Solitary Oak Leafminer

From Bugwoodwiki

Jump to: navigation, search

solitary oak leafminer
image_caption
Photo by James Solomon, USDA Forest Service, Bugwood.org
Taxonomy
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Hexapoda (including Insecta)
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Gracillariidae
Genus: Cameraria
Species: hamadryadella
Scientific Name
Cameraria hamadryadella
(Clemens)

Cameraria hamadryadella (Clemens)



Contents

Importance

These leafminers occur over much of the East. They attack various oaks but prefer the white oak group. Heavy infestations cause browning and premature dropping of foliage – sometimes over large areas.

Identifying the Insect

Adults and larvae of both species are similar. Young larvae are flat, taper toward the rear, and are about .25 inch (6 mm) long at maturity. Adults are pale and silvery with bronze patches on the wings.

Identifying the Injury

Larvae of the solitary oak leafminer feed singly, forming irregular, blotch-like mines just below the upper leaf surface; a single leaf may contain several contiguous mines. Larvae of the gregarious oak leafminer feed together, forming large mines.

Biology

The winter is spent in the larval stage in leaves on the ground. Adult moths emerge during the spring and females lay eggs on the leaves. There are two to several generations per year.

Control

Rake fallen leaves promptly and burn them to destroy pupae in cocoons. Natural enemies are helpful. Chemical control is occasionally needed.

References

J. D. Solomon, F. I. McCracken, R. L. Anderson, R. Lewis, Jr., F.L. Oliveria, T.H. Filer, and P.J. Barry

Personal tools
Export Current Page
In other languages