalley, 1976

References

  1. Hampson, G. F. (1892). The Fauna of British India Including Ceylon and Burma: Moths. I. Taylor & Francis. Retrieved 29 September 2017.


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