This species was first described by Alfred Philpott in 1930 using a specimen collected by Stuart Lindsay at Porter River.[3] Philpott named the species Acroclita discariana.[3] The genus level classification of this species is regarded as unsatisfactory.[2] As such this species is also currently known as Acroclita (s.l.) discariana.[4] The holotype specimen is held at Canterbury Museum.[5]
Description
Philpott described the species as follows:
♂︎♀︎. 15-16mm. Head, palpi and thorax grey; head with projecting scales on frons; palpi with projecting scales above and beneath, terminal segment short, almost hidden. Antennae grey, simple in both sexes. Abdomen fuscous grey. Legs grey, tarsi obscurely annulated with white. Forewings moderate, costa slightly arched, without fold, apex blunt-pointed, termen slightly sinuate, oblique; grey mixed with brownish beneath costa and round termen, numerous transverse blackish strigulae; a triangular blackish spot in disk at 1⁄3 and a V-shaped blackish mark at 2⁄3, both of these marks being much more prominent in the ♀︎; fringes fuscous grey, with a thin faint white median line. Hindwings fuscous, fringes greyish fuscous with a darker basal line.[3]
The larvae of A. discariana make distinctive webbing on their host plant.[7] It is very tough, white and is formed at the stem axils of their host.[4] The webbing can be as large as 30 cm in diameter.[4] The species inhabits this webbing both as larvae and pupae and pupates on its larval host.[8][10] The adult moth is day flying.[9] The species is on the wing in October[9] and November.[8] It overwinters.[10]