Aglossa

Aglossa
Adult Grease Moth (A. pinguinalis)
Image by entomart.be
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Pyralidae
Subfamily: Pyralinae
Tribe: Pyralini
Genus: Aglossa
Latreille, 1796
Species

Numerous, see text

Synonyms

[1]
Agriope Ragonot, 1894
Euclita Hübner, [1825]
Crocalia Ragonot, 1892
Oryctocera Ragonot, 1891

Aglossa is a genus of small moths belonging to the family Pyralidae. They are found mainly in western Eurasia, though some species have been introduced elsewhere.[1]

This genus is remarkable for the caterpillars, which in some species are able to feed on a wide range of materials that are not usually eaten by Lepidoptera larvae, such as dead insects, manure and straw. The caterpillars of other Aglossa (e.g. A. signicostalis) are myrmecophilous.[2]

Adults of the Grease Moth (A. cuprina) sometimes eat fats such as suet.

Species

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 See references in Savela (2009)
  2. Grabe (1942)

References

Media related to Aglossa at Wikimedia Commons