Red-cedar Leafminer(Coleotechnites albicostatus)

From Bugwoodwiki

Jump to: navigation, search

Gelechiid moths
image_caption
Photo by Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station Archive, Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, Bugwood.org
Taxonomy
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Hexapoda (including Insecta)
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Gelechiidae
Genus: Coleotechnites
Species: spp.
Scientific Name
Coleotechnites spp.
Chambers, 1880


Contents

Description

Greenish gray body with pinkish red bands on dorsum. Orange-brown head, greenish brown prothoracic shield and anal plate; narrow grayish band at hind margin of segments. Up to 7 mm.

Food

Eastern red-cedar.

Life Cycle

One generation. Partly grown caterpillar overwinters in mined foliage. Mature caterpillar present in May and June.

Comments

In spring, the caterpillar dwells in the largest of the mined needles in its silken, feeding nest. The webbed nest includes not only mined needles, but also fragments of needles and frass (see below). The caterpillar becomes a pupa within a silk-and-frass cocoon that is located on the foliage within the web. Adults reared from the red-cedar leafminer depicted here closely match specimens of Coleotechnites albicostatus in the Canadian National Collection (J.-F. Landry, pers. comm.). In northeastern North America, C. juniperella and C. obliquistrigella also feed upon eastern red-cedar or common juniper. Until Coleotechnites is revised taxonomically, the identity of the miner depicted here must remain tentative. Eastern red-cedar also is eaten by the greenish leafminers, Argyresthia affinis and A. freyella. Argyresthia freyella has a whitish, spindle-shaped cocoon with brown spotting. Its cocoon, which is pictured by Rose et al. (2000), is attached to the outside surface of the foliage included in the web.

Gallery

Photo by Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station Archive, Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, Bugwood.org

References

Maier, C.T., C.R. Lemmon, J.M. Fengler, D.F. Schweitzer, and R.C. Reardon. 2004. Caterpillars on the Foliage of Conifers in the Northeastern United States. FHTET-2004-1. Morgantown, WV: USDA Forest Service, Forest Health Technology Enterprise Team; 151 p.

Personal tools
Export Current Page