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~ a celebration of nature

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Tag Archives: leafmines on Wych elm

Leafmines: Stigmella lemniscella

25 Monday Aug 2025

Posted by sconzani in insects, trees

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Tags

Beautiful elm dot, British leafminers, leaf-mining moth larvae, leaf-mining moths, leafmines, leafmines on Wych elm, Stigmella lemniscella

I discovered today’s new leafmines the same day as I found last week’s (Leafmines: Stigmella viscerella) and, considering how much time I spend leaf-fossicking and simply staring at trees, was also amazed I’d not noticed these very distinctive mines before.

The larvae of the moth Stigmella lemniscella munch away within the leaves of Elm trees (Ulmus species), in this case Wych elms (Ulmus glabra), and their galleries often follow the edge of the leaves, looking like a zigzag pattern. These moths are bivoltine so are active during July, and again in September – October. The adult moth is a pretty little thing – there’s a photo on the UK Moths website, which has the common name of Beautiful elm dot.

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Leafmines: Stigmella viscerella

18 Monday Aug 2025

Posted by sconzani in insects, trees

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British leafmines, leaf-mining moth larvae, leaf-mining moths, leafmines on Wych elm, Stigmella viscerella, Wych elm

I’m often surprised when I find a new leafmine: how is it that I’ve not noticed this one before, and how many different leafmines can there be? The answer to the first question has to be that I haven’t been paying enough attention, and to the second that there are probably hundreds that I haven’t yet found.

Today’s new leafmines were made by larvae of the moth Stigmella viscerella, and the mines can be found on the leaves of Elm trees, in this case Wych elm (Ulmus glabra), during August and September. Now that I’m aware of them, I’ve managed to find the mines in two different locations on two separate days, which is why the elm leaves in the two sets of images look different in colour (one day was brighter than the other).

The epithet viscerella may seem odd – it comes from the Latin viscera, plural of viscus, and refers to the human body’s internal organs – but when I look at these mines, the twisting shapes of the frass-filled galleries do, indeed, remind me of human intestines. I presume that the adult moth is not often seen as the UK Moths website doesn’t have its photo but, if you’re curious to see what emerged from these ‘intestines’, I managed to find an image on the German Lepiforum website.

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Leafmines: Orchestes alni

28 Monday Apr 2025

Posted by sconzani in insects, trees

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British leafmines, British weevils, leaf-mining weevil larvae, leafmines on Wych elm, Orchestes alni, weevil leafmines, weevils on Elm species

It seems, from my online research, that some of my North American readers may consider today’s creature a pest (see, for example, this web page from The Morton Arboretum in Illinois) but, here in Britain, sightings are few and far between; my find was the first in my local 10km area since 1916, and only 20 records are showing in the Welsh biodiversity database.

Making a change from the usual moth and fly larvae leafminers, today’s mines were made by the larvae of a weevil, Orchestes alni, also known as the European elm flea weevil. The adult female weevil lays her eggs inside the midrib of a leaf on one of the Elm species, in this case on Wych elm (Ulmus glabra); you might just be able to make out the scar in the midrib of the underside of the leaf, shown in the photo on the right above. Once hatched, the tiny larva burrows into the leaf, initially creating a gallery mine running towards the leaf edge, then the mine widens out to a blotch. When it’s eaten its fill and the time is right, the larva spins itself a cocoon and pupates within the mine. The hole in the leaf shown above indicates that the adult weevil has emerged from its cocoon and exited the mine.

I found several mines on this one Wych elm, and most were already empty – this leafminer starts early in the season – but a couple were still occupied. As I didn’t think I would be damaging the weevil population and, yes, I was curious – I’d never seen a weevil larva before – I opened one of the mines. So, now you get to see a tiny weevil larva as well.

There is another weevil that also mines the leaves of Elm species, Orchestes betuleti, but, as I wrote above, Orchestes alni starts early in the season, whereas O. betuleti doesn’t usually begin egg-laying until May.

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Leafmines: Coleophora badiipennella

25 Monday Oct 2021

Posted by sconzani in insects, leaves, trees

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Case-bearing moth, Coleophora badiipennella, leaf-mining moth, leafminer, leafmines on Wych elm, Pale elm case-bearer

This might not look like much but I’ve been looking for one of these for perhaps a year, at least during the months when it was around to be found. And if I hadn’t been looking closely at the leaves of this Wych elm, I could so easily have missed it. These are the leafmine and the case of Coleophora badiipennella, the Pale Elm Case-bearer (click on the link here to see the adult moth on the UK Moths website).

211025 coleophora badiipennalla (1)
211025 coleophora badiipennalla (3)

According to the British Leafminers website, the larva:

initially forms a gallery along the midrib, which then goes out along a vein (see photo). The end of this gallery is then excised to construct the first case. It then feeds close to this and makes several small mines …

211025 coleophora badiipennalla (2)

If you look at my photo above, you can see where the larva has made a second mine below the first – you can see the tiny hole where it would have attached itself – before moving to the third mine where it was then feeding. I haven’t been able to find much information about pupation but I presume the larva remains in its case, falls to the ground either still attached to its leaf when the leaf falls or after detaching itself, and over-winters on the ground. It seems many of these leafminers are not very well studied … yet.

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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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