| 1. | Terminal leaves are ovate-elliptic to lanceolate and are long and wide.
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| 2. | They tie the terminal leaves of their host plant, forming a frass-packed shelter.
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| 3. | They spin together the terminal leaves of their host plant.
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| 4. | Mines are only found in terminal leaves of young shoots.
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| 5. | The late instar larva of make a pouch of two or three terminal leaves on twigs.
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| 6. | Second generation larvae usually feed in spun terminal leaves and flowerheads, and sometimes in the pods.
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| 7. | They initially mine the terminal leaves and stem.
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| 8. | When older, they continue to feed by skeletonizing the underside of one of the two terminal leaves.
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| 9. | The larva webs together the terminal leaves of, thereby creating a nest inside of which it skeletonizes the foliage.
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| 10. | Two weekends ago, a man was spotted at a ferry terminal leaving a knapsack next to a garbage can.
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