Sabatinca bimacula is a species of moth belonging to the family Micropterigidae. This species is endemic to New Zealand and has only been found in the Percy Valley and on Secretary Island in Fiordland.[1] This species is sexually dimorphic with the male of the species having an L-shaped marking on the forewing while in the female the L-shaped marking is much broader and takes up most of the half of the forewing nearest the abdomen. The adults of this species are on the wing in the second half of October. Larvae of this species feed on the liverwort Bazzania involuta. The host species of adult S. bimacula are unknown but are likely to be fern spores or pollen from Sedge grasses. As at 2017 S. bimacula has been classified as having the "At Risk, Naturally Uncommon" conservation status under the New Zealand Threat Classification System.
This species was described by George Gibbs in 2014. The male holotype specimen was collected in Percy Valley, Fiordland and is held in the New Zealand Arthropod Collection.
Gibbs described the adults of this species as follows:
This species is sexually dimorphic with the male of the species having an L-shaped marking on the forewing while in the female the L-shaped marking is much broader and takes up most of the half of the forewing nearest the abdomen.
This species has only been found in the Percy Valley and on Secretary Island, both locations in Fiordland. It has been hypothesised that the species may well occur more widely throughout Fiordland but that it is likely very local in its occurrence.
This species has only been recorded as being on the wing from the middle to the end of October.
The larvae of S. bimacula lives on Bazzania involuta.[2] The host species of adult S. bimacula are unknown but are likely to be fern spores or pollen from Sedge grasses.
S. bimacula has been classified as having the "At Risk, Naturally Uncommon" conservation status under the New Zealand Threat Classification System.[3] [4]