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Tag Archives: leafmines on Blackthorn

Leafmines: Lyonetia prunifoliella, 2

30 Monday Sep 2024

Posted by sconzani in insects, plants

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blackthorn, leaf-mining moth larvae, leaf-mining moths, leafmines on Blackthorn, Lyonetia prunifoliella

As you will have gathered from the ‘2’ in the title, I’ve blogged about this leafmine before (Leafmines: Lyonetia prunifoliella, 9 October 2023).

240930 lyonetia prunifoliella (1)

The reason I’m revisiting this species is that, by sheer chance, I turned over a couple of Blackthorn leaves at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park last week and discovered an adult moth sitting next to the ‘hammock’ cocoon from which it had, presumably, very recently emerged.

240930 lyonetia prunifoliella (2)

My photos aren’t sharp as the Blackthorn was growing just inside the edge of a woodland and the light wasn’t good but I was still delighted to find this gorgeous little moth.

240930 lyonetia prunifoliella (3)

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Leafmines: Lyonetia prunifoliella

09 Monday Oct 2023

Posted by sconzani in insects, leaves, trees

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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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Leafmines: Stigmella plagicolella

04 Monday Oct 2021

Posted by sconzani in insects, leaves

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British leaf mines, leaf-mining larvae, leaf-mining moth, leaf-mining moth larvae, leafminers, leafmines on Blackthorn, Stigmella plagicolella

Rob Edmunds, one of the people behind the British Leafminers website, labelled these leafmines ‘tadpoles’ and, as you can see, it’s a very apt description. They are also tiny, as these mines appear on Blackthorn or Sloe (Prunus spinosa), the leaves of which are only 2 – 4cms long.

211004 Stigmella plagicolella (1)

The adults of the moth Stigmella plagicolella, also known as the Scrubland Pigmy, are active twice each year, firstly in May and June, and then again in August, so their larval mines can be seen soon after those periods, in July and then again during September and October. So, this is a mine to look out for when all you gin drinkers out there are collecting the fruit to make Sloe gin.

211004 Stigmella plagicolella (2)
211004 Stigmella plagicolella (3)

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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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