Thursday 23 February 2012

Broom - adding to the confusion

I found some more mines on Broom over the weekend and, wanting to try to get a decent photo of the mine of Trifurcula immundella or Leucoptera spartifoliella, I brought one back. It's a difficult mine to photograph but you should be able to see that it starts on the uppermost right hand branch, goes down the right hand side of the main stem before moving to the front of the stem by the middle right hand branch then turning by the lower left branch to start travelling back up again. This mining down then up method is referred to immundella in some of the literature but there was no sign of an egg, even under the microscope, which means it should be spartifoliella. I decided to open the mine to make sure and the larva is clearly immundella. I would recommend that if you can't see an egg, you open the mine and have a look at the larva to confirm which species it is.



Sunday 12 February 2012

Moths on Broom in winter

There are a few things that can be looked for on Broom at this time of year (and it's much easier when there are no leaves in the way!). They range from the very common and easy to find, to the somewhat more difficult but if you know somewhere with a few bushes you should be able to find at least one species.

Agonopterix assimilella larvae seem to be everywhere I look. They spin a couple of twigs together as shown below (although the silk may not be quite as obvious as in this example).



It is important that you gently pull the twigs apart until you can see the larva and check that it looks like the photo below. This is because the dreaded Light Brown Apple Moth has been recorded on Broom and makes a similar spinning. No doubt there will be other polyphagous species that also do something similar.



The other three species are all miners. In all cases they mine the most recent years growth so the mines will be found relatively near the end of the twigs. The mines of Leucoptera spartifoliella and Trifurcula immundella are, in my opinion, inseparable. Some literature states that one species mines up the twig and then back down, whilst the other mines down the twig and then back up. However in my experience this is not reliable. My pictures of the mines are not great, nor are those I can find on the web but both mines are blackish as can be seen in the photo below.

The way to separate the species is that the egg of T. immundella stays fixed on the twig at the base of the mine, whilst that of L. spartifoliella falls off soon after the larva hatches. The photo shows the egg of immundella at the start of the mine.



If you want confirmation, you can carefully dissect the mine and look at the larvae which are very different:



The larva of T. immundella is shown above and that of L. spartifoliella below.



The final species, and perhaps the hardest to find, is Phyllonorycter scopariella. The mine is shorter than the two preceeding species and tends to be greyer or browner. The books say that the mine is 'inflated' and this is true if you use your imagination a bit!