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Category Archives: insects

Leafmines: Antispila petryi

09 Monday Sep 2024

Posted by sconzani in insects

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Antispila petryi, British leafminers, Dogwood cutter, leaf-mining moth larvae, leaf-mining moths, leafmines on Dogwood

Prompted by a post on Twitter by Butterfly Conservation’s Head of Science Richard Fox, I spent some of last Monday’s walk checking for mines on the leaves of Dogwood (Cornus sanguinea), a plant I tend to ignore when leaf bothering. I got lucky, finding several mines when checking the first Dogwood I came across.

240909 Antispila petryi (1)

There are two leafminers that make very similar mines so it’s important to check the larvae if they’re still present. If the larvae have dark spots along the centre of their bodies, they are Antispila petryi (a little moth that’s also known as the Dogwood cutter); if there are no spots, they are Antispila metallela (Shining dogwood cutter). As you can see, the larvae I found have spots, so are the former.

240909 Antispila petryi (2)

When they are fully grown, the larvae cut out an oval from the leaf to make themselves a case and drop to the ground to pupate, hence the holes shown in my photos. The mines can be found from August to October.

240909 Antispila petryi (3)

When I checked the Welsh biodiversity records database, I found that there were very few Welsh records, and none in my area. However, a few days later I found more mines in another location so it seems that, like many other leafminers, this species is under-recorded. I’m now on the look out for the other species, Antispila metallela.

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Leafhopper: Populicerus confusus

07 Saturday Sep 2024

Posted by sconzani in insects

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British cicadellidae, British leafhoppers, Cicadellidae, Idiocerus confusus, leafhopper, leafhopper on willow, Populicerus confusus

I found this little leafhopper a few weeks ago but it sometimes take a while for the verifiers to check records (that’s not a criticism – they are almost all volunteers, and I am hugely grateful for their efforts). And, to be honest, I wasn’t sure this would be accepted as I read on one website that the species could only be identified by examination of its internal genital structure. Fortunately, that didn’t prove necessary in this case.

240907 Populicerus confusus (1)

So, meet Populicerus confusus (also known as Idiocerus confusus), a leafhopper that can be found throughout Britain, living on the various species of willow (Salix species), usually in the damp environments preferred by those trees. The two I spotted quite close together were on a young willow at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park.

240907 Populicerus confusus (2)

Like most members of the Cicadellidae family, Populicerus confusus is small, between 5 and 7mm in length. It is mainly yellow-green, with rusty colouring on the inside of its forewings and, often but not always, a brownish posterior. The adult leafhoppers can be seen from June to October.

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Aleiodes wasp update

05 Thursday Sep 2024

Posted by sconzani in insects

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Aleiodes wasp, British wasps, mummy wasp, parasitic wasp

When I checked the jars on my kitchen window sill yesterday morning, I discovered the Aleiodes wasp I blogged about last week had hatched (Aleiodes mummy wasp, 28 August). And here she is …

240905 aleiodes wasp (3)

The photo above was taken through the glass of its jar so apologies that it’s not very sharp, but you can see she’s a female by the presence of the sharp ovipositor poking out the bottom of her body. And a reminder, below, of how small the cocoon was: approximately 7mm long, so I would guess the wasp was around 6mm.

240905 aleiodes wasp (2)

Finally, the image on the left below (also not very clear) shows the small circular dark hole on the underside of the cocoon where the tiny wasp had chewed her way out into the world. And, on the right, the wasp sitting, very briefly, on the outside of the jar before she flew off to begin her life in the wild.

240905 aleiodes wasp (1)

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Galls: Dasineura crataegi

04 Wednesday Sep 2024

Posted by sconzani in insects, plants, trees

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British galls, Dasineura crataegi, gall-causing mites, galls caused by mites, galls on Hawthorn, Hawthorn button-top gall, plant galls

Teeny tiny mites have caused this damage to the tips of new branches on Hawthorn bushes (Crataegus species). Mites are so tiny that they can feed on individual plant cells, and it is this feeding that distorts and deforms the new leaf growth. These particular mites are called Dasineura crataegi, and the galls they create are known as Hawthorn button-top galls.

240904 Dasineura crataegi

Apparently, these galls are quite common but I’ve only seen them recently. All plant growth in the field where these Hawthorn bushes are growing is usually cut to the ground in late Autumn but that cut wasn’t down last year, possibly because it was too wet. This has allowed Hawthorn seedlings to grow where they usually wouldn’t, and it is on these young Hawthorns that the mites are thriving. It will be interesting to see if the galls appear again next year if the annual cut goes ahead.

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Leafmines: Caloptilia stigmatella

02 Monday Sep 2024

Posted by sconzani in insects, trees

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British moths, Caloptilia stigmatella, leaf mines on poplar, leaf mines on willow, leaf-mining moth larvae, leaf-mining moths

Another Monday, another new leaf mine – they’re never ending!

240902 Caloptilia stigmatella (1)

Now, this may not look like a mine but what’s happened is this: once hatched from its egg, the larva chewed an initial linear mine in the surface on the underside of the leaf – this species uses willow (Salix sp.) and poplar (Populus sp.). Then it munched out a blotch at the edge of the leaf and rolled the edge over to create a cone. As you see here, the larva will often create two or even three cones before it pupates.

240902 Caloptilia stigmatella (2)

These mines and cones are the work of the moth Caloptilia stigmatella. You can see more examples of the mines and get more information on the British Leafminers website here, and see photos of the adult of the species on the UK Moths website here.

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Alder spittlebug

31 Saturday Aug 2024

Posted by sconzani in insects

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Alder spittlebug, Aphrophora alni, British bugs, British insects

“High five!”

