There are 98 describedgenera of Gracillariidae. A complete checklist is available of all currently recognised species. There are many undescribed species in the tropics but there is also an online catalogue of Afrotropical described species ; the SouthAfrican fauna is quite well known. Although Japanese and Russian authors have recognised additional subfamilies, there are three currently recognised subfamilies, Phyllocnistinae of which is likely to be basal. In this subfamily, the primitive genus Prophyllocnistis from Chile feeds on the plant genus Drimys, and has leaf mines structurally similar in structure to fossils . While there have been some recent DNA sequence-based studies of Palaearctic species, there is need for a satisfactory modern global phylogenetic framework for the subfamilies of Gracillariidae. Some genera are very large, e.g. Acrocercops, Caloptilia, Cameraria, Epicephala and Phyllonorycter.
Distribution
Gracillariidae occur in all terrestrial regions of the World except Antarctica.
Identification
These generally small moths are leaf miners as caterpillars, which can provide a useful means of identification, especially if the hostplant is known. The subfamilies differ by the adult moth resting posture. Most Gracillariinae rest with the front of the body steeply raised; Lithocolletinae and Phyllocnistinae rest with the body parallel to the surface; in Lithocolletinae often with the head lowered.
Life history
The first to fifth-instar larvae are flattened and possess specialised mouthpartsadapted for feeding on sap. Older-instar larvae are cylindrical and have normal chewing mouthparts for feeding on plant tissue within the leaf mines, and have a fully functional silk-producing organ, the "spinneret". Some genera have an intermediate stage in this remarkable hypermetamorphosis.
Larval hostplants
Many hostplants are known, generally dicotyledonous trees or shrubs. Patterns of hostplant shifting have been inferred for many United Kingdom species in the genus Phyllonorycter and its sister genusCameraria. A recent DNA sequencing study mainly of Palaearctic species has shown that the burst of evolutionaryadaptive radiation occurred long after that of the larval hostplants, rather than demonstrating a tight coevolutionary process.
Fossils
The family is an old one, with fossil Phyllocnistinae mines known from 97-million-year-old rocks in Kansas and Nebraska. There are other fossil mines known from rocks of Eocene and Miocene age .
Subfamilies and genera
Gracillariidae phylogeny has been revised in 2017 and is now containing eight subfamilies :
"Ornix" blandella Müller-Rutz, 1920, this species was described from Switzerland. Larvae were recorded feeding on Salix. The present taxonomic status is unknown.
"Gracilaria" confectella Walker, 1864
"Gracilaria" delicatulella Walker, 1864
"Phyllonorycter" fennicellaHering, 1924, this species was described from Finland. The larval hostplant is probably a Salix species. The present taxonomic status is unknown, but is probably a junior subjective synonym of Lithocolletis viminetorum or Lithocolletis salictella.
"Lithocolletis" graeseriella Sorhagen, 1900, see Phyllonorycter
"Lithocolletis" italica Herrich-Schäffer, 1855, this species was described from Italy. The present taxonomic status is unknown.
"Ornix" jyngipennella Heydenreich, 1851, nomen nudum.
"Lithocolletis" lativitella Sorhagen, 1900, this species was described from Germany. Larvae were recorded feeding on Sorbus aria and Pyrus scandinavica. The present taxonomic status is unknown. It might be a synonym of Tinea lantanella Schrank, 1802.
"Lithocolletis" norvegicella Strand, 1919, this species was described from Norway. The present taxonomic status is unknown.
"Gracillaria" pistaciella Rondani, 1876, this species was described from Italy. Larvae were recorded feeding on Pistacia terebinthus.
"Ornix" quercella Müller-Rutz, 1934, this species was described from Switzerland. Larvae were probably bred from a mine on a Quercus species. The present taxonomic status is unknown.
"Phyllonorycter" sessilifoliella Hering, 1957, this species was recorded from southern France, where it was said to have been reared on a Quercus species. nomen nudum