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Superfamily Tortricoidea - Tortricid Moths

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Biology of Rhyacionia subtropica (Miller) (Lepidoptera: Olethreutidae)
By McGraw, James Robert
Thesis (Ph.D.) University of Florida, 1975

Full text PDF

Life history and habits of the southwestern pine tip moth, Rhyacionia neomexicana (Dyar) (Lepidoptera: Olethreutidae)
By D. T. Jennings
Annals of the Entomological Society of America 83(3): 597-606, 1975

Occurrence In Florida of Rhyacionia busckana new record Lepidoptera, Tortricidae, Olethreutinae
By J. B. Heppner
Entomological News, 86: 121-122, 1975

The Species of Pseudexentera (Tortricidae)
By William E. Miller
Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society, 40(3), 218-237, 1986
The Species of Pseudexentera (Tortricidae) is an excellent, detail study by Dr. William E. Miller, Adjunct Professor of Entomology, University of Minnesota. Dr. Miller is the author of several species of Pseudexentera, including P. sepia.

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Petrova houseri, a new pitch-nodule moth from eastern north America
By William E. Miller
The Ohio Journal of Science 59 (4): 230-232, 1959

Discovery of a larval host plant for Olethreutes monetiferana (Riley) Tortricidae in Northern Kentucky
By Loran D. Gibson
Journal of the Lepidopterists’ Society 61(2): 113, 2006

New apple pest, Hedya nubiferana (Haworth), discovered in Ohio
By Roy W. Rings
The Ohio Journal of Science, 92(3): 72, 1992

The Grape-Berry Moth
By M. V. Slingerland, with note by W. D. Kearfott
Cornell University, 1904
Cornell University Agricultural Experimental Station of the College of Agriculture, Department of Entomology, Bulletin 223, November 1904. Available at https://archive.org/details/annualreportofag1905corn.

Includes on pp. 123–125: Descriptive Notes on Some New Species of American Moths that have been Confused with the Grape-Berry Moth, by W. D. Kearfott, with the following key:

1. With large outer marginal patch of front wing indented above anal angle by a spur of ground color: 2
With this patch evenly rounded on outer edge, not indented below: botrana
2. With inner half of front wing uniformly lilaceous or leaden-blue, crossed by well-defined narrow brown lines: 3

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