Meharia Explained

Meharia is a genus of moths belonging to the family Cossidae.

Diagnosis

Meharia is distinguished from all other Cossidae genus by a number of apomorphous characters: the specific “tineoid appearance”, the reduction of the lateral processes of the juxta, the specific dorsolateral sclerotization of the asymmetric aedeagus and the specific ribbon – like epiphysis.

Description

These are small to medium-sized moths, females larger; eyes naked; male and female antennae bipectinate along their length; proboscis reduced; legs long, slender; foretibia bearing a ribbon-like epiphysis; forewing elongate, rounded on the outer margin; forewing pattern has alternate dark and pale spots and bands transversely; hindwing uniform.[1]

Distribution

Eleven species have been reported so far, primarily from the deserts and arid mountains of the Western Palearctic and Africa.

Species

Notes and References

  1. Borth . Robert . Ivinskis . Povilas . Saldaitis . Aidas . Yakovlev . Roman . 2011-08-11 . Cossidae of the Socotra Archipelago (Yemen) . ZooKeys . en . 122 . 45–69 . 10.3897/zookeys.122.1213 . free . 21998527 . 3187673 . 2011ZooK..122...45B . 1313-2970.