Chedra fimbristyli is a moth in the family Batrachedridae.
It was described by Wolfram Mey, in a paper published with Maria J. C. Ceniza in 1993.
[1] The larvae have been recorded mining, with which is meant tunnelling within the tissues of the stems, an unknown Fimbristylis species, a large rush-like plant related to papyrus, known locally as tikog.
The tikog has economic importance and is used locally to produce a fibre, and thus this tiny moth can be seen as a nuisance species, because it harms the plant.
This article on a moth of the family Batrachedridae is a stub.