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Category Archives: insects

Leafmines: Phyllonorycter corylifoliella

23 Monday Oct 2023

Posted by sconzani in insects, leaves, trees

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Hawthorn, Hawthorn midget, leaf-mining moths, leafminers, leafmines on Hawthorn, moth larvae on Hawthorn, Phyllonorycter corylifoliella

I thought I’d already shared this leafmine but it seems not so say hello to the Hawthorn midget (Phyllonorycter corylifoliella), a very attractive chestnut –and-white moth, which can be viewed on the UK Moths website and whose larvae mine the leaves of various Rosaceous trees and shrubs. As you can probably see, the mines I’ve found have been on Hawthorn (Crataegus species) but they also mine Apple (Malus sp.) and Cherry (Prunus sp.)

231023 Phyllonorycter corylifoliella (1)

The mines, which are found on the upperside of the leaves, look almost silvery and contains strings of brown frass, can be found in July, and again in September –October. The adult moths are active in May and August, though I’ve not seen one yet.

231023 Phyllonorycter corylifoliella (2)

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Orange and spotty

21 Saturday Oct 2023

Posted by sconzani in insects, ladybird

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British ladybirds, Halyzia secedimguttata, Orange ladybird

As I put my foot forward to get closer to yet another bush I was examining, something tiny and yellow-looking flitted up from the ground. I was intrigued, wondering what it could be, so followed its upward trajectory until it settled on a bramble branch in front of me. Well, hello, little Orange ladybird. How lovely to see you!

231021 orange ladybird

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Black mummies

19 Thursday Oct 2023

Posted by sconzani in insects

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Tags

Aphelinus species, aphid, aphid mummies, aphid parasitised by wasp, British aphids, Drepanosiphum platanoidis, parasitic wasp, parasitised aphids

Unless I find something particularly noteworthy, this might be my last venture into the confusing world of aphids and their parasites, at least for the winter months. You might remember my post about Aphid mummies on 26 September. Well, the tiny creature pictured below is also an aphid mummy and, thanks to my local expert, I can identify this as a nymph of the aphid Drepanosiphum platanoidis that has been parasitised by one of the Aphelinus species of parasitic wasps. Within its now-blackened body, a wasp larva has been eating its host, will pupate and eventually emerge as an adult wasp. (Perhaps I should have saved this post until 31 October as it has something of the Halloween / zombie / walking dead feel to it.)

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Galls: Rabdophaga rosaria

17 Tuesday Oct 2023

Posted by sconzani in insects, trees

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gall midges, gall-causing midges, galls, galls made by midges, galls on willow, Rabdophaga rosaria, Rabdophaga strobilina / rosaria agg, willow species

Although I’ve named this blog post Rabdophaga rosaria, it is apparently difficult to be specific as to which exact species has caused galls like the one pictured below, so finds are recorded as Rabdophaga strobilina / rosaria agg. The gall causer is a midge, of the family Cecidomyiidae, of which there are more than 600 species in Britain. All are tiny, less than 5mm in length, and it is their larvae that cause the plants they inhabit to form galls. In this instance, the galls are formed in the buds of willow species.

231017 Rabdophaga rosaria

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Leafmines: Agromyza alnivora

16 Monday Oct 2023

Posted by sconzani in insects, leaves, trees

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Agromyza alnivora, Alder, British leafminers, fly mines, leaf-mining fly larvae, leafmines, leafmines on Alder

These are new leafmines for me, found during time recently spent checking the leaves of Alder trees, both the more frequently seen Alder (Alnus glutinosa) and the Italian alder (Alnus cordata), a common planting here along street edges and in parks. To me, these mines all look very snake-like!

231016 Agromyza alnivora (1)

These are the work of larvae of the fly species Agromyza alnivora. As the British Leafminers website describes, they create ‘An upper surface corridor, gradually widening, which is not associated with leaf margin or veins’, but the most distinctive feature of these mines is the frass, which is always deposited in two rows. The larvae make their mines twice each year – the technical term is bivoltine – in summer and in early autumn.

231016 Agromyza alnivora (2)

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Small white on purple

15 Sunday Oct 2023

Posted by sconzani in insects, wildflowers

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

British butterflies, British wildflowers, butterfly, Common knapweed, purple flower, Small white, Small white butterfly

I had something different planned for today but ‘the best laid plans’ and all that. So, here is the first scene that greeted when I arrived at the local country park this chilly autumn morning, a lovely little Small white butterfly sipping from a pretty purple Common knapweed flower.

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A Vapourer cocoon

13 Friday Oct 2023

Posted by sconzani in insects

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British moths, moth cocoon, Orgyia antiqua, Vapourer, Vapourer cocoon, Vapourer larva

Here’s an intriguing find I made when doing a little leaf-turning during yesterday’s rather damp local meander – a hairy cocoon on willow.

231013 vapourer cocoon

From looking at the yellow and black hairs contained within the silk, I thought perhaps this might have been created by a Pale tussock moth. Fortunately, Andy, one of the moth-ers I follow on Twitter, recognised this cocoon and was able to correct my identification. This was, in fact, created by a Vapourer moth larva (Orgyia antiqua) – below is one I photographed a few years back (it had just shed its skin, the remnants of which can be seen to the left of the caterpillar).

