| AENIGMATINEIDAE, NEOPSEUSTOIDEA | (donherbisonevans@yahoo.com) and Stella Crossley |

caterpillar in borehole, magnified
(Photo: courtesy of Andy Young, Kangaroo Island, South Australia)
The Caterpillar of this species is off-white with a brown head and a corrugated body. The caterpillar has been found boring into a stem of
The pupa has a spiky 'rasp' cap, with which it bores through an opercula in the larval/pupal cell on emergence.

The adult moths have bronzy-purple forewings with gold flecks. The hindwings are dull greyish-black with a little bronzy iridescence. The wingspan is about 0.8 cm.
The eggs are white and spherical, with a diameter of about 0.1mm. The female moths lay their eggs in a group inside the tips of shoots of a foodplant.

The species has been found in
Further reading :
N.P. Kristensen, D.J. Hilton, A. Kallies, L. Milla, J. Rota, N. Wahlberg,
S.A. Wilcox, R.V. Glatz, D.A. Young, G. Cocking, T. Edwards, G. Gibbs, & M. Halsey,
A new extant family of primitive moths from Kangaroo Island, Australia,
and its significance for understanding early Lepidoptera evolution,
Systematic Entomology,
Volume 40 (2015), pp.8-13, figs 1-5.
![]() caterpillar | ![]() butterflies | ![]() Lepidoptera | ![]() moths | ![]() caterpillar |
(written 30 March 2026, updated 6 April 2026)