ANAGALLIS. Pimpernels and Chaffweed. [Primulaceae]


Four species, two subspecies and one hybrid of Anagallis are recorded in Britain. These include Scarlet Pimpernel (A. arvensis), Garden Pimpernel (A. monelli), Bog Pimpernel (A. tenella) and Chaffweed (A. minima).

No Diptera miners are recorded on Anagallis in Britain.

The polyphagous agromyzid Liromyza huidobrensis has been recorded in quarantine in Britain (Dom Collins (pers. comm.)).

Elsewhere the polyphagous agromyzids Chromatomyia horticola and Liriomyza huidobrensis are recorded mining Anagallis.

No non-Diptera miners are recorded on Anagallis in Britain.

Elsewhere one British non-Diptera miner, Orthochaetes insignis, is recorded on Anagallis (see below).

A key to the European miners, based on characteristics of the mines, immature stages and where relevant the larval cases, recorded on Anagallis is provided in Bladmineerders van Europa. This includes Ochrosis ventralis and Orthochaetes insignis but not Chromatomyia horticola or Liriomyza huidobrensis.



Key for the identification of the mines of British non-Diptera recorded on
Anagallis

 

Note: The larvae of mining Coleoptera, Hymenoptera and Lepidoptera may live in a corridor mine, a corridor-blotch mine, a blotch mine, a case, a rolled or folded leaf, a tentiform mine or sandwiched between two more or less circular leaf sections in later instars. Larva may pupate in a silk cocoon. The larva may have at least six legs (although they may be reduced or absent), a head capsule and chewing mouthparts with opposable mandibles (see video of a gracillarid larva feeding). Larvae of Hymenoptera and Lepidoptera usually also have abdominal legs (see examples). Frass, if present, never in two rows. Unless feeding externally from within a case the larva usually vacates the mine by chewing an exit hole. Pupa with visible head appendages, wings and legs which lie in sheaths (see examples).

 

1 > Leaf-miner: Rather narrow corridor, untidy and sometimes branched, starting from the base of the leaf, in particular the midrib. Sides of the corridor irregularly eaten out, not really parallel. Frass mostly present, and then in a central line. The legless larva is capable of leaving the mine and start a new one elsewhere. These later mines are much broader, and the frass is scattered irregularly. (Bladmineerders van Europa).

Host plants unknown in Britain. Recorded on numerous genera and species in several plant families, including Anagallis, elsewhere. Recorded in southern England. Widespread in continental Europe.

Orthochaetes insignis (Aube, 1863) [Coleoptera: Curculionidae]



Valid HTML 4.01 Transitional
Last updated 03-Feb-2012  Brian Pitkin Top of page