Lampronia capitella
The currant shoot borer moth (Lampronia capitella) is a species of moth of the family Prodoxidae. It is found in most of central, northern and eastern Europe.[1] It is also found in North America.[2]

Lampronia capitella | |
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Species: | L. capitella |
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Lampronia capitella (Clerck, 1759) | |
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Description
The wingspan is 14–17 mm. Adults have chocolate-brown wings with creamy markings and a yellowish-orange head tuft.[3] They are on wing from May to mid-July.
The larvae feed on the young green fruit of Ribes rubrum, Ribes uva-crispa and Ribes nigrum. Larvae can be found from August to September. The species then overwinters in the larval stage near the roots of the host plant. In spring, the larvae bore in the young new buds of their host plant.[4]
gollark: As it should be.
gollark: Perhaps they were delivering too many things and ran out of time.
gollark: No, but the H100 has.
gollark: They've had to add extra power connectors to PSUs now.
gollark: The highest end consumes ridiculous amounts of power now. Particularly the Hopper ones/4000 series.
References
- Fauna Europaea
- mothphotographersgroup
- UKmoths
- microlepidoptera.nl Archived 2011-02-12 at the Wayback Machine
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