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Leaf-mine:
Oviposition in the underside of the midrib or a thick lateral vein;
later a large scar is visible there. Initially the larva tunnels
in the midrib or vein, that inflates and disfigures somewhat as
a result. Then the larva starts a corridor in the leaf blade, quite
narrow at first, but strongly widening as the larva approaches the
leaf margin or leaf tip. The mine is reddish brown in colour. The
mature larva makes itself a dark brown globular cocoon in the mine
and pupates there. Because the mine is made at a time that the leaf
still is unfolding, the leaf becomes permanently rumpled. In the
course of the summer the mine erodes away, but the combination of
the oviposition scar, the swolllen mibrib and the frayed leave missing
a large part of its distal half remains unmistakable (Bladmineerders
van Europa, as testaceus).
Larva:
Details unknown.
Pupa:
Details unknown.
Comments:
Alonso-Zarazaga in Fauna
Europaea treats Orchestes
calceatus (Germar, 1821) as a junior synonym of Orchestes
testaceus (Müller, 1766) following Anderson (1989).
According
to Morris in Duff (2008) Orchestes calceatus Germar, 1821
on Betula pubescens is
distinct from Orchestes testaceus (Müller, 1766) on
Alnus in Britain.
Hosts
in Britain:
Hosts
elsewhere:
Time
of year - larvae: July (British
leafminers, as testaceus on Betula).
Time
of year - adults: Unknown.
Distribution
in Great Britain & Ireland: There are records of Orchestes
testaceus including Orchestes
calceatus from Cambs (British
leafminers, Cheshire, Glamorgan, Hertford, Hunts, Northampton,
Nottingham and West Kent (NBN
Gateway distribution map - CCW
and NE,
as testaceus).
NBN
Grid map:
Distribution
elsewhere: There are records of Orchestes
testaceus including Orchestes
calceatus in Europe including Danish mainland, Finland,
French mainland, Germany, Italian mainland, Norwegian mainland,
Poland, Romania, Russia - Central, East, North, Northwest and South,
Sardinia, Slovakia, Sweden, Yugoslavia and in the Nearctic region
(Alonso-Zarazaga in Fauna
Europaea).
NBN interactive distribution maps of known host species in Britain and elsewhere:
Parasitoids
in Britain and elsewhere: Unknown.
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