231013 vapourer larva

I’ve not yet seen an adult Vapourer but they are a particularly interesting species, as the female is virtually wingless – you can read more and see some images on the UK Moths website. Andy also introduced me to the Lepiform e.V. website, which, though it is in German, can still be searched using a moth’s scientific name and has an excellent and comprehensive range of images for each species, including larval stages, cocoons, pupae, etc.

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A confusion of pie crusts

10 Tuesday Oct 2023

Posted by sconzani in insects

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Tags

aphids parasitised by wasps, Drepanosiphum platanoidis, Drepanosiphum platanoidis parasitised by Dyscritulus planiceps, Dyscritulus planiceps, parasitic wasp, parasitised aphids, Praon flavinode, Tuberculatus parasitised by Praon flavinode, Tuberculatus species

You can tell I’m no baker – I got my pie crusts confused, what should’ve been puff pastry was really a pizza base. And now you’re confused … let me explain.

Back on 19 September, I wrote about A parasitised aphid, and said that ‘The Praon genus of parasitic wasps are the only ones that create this disc-shaped attachment beneath their host’. That was wrong (and I’ve now edited that post). The Praon wasps are actually responsible for an attachment beneath their host that looks more like puff pastry. Here are examples of the two types of pie crust.

231010 Drepanosiphum platanoidis parasitised by Dyscritulus planiceps and live

First, the pizza base. The first photo above shows the aphid Drepanosiphum platanoidis, which has been parasitised by the wasp Dyscritulus planiceps. The second photo, just for comparison, shows the same species of aphid when alive.

231010 Tuberculatus parasitised by Praon flavinode

Second, the puff pastry. And these two are both Tuberculatus species of aphids that have been parasitised by Praon wasps, most likely Praon flavinode (the local expert I’ve now made contact with tells me ‘There are quite a few species of Praon/Praini but flavinode will almost certainly be the species involved with Tuberculatus on oak’). What was that I said about ‘standing at the top of a very slippery slope, at the bottom of which is a chasm filled with aphids and their parasites!’ (Aphid mummies, 26 September)? Always learning!

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Leafmines: Lyonetia prunifoliella

09 Monday Oct 2023

Posted by sconzani in insects, leaves, trees

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Tags

British leafmines, British moths, leaf mines, leafmines on Blackthorn, leafmining moth larvae, leafmining moths, Lyonetia prunifoliella

For over 100 years, the lovely little micro moth Lyonetia prunifoliella was thought to be extinct in the UK until it was rediscovered in the 2000s in southern England. It took a while to spread across the country but was found new to Wales, near Holyhead, last autumn and, soon afterwards, found here in south Wales, at Kenfig National Nature Reserve, though just one larval mine was found despite much searching by Butterfly Conservation’s senior moth ecologist George Tordoff.

231009 lyonetia prunifoliella (1)

This year, though, George says, it’s really taken off in south Wales: he’s found it in various Cardiff parks and at Lavernock Nature Reserve. When I heard this news last Sunday, 1 October, I immediately decided to go searching, focussing in particular on the suckering growth of Blackthorn (Prunus spinosa), the tree this moth appears to favour locally for its larval leafmines (though it is known to use other roseaceous trees elsewhere).

231009 lyonetia prunifoliella (2)

Last Monday I found Lyonetia prunifoliella mines immediately at the first place I looked, and have since found it at six locations in my surrounding area, sometimes in abundance, other times just one or two mines, despite a plentiful supply of young Blackthorn leaves. The mines are relatively easy to identify, as the larvae eject their frass from the mines in a ‘string of black pearls’, a rather poetic description from someone on Twitter but easy to remember. (The photographs above show the upper and under sides of the same leaf, with the larva apparent above and its frass ejected below.)

231009 lyonetia prunifoliella (3)

Although most mines I’ve seen have been empty (this moth overwinters as an adult), a few have held larvae, and I was particularly delighted last Thursday to find a group of five cocoons, strung like hammocks on the underside of leaves with silk produced by the larvae before they pupate. I’ve yet to see an adult moth but will definitely share that exciting moment when it happens.

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Harvestman: Opilio canestrinii

07 Saturday Oct 2023

Posted by sconzani in insects

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Tags

Harvestman, Opilio canestrinii

I seem to be seeing a lot of Harvestmen this year. I’m not sure if they’re having a particular good year or if it’s just because I’m doing a lot of leaf-turning and that’s where they’re generally to be found, lurking on a leaf. With its orange coxae (think hip bones in humans – so at the top of the legs where they join the body) and a white ring around the eyes (not easy to see in this image, unfortunately), I think I’ve nailed the ID for this one: Opilio canestrinii.

231007 Harvestman Opilio canestrinii

Interestingly, the NatureSpot website reports that this harvestman is

an invader that is quickly colonising Britain. It was first seen in the UK in October 1999 beside a reservoir in the Lea Valley, Essex. The species has been expanding northwards from Italy, Austria and Switzerland. Where it has colonised Denmark and Germany, it has displaced the other two species of Opilio so this may also happen here.

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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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