Case-bearing-larva

Guides

  • Adelidae

    Fairy Moths, Fairy Longhorn Moths

    Adelidae, commonly known as fairy longhorn moths or fairy moths, is a family of small monotrysian moths in the infraorder Heteroneura. Males are distinguished by extraordinarily long antennae, often 1–3 times the length of the forewing, while females have antennae about twice the forewing length. Most species exhibit metallic coloration and are diurnal, though some are crepuscular with drab coloration. The family was first described by Charles Théophile Bruand d'Uzelle in 1851 and was formerly treated as a subfamily (Adelinae) of Incurvariidae.

  • Coptodisca kalmiella

    Coptodisca kalmiella is a small moth in the family Heliozelidae, described from New Jersey in 1921. The species is notable for its specialized leaf-mining larvae that feed exclusively on Kalmia angustifolia. Its life cycle includes a distinctive behavior where larvae construct portable oval cases from leaf tissue and drop to the ground to pupate.

  • Neochlamisus scabripennis

    warty leaf beetle

    Neochlamisus scabripennis is a species of warty leaf beetle in the family Chrysomelidae. It belongs to the tribe Chlamisini, commonly known as warty leaf beetles due to their distinctive irregular, tuberculate body surface. The species is distributed across Central America and North America. Like other members of the genus, it exhibits remarkable mimicry of caterpillar frass (feces) as a defensive adaptation.

  • Tinea pellionella

    case-bearing clothes moth, casemaking clothes moth, fur moth

    Tinea pellionella is a small tineid moth commonly known as the case-bearing or casemaking clothes moth. It is a cosmopolitan pest of stored woollen goods and natural keratinous materials. The species is distinguished by larval behavior: caterpillars construct portable silken cases reinforced with debris and food fibers, which they carry while feeding. Adults are weak fliers with reduced mouthparts and do not feed. The species has become less common in modern centrally heated homes due to drier conditions.