Coleophora glaucicolella

Coleophora glaucicolella is a moth of the family Coleophoridae, found in Asia, Europe and North America. It occurs in forest-steppe biotopes, wet meadows and meadow-steppe.

Coleophora glaucicolella
Ex larva, Somerset England Genitalia determination
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
C. glaucicolella
Binomial name
Coleophora glaucicolella
Wood, 1892
Synonyms
  • Perygra glaucicolella

Description

Coleophora glaucicolella, Trawscoed, North Wales Male genitalia

The wingspan is 10–12 mm. Forewings pale and often yellowish or ochreous – tinged, usually with darker greyish streaks between veins towards costa. Only reliably identified by dissection and microscopic examination of the genitalia. Adults are on wing from June to August at sunrise, dusk and night.

The larvae feed on the seeds of rushes (Juncus species), including Juncus inflexus, compact rush (Juncus conglomeratus), soft rush (Juncus effusus) and saltmarsh rush (Juncus gerardii), and supposedly also on woodrush (Luzula species). They create a trivalved, tubular silken case.

Distribution

It is found from Europe, east to the Urals and Iran, west to Greenland and North America (where it is found in most of Canada and Ohio). It is also found in China.[1]

gollark: Consider: Egypt is warm. Britain is not warm. You are likely used to higher temperatures.
gollark: See, with modern deep learning, my large set of known-good memes in the form of memeCLOUD™, and the existence of vast reams of probably bad ones on Reddit, I may be able to automatically classify memes as "good" or "bad".
gollark: FEAR the possible GTech™ meme classifier/autoharvester engines.
gollark: Oh. Huh.
gollark: What is it doing?

References



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.