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Yucca Moths

    Kingdom: Animalia
    Division: Arthropoda
    Subdivision: Hexapoda
    Class: Insecta
    Subclass: Pterygota
    Infraclass: Neoptera
    Order: Lepidoptera
    Superfamily: Incurvarioidea
    Family: Prodoxidae
    Subfamily: Prodoxinae
    Genus: Tegeticula

The Yucca Cactus and Yucca Moth:
A Perfect Example of Co-Evolution

A yucca moth, Tegeticula yuccasella, in Bartletsville, Oklahoma.
A yucca moth (Tegeticula yuccasella),
Bartlesville, Oklahoma. Photo copyright Mark
Dreiling, www.bugguide.net.

The relationship between the yucca moth (Genus: Tegeticula) and yucca plant (Genus: Yucca) is believed to have begun at least 40 million years ago and is one of the most cited examples of co-evolution. The yucca plant requires pollination by the yucca moth and moth larvae, in turn, require developing yucca seeds for food - a relationship known as an obligate mutualism. This is actually one of the few documented cases of active pollination because the moth purposefully places pollen on the plants' stigmas. The female yucca moth has specially adapted mouth-parts used for pollen handling. The moth drags its tentacles across the yucca's anthers and collects a large amount of pollen, which the moth then forms into a sticky ball and carries it between its tentacles and thorax. This pollen ball is very large - often made of nearly 10,000 grains of pollen - and can constitute up to 10% of the moth's weight. After collecting the pollen ball, the moth flies to a different yucca plant to deposit its eggs. The moth deposits its eggs in the flower's ovary and uses its tentacles to scrape the pollen ball onto the top of the yucca plant's stigma, pollinating the yucca plant. The moth then climbs to the new flower's anthers and collects pollen, and repeats the entire process.

References: Yuccas, Yucca Moths, and Coevolution: A Review (Olle Pellmyr In: Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, Volume 90, pp. 35-55, 2003), The Yucca Plant and the Yucca Moth (M. Ramsay and J. R. Schrock In: The Kansas School Naturalist, Volume 41, Number 2, June 1995), Pollination Partnerships Factsheet (Claire Hemingway, Flora of North America Association, 2004), and Yuccas and Yucca Moths (Lund University)

Yucca Moth (Tegeticula) Resources
Showing 11 Results
CollapseGreat Smokies Moth and Butterfly Bioblitz Species List
Description: Species checklist from 2000 butterfly and moth inventory in Great Smoky Mountains National Park as part of the all-taxa biodiversity inventory (ATBI).
Resource Type: Checklists and Identification Guides
Resource Format: URL
Publisher: United States Geological Survey (USGS), Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center (NPWRC)
ExpandIntegrated Taxonomic Information System Report: Tegeticula
ExpandMoment of Science: Yucca Flowers and Yucca Moths
ExpandTegeticula Species Overview
ExpandYucca and Its Moth: Pollination that Depends on a Small Moth
ExpandYucca Moths
ExpandYucca Plant and the Yucca Moth
ExpandYucca Plant and the Yucca Moth
ExpandYuccas and Yucca Moths
ExpandYuccas, yucca moths, and coevolution: A review
ExpandYuccas, Yucca Moths, and Coevolution: A Review

The Yucca Moth

Tegeticula spp.

Description: Tegeticula spp. are small to medium sized moths, with wingspans of a little more than 1/2 inch. Generally they are white but can have some tan or grey coloration. The moths have a fringe of fine hairs on their wings. Males are slightly smaller than females. Larvae are white during early instars but turn pink to dark red during later instars.

Some distinguishing characteristics include: females with tentacle-like appendages between the first and second segments of their maxillary palps (paired structures located just behind the mandible); females with a sword-shaped ovipositor (egg-laying blade) and males with a blunt tail; and larvae with three pairs of setae on the anal plate (a stiff, hair-like structure on the rear portion of the larva).

Life History: In the spring, Tegeticula spp. emerge from cocoons and fly to nearby yucca plants and mate. The female then deposits eggs into the yucca plant ovary and deposits a pollen ball on the flower's stigma, pollinating the plant. The larva, usually one or two, hatch inside the developing ovary during late spring and summer and feed on the maturing seeds through the summer and fall. The larva bores out of the fruit upon maturity and creates a cocoon in the soil. The adult then emerges up to one year later.

Habitat: These moth species are found in natural habitats like sand dunes, pine forest and glades, and grasslands.

Distribution: Tegeticula spp. are found north to southern Alberta and Ontario, Canada, south to Puebla, Mexico, and east to Connecticut.

Resources:
Tegeticula (Olle Pellmyr, Vanderbilt University)

Yucca Moths (I. Alvarez and M. Youmans (Editors), Qarrtsiluni, November 2007)

The Yucca Plant and the Yucca Moth (M. Ramsay and J. R. Schrock, The Kansas School Naturalist, Volume 41, Number 2, June 1995)

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