Argyresthia goedartella
Argyresthia goedartella
Larva • Chorlton, Greater Manchester • © Ben Smart

20.012 BF411

Argyresthia goedartella

(Linnaeus, 1758)


Wingspan 10-13 mm.

This is one of the commonest moths in the genus Argyresthia, flying at night and on sunny afternoons from June to August among birch throughout the British Isles, except Shetland.

The typical form with white forewing crossed in the middle by a 'Y' shaped golden-brassy fascia is easily identified. The markings are less distinct in form literella which has the white areas suffused with gold, and in the unicolorous golden form resembling unicolorous brassy specimens of A. brockeella, though goedartella is usually paler.

The larva overwinters in a shoot or hard male catkin of birch (Betula) or alder (Alnus glutinosa). In spring, feeding in a catkin can be detected by its distortion, soft feel and by frass ejected from a hole. In late March or April, larvae congregate under bark (among paper or cloth in captivity) where they eventually pupate.

Examination of the larva and, preferably, rearing to imago are advised to distinguish it from other catkin feeding species: (Bradley & Fletcher numbers) 410, 415, 968 (July, Aug), 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136 and 1225 in birch, and 1135, 1136 and 1139 in alder.
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