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Platyptilia gonodactyla

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Platyptilia gonodactyla
Platyptilia gonodactyla
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Pterophoridae
Genus: Platyptilia
Species:
P. gonodactyla
Binomial name
Platyptilia gonodactyla
Synonyms
  • Alucita gonodactyla Denis & Schiffermuller, 1775
  • Alucita diptera Sulzer, 1776
  • Platyptilia farfara Gregson, 1885
  • Alucita megadactyla Denis & Schiffermuller, 1775
  • Alucita trigonodactyla Haworth, 1811

Platyptilia gonodactyla, common name triangle plume, is a moth of the family Pterophoroidea.

Distribution

This species can be found in the Palearctic ecozone.[1] It has a widespread distribution in Britain.[2][3]

Habitat

These moths inhabit open, grassy areas, waste ground, meadows and spruce forest edge.[4][2]

Description

The wingspan is 22–28 mm.[4] They have pale brown or grayish wings with chestnut coloured markings towards the tips.[2]

This species is very similar to Platyptilia nemoralis, but it shows a very small scaletooth at the dorsum of the third lobe.[5]

The caterpillars are about six millimeters long at the end of March. They have a glossy black head and black mouthparts, prothoracal shield and thoracic legs. The body is yellow, with a broad reddish back.[3]

Biology

Mines of a larva in a leaf

The moths fly from May to October depending on the location. They are active at dusk and night. This species has two generation a year, in June and in late July–September.[2][5]

The larvae feed on Tussilago and sometimes also Petasites.[5] They mine the leaves of their host plant. The mine consists of a small, transparent, irregularly shaped full depth mine. There are often several mines in a single leaf. The frass is granular. There is little or it is missing completely. After some time the larvae leave the mines and continue feeding freely at the leaf underside or under a folded leaf margin.[6]

References