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Recent Publications
- Biology of Pseudopostega species in Europe (Lepidoptera: Opostegidae). In J. van der Linden, Some endophagous insects from the Upper Midwest, USA.
- Ciclo estacional de un minador subcortical de coigue (Nothofagus dombeyi) [Seasonal cycle of a coigüe (Nothofagus dombeyi) subcortical leafminer]
- Notes on the oviposition sites and larval mines of Opostegoides minodensis (Kuroko), a cambium-miner of Japanese White Birch.
- The Nepticulidae and Opostegidae (Lepidoptera) of North West Europe
- Introduction to the Nepticulidae
- Stigmella aurella (F.) and Stigmella splendidissimella (H.S.) (Lep., Nepticulidae) - a method of distinguishing mines on Rubus
Nepticuloidea
Ectoedemia hendrikseni A. Laštuvka, Z. Laštuvka & van Nieukerken in van Nieukerken et al., 2010
Ectoedemia hendrikseni
Diagnostic description:Diagnosis. Ectoedema hendrikseni males are separated from similar suberis by the brown hairpencil and both from suberis and andalusiae by the white scaling on hindwing reaching the dorsal margin of the wing, with brown scales towards base. In the genitalia the shape of the valva is characteristic for the male, as is the number and length of the setae on the female T8 .
Morphology:Description. Male. Forewing length 2.6–3.0 mm, wingspan 6.0–6.8 mm. Head: frontal tuft ochreous, collar greyish; scape yellowish white; antenna with 36–40 segments, brown-grey. Thorax and forewings fuscous black, thorax with some grey scales anteriorly and on metathorax, metallic shiny. Forewing: basal half covered with coarse black scales, medial fascia sharp, ochreous, narrowed towards costa; distal to fascia are individual coarse scales distinct, sometimes with ochreous ground colouration between them, especially on edge; cilia-line interrupted; cilia ochreous grey; underside grey. Hindwing: grey, with brown hair pencil near frenulum, surrounded by white androconial scales in basal half, partly brown towards base; cilia grey; underside ochreous grey. Abdomen and legs ochreous brown-grey.
Female. Forewing length 2.8–3.0 mm, wingspan 6.3–6.6 mm. Antenna with 29–34 segments. The coloration as in male, hindwing grey, without androconial scales.
Male genitalia. Vinculum distinctly concave anteriorly. Tegumen with a bulbous, rounded pseuduncus, with several long setae. Gnathos broad, its processes and connecting bar of equal breadth, lateral processes rounded at their ends, only slightly shorter than central element. Valva broad, with an angular inner lobe on its base and with only slightly elongate distal process, sublateral processes about ¼ transtilla length. Aedeagus with distinct cathrema, with numerous very small cornuti in vesica, carinae simple, slightly curved, not pointed.
Female genitalia. T7 on either side with a patch of ca 35 long setae along margin with T8; T8 on disc with ca 40 long setae on either side; T8 with rounded corners, slightly indented posteriorly. Papillae anales broadly rounded, with many short setae, approximately 80–90 on each. Apophyses short and thick. Vestibulum with distinct vaginal sclerite and a spiculate pouch with small spines arranged as pectinations. Corpus bursae ca. 790μm long, almost globular, covered with minute pectinations; signa dissimilar, resp. ca 415 and 610 μm long (n=1), approximately 2.1–2.9 as long as wide. Ductus spermathecae with about 5.5 narrow sclerotized convolutions.Associations:Hostplant. Quercus suber L.
Leafmines. Probably indistinguishable from the mine of E. suberis; a narrow, partly contorted gallery in the first half changes suddenly in a large blotch mine with two lateral bands of frass.
Larva. Green.Distribution:Known from a small area in the Provence region in Southern France: the Estérel massif in the Alpes Maritimes and Var.
Life cycle:Life history. Larvae collected in March, several weeks earlier than in E. suberis, most adults on the wing in May and June; an individual record in October may represent a (partial) second generation or a late emerging specimen. In this case the species flies together with E. suberis.