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| LEPIDOPTERA, Blastobasidae --  <Images> & <Juveniles>   Description   The genus Holocera,
  is related to the lecaniine Coccidae and is predaceous.  Some representatives are thought to be
  scavengers rather than predators of living scale insects.  Holcocera
  pulverea Meyr., attacking the lac insect in India, causes economic loss
  to the lac industry, not only through its destruction of living scales but
  through the infestation of stored lac. 
  At times the field damage reaches 25-30%.  Glover (1933) found that the eggs were laid singly on adult
  female scales, empty male cocoons, or twigs having a heavy growth of
  sooty-mold fungus, produced by the scale infestation.  Younger larvae feed on the body contents
  and waxy covering of scale insects. 
  They move from one scale to another, building a silken tunnel or web
  through the mass.  A maximum of 45
  adult female scales have been found killed, and the wax covering partially
  destroyed, by each larva during its feeding. 
  There are 5 generations annually, and winter is spent principally in
  the egg stage.  Eggs seem to be very
  susceptible to changes in weather, for there is high winter mortality.  Also, the majority of eggs laid during
  June are killed by high temperatures of the season (Glover 1933).   In the western part
  of North America, H. iceryaella
  Riley attacks Lecanium persicae F.
  and other lecaniine and diaspine Coccidae. 
  There is some uncertainty as to whether feeding is mainly on living or
  dead scales.  Basinger (1924) reported
  that the larvae of this species feed on citrus fruit in California.  They construct holes or channels into
  oranges that are similar to those made by Tortrix
  citrana Fern.  Blastobasis transcripta Meyr. is a
  natural enemy of Ripersia in
  India.  Zenodochium coccivorella Ch. is an internal parasitoid of the
  gall-like females of Kermes in Florida, but it was believed to be more
  probably a specialized predator on the eggs in the egg chamber, and
  restricted to the product of a single female (Clausen 1940/1962).            
  This family of moths is in the superfamily Gelechioidea. Its species
  can be found almost anywhere in the world, though in some places they are not
  native but introduced by humans. In some arrangements, these moths are
  included in the case-bearer family (Coleophoridae) as subfamily
  Blastobasinae. The Symmocidae are sometimes included in the Blastobasidae
  (particularly if both are included in Coleophoridae) as subfamily or tribe.            
  The group around Holcocera is often separated as subfamily
  Holcocerinae (or tribe Holcocerini) from the Blastobasis lineage
  (which correspondingly become a subfamily, or a tribe Blastobasini). While
  this seems far more reasonable than some of the more extreme arrangements
  sometimes seen in Gelechioidea taxonomy and systematics, the relationships
  among Blastobasidae genera are not yet sufficiently studied to allow a
  well-supported subdivision of this family.   Ecology            
  The imagines (adults) are small, slender moths which at a casual
  glance lack conspicuous and characteristic features – noted entomologist
  Edward Meyrick once described the group as "obscure and dull coloured
  moths, decidedly the least attractive family of Lepidoptera". Their
  coloration is usually reddish-brown, without crisp streaks or large wingspots.            
  The head is smooth, with moderately long antennae (slightly more than
  half as long as the forewings) which are each situated halfway down the head.
  As usual for moths, the antennae do not have clubs; even in the males they
  are smooth or almost so and not at all comb-like. The antenna base bears a
  small brush of dense hairs and is flat, with a concave underside and may
  cover part of the compound eyes. The Blastobasidae have few or no bristles on
  the compound eyes, no ocelli, and probably lack chaetosemata too. The
  mouthparts are well-developed and moderately specialized, with 4-segmented
  folding maxillary palps, long labial palps and a long proboscis with a scaly
  base. The tibiae of the forelegs are enlarged at the end, those of the middle
  legs two spurs, and those of the hundlegs 4 spurs and many long thin hairs.             
  Wingspan is about one to two dozen millimeters, more than ten times as
  much as the thorax width. The forewings lack a tornus and are about 4-5 times
  as long as they are wide, with a convex outer margin and a rather blunt tip.
  The round-tipped hindwings are very narrow, of equal or somewhat less length
  as the forewings, to which they are joined with a frenulum. The edge of the
  hindwings is surrounded by a fringe of hairs about two times as long as the
  wing is wide.             
  The wing venation of forewings and hindwings differs. The forewing has
  12 veins altogether, with two anal veins – vein 1b and 1c, the former of
  which forks proximally – and a distally complete tubular vein (1c). The
  transverse vein is complete, and the discal cell has no tubular vein running
  through its middle. By contrast, the hindwings have 7 or 8 veins. Their anal
  veins are 1b and 1c like on the forewings; they lack vein 1a but also have
  the tubular vein 1c. Vein 1b may fork as in the forewings or remain
  unbranched, while a transverse vein may be present or not. Usually, 5 veins
  arise from the hindwing cell, of which the fourth and fifth are proximally
  joined; Blastobasis however might only have 4 cell veins, with veins 3
  and 5 joined and vein 4 missing, but this is not universally accepted.
  Hindwing vein 8 either runs along the upper cell margin initially and
  anastomizes with it; possibly, it arises from the cell margin in some
  species, but in neither case it runs close to vein 7.             
  The caterpillars (larvae) have ten prolegs and feed openly, usually on
  dead organic matter. Some species are pests of stored foodstuffs. The pupae
  are concealed and are not protruded during hatching.             Most of the estimated 32 genera of
  Blastobasidae presently recognized are small or even monotypic, though Auximobasis
  and Pigritia are fairly diverse and Blastobasis and Holcocera
  are quite large. Such an arrangement is suspicious of not representing the
  true phylogeny of the family adequately; with few species having been
  compared in sufficient detail in recent times, it is to be expected that as
  better data becomes available the two large genera will be split up, and/or
  several small genera will not be maintained as distinct. Thus, the following
  list is likely to change in the future.   = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =   References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>,
  [Additional references may be found at:  MELVYL Library]   |