Elachistidae


The Elachistidae are a family of small moths in the superfamily Gelechioidea. Some authors lump about 3,300 species in eight subfamilies here, but this arrangement almost certainly results in a massively paraphyletic and completely unnatural assemblage, united merely by symplesiomorphies retained from the first gelechioid moths.
In fact, most of these moths appear to be either closer to the Oecophorinae and are hence nowadays usually included in the Oecophoridae, or constitute quite basal lineages of gelechioids, neither closely related to Elachista nor to Oecophora, and hence best treated as independent families within the Gelechioidea. The genus Coelopoeta is sometimes still placed here, but probably belongs in the Oecophorinae.
Consequently, the Elachistidae are essentially identical to the subfamily Elachistinae in the family's wide circumscription. The Agonoxenidae might perhaps belong here regardless, but even this is doubtful. Nonetheless, a considerable number of genera remain in the present family, and eventually it is likely that subdivisions will again be established.
A significant reduction of genera has been proposed, from the current mass of 20 genera to 3. The proposition was made on the premise of several distinguishing classifications, all of which are synapomorphies. Those include genital size and presence of digitate, adult abdomen segments without dorsal spines, absence of maxillary palpi and fronto-clypeal suture, and immobile abdominal segments in pupae and larvae. Various tribes were considered within the proposition, with most differentiation coming from genital structure.
In the modern, reduced description, the Elachistidae are small to very small moths. Their wings appear feather-like due to the fine hair covering the wings' fringes, and the hindwings can be significantly reduced in area, essentially consisting of a small strip with a wide hairy fringe. The caterpillars are typically leaf miners or stem miners on Poales.

Genera

The genera of Elachistidae are:
Several small genera colored by some authors are here included in Elachista, as it would otherwise be liable to be non-monophyletic. As noted above, Aeolanthes may also belong here, as the only genus of a subfamily Aeolanthinae. Also possibly included is the Peruvian species Auxotricha ochrogypsa, described by Edward Meyrick in 1931 as the sole member of its genus.

Fossil record

Some prehistoric genera of Elachistidae, known only from fossils, have been described:

Former genera

Annetennia Traugott-Olsen, 1995Aristoptila Meyrick, 1932Atmozostis Meyrick, 1932Atrinia Sinev, 1992Austriana Traugott-Olsen, 1995Atmozostis Meyrick, 1932Bradleyana Traugott-Olsen, 1995Calamograptis Meyrick, 1937 Canariana Traugott-Olsen, 1995Cryphioxena Meyrick, 1921 Dicasteris Meyrick, 1906Dicranoctetes Braun, 1918Elachistoides Sruoga, 1992Eupneusta Bradley, 1974Gibraltarensis Traugott-Olsen, 1996Habeleria Traugott-Olsen, 1995Holstia Traugott-Olsen, 1995Illantis Meyrick, 1921Kumia Falkovich, 1986Kuznetzoviana Traugott-Olsen, 1996Mendesina de Joannis, 1902Microplitica Meyrick, 1935Ogmograptis Meyrick, 1935 Paraperittia Rebel, 1916Perittoides Sinev, 1992Petrochroa Busck, 1914Phaneroctena A.J.Turner, 1923 Phthinostoma Meyrick, 1914Polymetis Walsingham, 1908Proterochyta Meyrick, 1918 Sineviana Traugott-Olsen, 1995Sruogania Traugott-Olsen, 1995Symphoristis Meyrick, 1918Whitebreadia Traugott-Olsen, 1995