Ypsolophid
moths1 are a
peculiar2(特殊的) group of Lepidoptera that attracts attention with their strange preference for a pose of rest. To take a break adult Ypsolophids like to go bottom up with
antennae3(天线,触须) stretched forward. The
larvae4 of these quirky species live and feed in webs they form on the leaves, buds and
twigs5 of plants. When they are ready to
pupate(化蛹) they produce a
cocoon6 like cradle attached to the host plant. This bizarre group of moths is also particularly hard to catch. The standard methods for collecting adults, usually comprising of breeding them from larvae or attracting the adults by light, both work rarely in the case of Ypsolophids. The larvae of most species usually live
solitary7 on host plant and are hard to find in nature and unlike most flying insects, adults of many species fly on light infrequently. Thus the collecting of
specimens8 from this group is big event for
entomologists(昆虫学者), especially if the species caught turns out to be unknown for science. Russian scientists have had the rare luck to catch and describe two new species of ypsolophid moths from the south regions of the Russian Far East. The study was published in the open access journal ZooKeys.
Being thermophilic, Ypsolophid moths represent a group that has a
propensity9 for
relatively10 higher temperature of the southern regions of the Russian Far East. During last decade the number of known species from Russian Far East has been more than twice increased. Including the species described in this paper, they reached the number of 30 species, which makes for a fourth of all known Ypsolophids worldwide.
"
Faunistic11 studies are not only a
whim(奇想,怪念头)! Exploring species diversity is a task with
ecological12 repercussions13 on a local, and global scales," explains Dr. Ponomarenko, Institute of Biology and Soil Science, Far Eastern Branch of Russian Academy of Science. "Studying the species diversity in East Asia as a whole and in the Far East of Russia in particular is an important endeavour. Faunistic
investigations14 are only the first step in a long row of scientific tasks towards forming a primary database for further theoretical
reconstructions15 and conclusions for the benefit of biodiversity conservation and species
preservation16."