240831 Aphrophora alni Alder spittlebug (1)

The Alder spittlebug (Aphrophora alni) is very similar to the Common froghopper (Philaenus spumarius), and I have a feeling I may have mistaken them in the past, as this was the first time I was certain this was the spittlebug. The British Bugs website explains that ‘The genus can be recognised by the keel running down the midline of the head and pronotum, and the species by the colour pattern with distinct white patches near the margin of the wings’. To my eye, the spittlebug is a noticeably bigger – the froghopper is 5-7mm long, the spittlebug is 9-10mm – and wider in the beam.

240831 Aphrophora alni Alder spittlebug (2)

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Aleiodes mummy wasp

28 Wednesday Aug 2024

Posted by sconzani in insects

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Aleiodes wasp, British wasps, caterpillar parasitised by wasp, mummy wasp, parasitic wasp

I found this remarkable but tiny object a couple of weeks ago when checking out some Buff-tip moth caterpillars on a small willow tree, but I’ve delayed posting about it until I had confirmation of identification.

240828 aleiodes (2)

The situation is this: a female Aleiodes wasp (species unknown) laid her egg in a caterpillar (species also unknown). When the egg hatched, it fed inside the caterpillar, eventually leaving the skin of the caterpillar hardened, in a state many people describe as a ‘mummy’, which is why the Aleiodes wasps are commonly referred to as mummy wasps. The wasp larva pupates inside the mummy, and will eventually bite a hole in the outer skin to emerge as an adult. As I was intrigued to see what might emerge, I’ve brought this mummy home, and it’s currently in a jar on my kitchen window. If/when something emerges, I’ll post about it.

240828 aleiodes (1)

There’s an image on Bug Guide website that looks quite similar to the mummy I found, and another on Jungle Dragon, where you can see the exit hole made by the adult wasp (or wasps) when it/they emerged from pupation.

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Leafmines: Cephalomyza labiatarum

26 Monday Aug 2024

Posted by sconzani in insects, wildflowers

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Amauromyza labiatarum, British leafmines, Cephalomyza labiatarum, fly mines on Hedge woundwort, Hedge woundwort, leaf-mining fly, Stachys sylvatica

Since I read earlier in the year about the larvae of one of the case-bearing moths living on Hedge woundwort (Stachys sylvatica), I’ve been checking those plants whenever I see them. I’ve not yet found the Coleophora species but, a week or so ago, I did find some leafmines I’d never seen before. These are the larval mines of the fly Cephalomyza (formerly Amauromyza) labiatarum and they can, in fact, be found on a very wide range of plants (the Agromyzidae Recording Scheme website lists the following species: Ajuga, Ballota, Galeopsis, Glechoma, Lallemantia, Lamiastrum, Lamium, Leonurus, Lycopsis, Marrubiam, Melissa, Mentha, Prunella, Satureja, Scutellaris, Stachys, Teucrium, and Verbena). As you can hopefully see from my photos, the larva’s initial feeding creates a long thin line, which later becomes a large blotch mine. You can see more images on the Agromyzidae RS site referenced above and on the British Leafminers website.

240826 Cephalomyza labiatarum

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Hunting the Migrant hawker

23 Friday Aug 2024

Posted by sconzani in insects

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Aeshna mixta, British dragonflies, British odonata, Migrant hawker, Odonata

The first Migrant hawker (Aeshna mixta) I spotted this year, on 3 August, flew up into the tree tops almost immediately after I noticed it, and stayed there – I took some photos for recording purposes but they barely showed this dragonfly’s distinguishing features. So, when I spotted my next Migrant hawker, on 9 August, I spent 30 minutes watching and hoping for it to settle. This was all I got before it flew off, disappearing over a hedge, and I moved on.

240823 migrant hawker (1)

Then, finally, a week later, on the 16th, after another 30-minute session watching this beauty hawking back and forth along a tree line, expertly weaving in amongst the branches when it spotted potential prey, occasionally fighting with another of its kind hawking a little further along the ride, it perched very obligingly right in front of me and I managed slowly to approach for some reasonable photos. Dragonflies are amazing to watch, but it is also very satisfying to actually get good photographs of them.

240823 migrant hawker (2)

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The cases of Coleophora trifolii

22 Thursday Aug 2024

Posted by sconzani in insects, wildflowers

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British moths, case-bearing moths, Coleophora trifolii, Large clover case-bearer, Melilotus species, moth larvae on Melilot, moth larval cases on Melilot, seed-mining moth larvae

After being prompted by a post on Twitter/X by British Leafminers man Rob, I started searching for this moth, Coleophora trifolii, a couple of weeks ago. At that stage, Rob said you could pick out the moth larva’s presence by looking at the seeds of Melilot, where he’d found ‘Two seed cases (blackened) fused together whilst the larva inside feeds on the third seed (still green)’. Looking for those proved much more tricky than I expected as the seeds are tiny and, as the plants die off, the seeds seem naturally to go black. So, I failed to find my target.

240822 coleophora trifolii (1)

Then, a few days ago, Rob posted again, noting the formation of the little cases the moth larva moves in to while it continues to feed within the Melilot seeds and later to pupate within. And these cases have proved much easier to spot. In fact, I found at least 15, probably more, in one clump of plants where the adult moth must have laid a lot of eggs all at once. There were so many cases that I’ve actually brought a couple home to see what emerges – I don’t usually like to do that but, in this case, there were so many that I didn’t think I would be interfering too much and I’ll return any adults that appear back to the area. And I’ll share photos of them in another post if they emerge successfully.

240822 coleophora trifolii (2)

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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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