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The females do not have wings, as is usual for bagworm moths.
Eumasia is a small genus of the bagworm moth family, Psychidae.
It belongs to the bagworm moth family (Psychidae).
Eumeta is a genus of bagworm moths.
Psyche casta is a nocturnal moth from the family Psychidae, the bagworm moths.
"Case moth" redirects here; see also Psychidae (bagworm moths).
For the bagworm moth genus including e.g. C. hirsuta, see Canephora (moth).
The Bagworm Moth (Dahlica triquetrella) is a moth of the Psychidae family.
Parmelia lichens are food for the caterpillars of certain Lepidoptera, such as the bagworm moth Taleporia tubulosa.
The Psychidae (bagworm moths, also simply bagworms or bagmoths) are a family of the Lepidoptera (butterflies and moths).
The bagworm moths (Psychidae), which also belong to the primitive Ditrysia (although to superfamily Tineoidea, not Gelechioidea), build similar cases as larvae.
Eumeta crameri is a bagworm moth that spins its cocoon all its larval life, decorating it with small twigs, bark and thorns from the trees on which it feeds.
The Psychidae (bagworm moths, also simply bagworms or bagmoths) are a family of the Lepidoptera (butterflies and moths).
In 1810 the third volume (larger "macro-moths" including Psychidae) was published.
Psyche crassiorella is a moth of the Psychidae family.
He specializes in the study of the Lepidoptera Psychidae.
The subfamilies of Psychidae, with some notable genera and species also listed, are:
"Case moth" redirects here; see also Psychidae (bagworm moths).
Another common name for the Psychidae is "case moths", but this is just as well used for the case-bearers (Colephoridae).
The caterpillar larvae of the Psychidae construct cases out of silk and environmental materials such as sand, soil, lichen, or plant materials.
In some Lepidoptera families such as the Psychidae and Lymantriidae, the wings are reduced or even absent (often in the female but not the male).
Like all members of the family Psychidae, the male larva develops into an adult in a mobile silken bag covered with materials such as thorns and twigs.
Description d'une espèce malgache et d'un genre africain nouveau (Lep., Psychidae).
The Psychidae (bagworm moths, also simply bagworms or bagmoths) are a family of the Lepidoptera (butterflies and moths).
Stichobasis postmeridianus is a species of moth of the Psychidae family that was discovered in 2010 in the Maltese Islands.
The genus was established in the Psychidae, but was transferred to the Megalopygidae by Fletcher and Nye in 1982.
The Wattle bagworm (Kotochalia junodi, formerly Acanthopsyche junodi) is a species of moth in the family Psychidae.
Saunders' Case Moth or Large Bagworm (Metura elongatus) is a moth of the Psychidae family.
The genus Parameristis with the species Parameristis eremaea is now considered to be a Psychidae species in the genus Lamyristis.
There are six families usually included within it, Eriocottidae, Arrhenophanidae, Lypusidae, Acrolophidae, Tineidae and Psychidae, whose relationships are currently uncertain.
It is sometimes confused with the gypsy moth, or the fall webworm, and may be erroneously referred to as a bagworm, which is the common name applied to unrelated caterpillars in the family Psychidae.
The most distinct case of sexual dimorphism is that of adult females of many Psychidae species who have only vestigial wings, legs, and mouthparts as compared to the adult males who are strong fliers with well-developed wings and feathery antennae.
The larvae weave themselves cases similar to those of various species in the families Tineidae and Psychidae, and accordingly the genus has at various times been assigned to each of those two families, because for many years there was only a single specimen to work from.