Food Plant: Thymus species
Egg: laid on the leaf
Mine: September-May
Notes: In the autumn the leaf is excised to form the intial case with feeing resuming in the spring. Mined leaves turn brown and tend to drop off the plant, making the presence of this species hard to detect. The leaf is hollowed as the larva feeds, the petiole severed and the leaf opened out and incorporated onto the dorsal surface of the case. A characteristic 'V'shape is formed as each successive leaf is added to the case (as shown). The final case is 7-8 mm long, being dark brown and gently curved. Found in dry grassland, mainly in south-east England. Larval case feeding onThymus sp. Adults reared to confirm identification.
Bradley No: 548
National Status: pRDB3
Data: 22.x.2023, Aston Rowant NR, Oxfordshire, VC23
Image:© Will Langdon
sponsored by Colin Plant Associates (UK) LLP/Consultant Entomologists