Elder Shoot Borer

Achatodes zeae

The Elder Shoot Borer Moth or Spindle Worm is a moth species of the Noctuidae family.
The species has been known to taxonomists since at least 1841 but gained notoriety in 1927, when many of the species were found boring into the shoots of the common elder bush in Wisconsin, USA.
Achatodes zeae Achatodes zeae (Elder Shoot Borer). Larval hosts are species of Sambucus (Elderberry) the shoots of which they bore into. Achatodes zeae,Apameini,Elder Shoot Borer,Geotagged,Lepidoptera,Noctuidae,Noctuinae,Noctuoidea,Summer,United States,insect,moth

Behavior

Adult moths are known to lay eggs in July and August, and eggs hatch approximately 9 months later. Larvae feed on the leaves they hatch in before moving into lateral shoots of the bush. As they mature they move towards ground shoots and feed upward into the shoots until mid June when they are fully developed and begin to bore into dead canes to pupate.

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Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionArthropoda
ClassInsecta
OrderLepidoptera
FamilyNoctuidae
GenusAchatodes
SpeciesA. zeae