Phyllonorycter geniculella - mine collected 07/08/2017, adult emerged 14/08/2017
Now for some leaves. I'm still trying to perfect a method of photographing them, but at the moment I'm going with a scanned image of the whole leaf for context, and a back-lit close up of the mine to show the frass/feeding pattern where appropriate. I'm using the USB microscope to check for egg position where necessary, but the photos of that are not that enlightening.
First up, here's a couple more from Market Bosworth CP last Wednesday evening.
Vacated mine on cultivated 'paper-bark birch'. Gallery mine with linear frass pattern conforms to Stigmella confusella.
Vacated blotch mine on alder. The position of the blotch between veins, and the distinct single crease along the center of the mine on the underside confirms to Phyllonorycter rajella. The other mine on this leaf, a folded 'tent' on the edge with larval feeding and frass inside, is possibly Caloptilia falconipennella, but that's a scarce moth in VC55 and I'm not confident enough on that one to record the mine.
And here's a couple from the Ulverscroft Priory area on Saturday ......
Vacated mine on beech. The egg position is on the underside right up against the mid-rib amongst the hairs is absolutely key to this one, and otherwise the gallery mine with dispersed frass (not coiled) is right for Stigmella tityrella.
This vacated gallery mine on lime has the egg on the underside, and the early part of the mine shows the feeding on the underside only. The frass pattern is odd on this one as it fills the mine rather than being linear, but feedback from the leafminers forum agrees that this is Stigmella tiliae.
That's enough part-eaten leaves full of shite for now. Here's a couple from the garden trap to sign off.
Dioryctria abietella
Agriphila geniculea
3 comments:
Most instructive Mark - more please!
"...full of shite..." haha, you wordsmith you! Great stuff mate, glad to see you're finally looking for moths the proper way ;)
Thanks Steve - you're in luck, I will have more to post. In fact I've found one this evening that may even be exciting in a VC55 context. But tonight I'm posting something completely different.
Thanks Seth - finding moths the proper way my arse. I'm finding lots of evidence and creating lots of records, but I'm not actually seeing/ticking many moths. Found larvae and pupae of Bedelia somnulentella tonight though (which I've seen before), and tenanted mines of Stigmella plagicolella (which I've not!).
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