Hyblaeidae

 Hyblaeidae are the "teak moths", a family of insects in the Lepidopteran order. The two genera with about 18 species make up one of the two families of the Hyblaeoidea superfamily (the other family being the monotypic Prodidactidae),[1] which in the past has been included in the Pyraloidea. Recent phylogenetic studies find varying relationships of Hyblaeoidea among Ditrysian Lepidoptera: Mutanen et al. (2010) find the superfamily to group either with Pyraloidea, or – more often – with Thyridoidea or butterflies.[2] The results of Wahlberg et al. (2013) and Heikilä et al. (2015) indicate a sister-group relationship with Pyraloidea.[3][4]

Hyblaeidae
Hyblaea puera at Kadavoor.jpg
Hyblaea puera
Scientific classificatione
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Arthropoda
Class:Insecta
Order:Lepidoptera
Clade:Eulepidoptera
Clade:Ditrysia
Clade:Apoditrysia
Clade:Obtectomera
Superfamily:Hyblaeoidea
Family:Hyblaeidae
Genera
  • Erythrochrus
  • Hyblaea
Diversity
About 20 species

Males have a specialised "hair-pencil" on the hindleg.[5]

The genus Hyblaea is distributed throughout the Old World tropics, and Torone in the Neotropics. Caterpillar host plants are well known and comprise almost exclusively species of the families BignoniaceaeVerbenaceae, the mangrove families Avicenniaceae and Rhizophoraceae and a few other families.[6]

Note

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article
 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
Creative Commons
Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
.