[ncsc-moths] Re: Stigmella moth? Antispila

  • From: Harry Wilson <harrywilson@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: ncsc-moths@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Tue, 1 May 2012 19:22:50 -0400 (GMT-04:00)

Ken,

I knew I should have checked the hundred and first time! Or maybe I should have stopped at 99? Truth be told, I just missed this one. Thank you for setting me on the right course. But I did enjoy my sleuthing this morning, and I learned that something other than birds find a use for poison ivy. (They have planted it all over our property.)

Harry

-----Original Message-----
From: kjchilds
Sent: May 1, 2012 6:21 PM
To: "ncsc-moths@xxxxxxxxxxxxx"
Subject: [ncsc-moths] Re: Stigmella moth? Antispila

Just to confuse the issue, how about Antispila sp?
 


From: Harry Wilson <harrywilson@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: NC Moths <ncsc-moths@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, May 1, 2012 5:09 PM
Subject: [ncsc-moths] Stigmella moth?


The last half of last week provided some great mothing for me as I added at least a dozen new species. But one has been driving me crazy, and I have attached poor but the best photos that I took. The little moth was about the size of a Chinquapin Leafminer. As I worked through the MPG plates for the hundredth time (so it seemed), I decided that it "feels" right to be a Stigmella. The problem is that too few of them have photos available for comparison. This morning a did some research into the nine individuals that should occur in the state:

Hodges #  Name                         Host plants
0073           Stigmella rhoifoliella   poison ivy
0079           S. slingerlandella       prunus species
0081           S. apicialbella            American elm
0088           S. latifasciella            oak
0090           S. castaneaefoliella   American chestnut
0092           S. corylifoliella           blueberry, huckleberry
0093           S. ostryaefoliella       shagbark hickory, hophornbeam, hornbeam
0094           S. myricafoliella         wax-myrtle
0095           S. juglandifoliella       pecan

I have underlined the species for which we have the host plants. MPG has spread-wing photos of Hodges numbers 0081, 0088, 0092, 0093 and 0094, but none of them match my moth. Does anyone have more information to help me ID my suspect? Is it in fact Stigmella, or is it some other genus?
Harry Wilson
Zebulon, NC


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