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(Coleoptera, Diptera, Hymenoptera and Lepidoptera)
by
Brian Pitkin, Willem Ellis, Colin Plant and Rob Edmunds
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CARDAMINE.
Bitter-cresses and Cuckooflowers. [Brassicaceae]
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Fifteen
species of Cardamine recorded in Britain. These include the
native species Coralroot (Cardamine bulbifera), Cuckooflower
(Cardamine pratensis), Hairy Bitter-cress (Cardamine hirsuta),
Large Bitter-cress (Cardamine amara), Narrow-leaved Bitter-cress
(Cardamine impatiens) and Wavy Bitter-cress (Cardamine
flexuosa). The BSBI provide a downloadable plant cribs for the identification of species of Brassicaceae and Cardamine.
Five British miners are recorded on Cardamine.
A key to the European miners recorded on Cardamine is provided in Bladmineerders van Europa.
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Lady's Smock
Cardamine pratensis
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Key for the identification of the known mines of British
insects (Diptera and non-Diptera) recorded on Cardamine
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1a > Stem-mine: An external stem mine. Pupation in mine. |
On Alliaria in Britain and on Alliaria and Cardamine elsewhere. Uncommon. London (Hampstead)
(Spencer, 1972b: 27). Continental Europe (Spencer,
1990: 83) including Germany (Dempewolf,
2001: 74), Czech Republic, French mainland, Lithuania, Slovakia
and Spanish mainland (Martinez in Fauna Europaea).
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Ophiomyia
alliariae Hering, 1957 [Diptera:
Agromyzidae]. |
1b > Leaf-miner: Rather
small, untidy, full depth, often branched corridor, often close
to the leaf margin. Sides irregularly eaten out. Frass in a greyish-green
central line that is interrupted from time to time, sometimes partly
in strings. In times of rain the frass may run out and appear greenish.
Usually several mines in a leaf. The body is whitish; head greyish brown with Y-shaped lighter marking. Pronotum with a pair of brownish shields. The mandibles have two teeth. |
Mine
of Ceutorhynchus minutus on Raphanus sativus
Image: © Willem Ellis (Bladmineerders van Europa) |
Ceutorhynchus minutus larva, lateral
Image: © Willem Ellis (Bladmineerders van Europa) |
Polyphagous. On numerous genera and species of Brassicaceae, Capparaceae, Resedaceae and Tropaeolaceae, including Cochlearia, but not yet on Cardamine, in Britain and Cardamine, elsewhere. Widespread in Britain and continental
Europe. Also recorded in the Republic of Ireland.
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Ceutorhynchus
minutus (Marsham, 1802) [Coleoptera: Curculionidae]. |
1c > Leaf-miner: In the first instar the larva mines the leaves, forming short,
irregular, blotch-like mines, but in later instars it lives externally,
feeding in spun leaves and often twisting those of tender shoots. Larval head light-brown or yellowish brown, edged with black postero-laterally,
ocellar area blackish; prothoracic plate black edged with whitish
anteriorly; abdomen dull dark green; pinacula distinct, black,
sometimes brownish but with black bases to setae; anal plate large,
black (Bradley et al., 1973).
Small,
full depth mine without a definite shape; little frass. Some silk
is deposited in the mine. The larva soon leaves the mine and continues
feeding among spun leaves. |
Polyphagous. On numerous genera and species of plant families, but not yet
on Cardamine, in Britain. On numerous genera
and species of plant families including Cardamine elsewhere.
Widespread in Britain and continental Europe. Also recorded from
the Channel Is.
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Cnephasia
incertana (Treitschke,
1835) [Lepidoptera: Tortricidae]. |
1d > Leaf-miner: Corridor-blotch
mine, normally dorsal; usually whitish; in small leaves it lies
characteristically in the centre of the leaf often touching the
petiole; in larger leaves it lies to one side of the mid-rib. Frass
deposited in green clumps near the leaf margin. Pupation usually
external, sometimes in a separate pupation mine.
Oviposition
whitin the leaf, at the lower surface. The first part of the mine
is a long, sometimes very long, corridor, that mostly will be overrun
by the later developments. Generally this corridor is directed,
frequently guided by a thick vein, to the midrib. The next section
of the mine is large, irregular blotch overlying the basal section
of the midrib. Locally large chunks of midrib tissue are consumed.
From this central blotch excursions are made into the leaf blade:
generally upper-surface, less often lower-surface and locally full-depth.
In plants with narrow leaves, like Diplotaxis, the mine may
occupy the entire width of the leaf. Often several larvae together
in a mine. Frass blackish green, powdery, in clouds, sometimes along
the sides of the corridors, later more in the periphery of the mine
and in the end of extensions of the blotch, sometimes seemingly
absent. (Often the frass can only be seen after the mine has been
opened). Pupation generally in the ground, rarely within he leaf,
in a short mine without frass. Hendel (1928a) described the biology,
larva and puparium.
An initial narrow gallery then leads to a blotch on the midrib of the leaf.
Watch a video of a scaptomyzid fly larva on Arabidopsis on YouTube by mash92587. |
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Polyphagous. On
numerous genera of Brassicaceae, Asteraceae, Papaveraceae, Resedaceae,
Tropaeolaceae and Violaceae, including Alliaria, Barbarea, Brassica, Cheiranthus, Cochlearia, Coincyia, Conringia, Diplotaxis, ? Eruca, Erysimum, ? Hesperis. Lepidium, Matthiola, Raphanus, ? Rorippa and Sinapis, but not yet
on Cardamine, in Britain. On additional genera of these families and Fabaceae elsewhere. Widespread, from Caithness in the north to Cornwall in the south of Britain. Also recorded in the Republic of Ireland, Europe, the East Palaearctic, Near East and Neartic Region.
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Scaptomyza flava (Fallén, 1823) [Diptera: Drosophilidae]. |
1e > Leaf-miner: A distinctive mine primarily above mid-rib, with irregular short
lateral offshoots into leaf blade. Pupation external (Spencer, 1972:
51 (fig. 172), 55; Spencer, 1976:
270, 271 (fig. 486)).
Branched,
whitish, upper-surface corridor; main axis overlying the midrib;
side branches overlying the main lateral veins. (In Campanula and Phyteuma the mine is much less branched, sometimes nothing
more than a corridor on top of the midrib). Frass in rather long
strings. Usually the mines begins as a long and narrow, shallow,
tortuous lower-surface corridor that ends upon the midrib but otherwise
is not associated with the leaf venation. Often this initial corridor
is filled with callus, and then even less conspicuous. Pupation
outside the mine.
A
linear mine on the upper surface, usually following the midrib and
showing side branches along the veins. The frass is in strings. |
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Polyphagous. On more than 40 host genera in 15 families, but not yet on Cardamine,
in Britain and elsewhere. Widespread throughout Britain. Also
recorded in the Republic of Ireland. Widespread in continental
Europe.
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Liriomyza
strigata (Meigen, 1830) [Diptera: Agromyzidae]. |
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