Home    Metazoa    Arthropoda    Insecta    Lepidoptera   
Gracillariidae
next species »
« previous species  |    
Phyllocnistis extrematrix
 
 
Subspecies
No subspecies are recognized.
Synonyms
Phyllocnistis extrematrix Martynova, 1955
Identification
The imagines show an interesting case of automimesis. The apical area of the forewings shows a dark eyespot which is surrounded by dark stripes that imitate appendages (legs, labial palps and antennae). This "head" is followed by a green-brown area that looks like the "thoracic shield" behind this head, and after this "thorax" there is even an indentated dark line that imitates the proximal rim of the wing base plus the start of the wing suture. Imagines of the first generation usually have an entirely silver-white basal and medial wing area, but imagines of the following generations apparently often show a dark spot in this area at the posterior wing margin (see Schulz and Faehnrich 2018).

The larvae are yellow-green and slightly translucent, without any darker markings on the body.
Distribution
Probably widely distributed in Europe and Asia, but formerly confused with Phyllocnistis unipunctella. In Germany, this species is so far only known from Bayern (Haslberger et al. 2017) and Niedersachsen (Schulz and Faehnrich 2018), but is probably more widespread in Germany.
Biology
Females deposit their eggs on the underside of poplar trees, near broad leaf veins (usually the primary vein). The larvae mine in the fresh twigs and leaves of poplar trees (genus Populus); the species has been reported from Populus balsamifera, Populus trichocarpa and Populus nigra (Schulz and Faehnrich 2018); other Populus species or hybrids are also used as food plant. The species has at least two generations in Germany and the first larvae can be found as early as April. Larvae pupate inside a cocoon, within their mine on the underside of the leaf and usually near the leaf edge. The first generation of imagines ecloses in May and June, the second generation ecloses after late July. A partial third generation with imagines in September and October appears to exist.
Contact

Zoographia Germaniae is authored and maintained by Niko Prpic-Schäper.
Contact information: see here
Site info:   About   •    Support   •    News   •    Links   •    Donate / Spenden
Explore:   Home    •     References Database    •     Serial Publications
Legal info:   Disclaimer   •    Terms & Conditions