An updated checklist of Nepticulidae (Lepidoptera) of the Crimea, Sub-Mediterranean SE Europe
Author
Navickaitė, Asta
Author
Diškus, Arūnas
Author
Stonis, Jonas R.
text
Zootaxa
2014
3847
2
151
202
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3847.2.1
22439cd3-cb3f-4b4c-9b0d-482553ad88d7
1175-5326
251666
F85B24DA-AA58-4155-9240-D30F72BA1B6C
10.
Stigmella prunetorum
(Stainton, 1855)
(
Figs 20, 21
,
68
)
Host-plants.
Prunus cerasifera
Ehrh.
and
P. spinosa
L. in the Crimea; in other regions also
Cerasum
spp.
Type
of distribution
(chorological group). Euro-Submediterranean; the species occurs from
Great Britain
and
Italy
to central European
Russia
, the western Caucasus, and
Greece
.
Material examined.
CRIMEA:
1♂
,
20 km
SW Feodosiya,
Karadag
Reserve, at light,
18.vii.1987
, leg. R. Puplesis, genitalia slide no. AN
202♂
;
2♂
, the same locality, empty leaf-mines on
Prunus spinosa
L. and
Prunus cerasifera
Ehrh.
, fieldwork card no. 5011,
14
–25.vii.2011, leg. A. Diškus & A. Navickaitė; the same locality, at light,
31.vii.2011
. leg. J. R. Stonis, A. Navickaitė & G. Varačinskas;
2♂
, the same locality, at light,
31.vii.2011
. leg. J. R. Stonis, A. Navickaitė & G. Varačinskas; Simferopol, empty leaf-mines on
Prunus spinosa
L., fieldwork card no. 5011,
12
.vii.2011, leg. A. Diškus;
12 km
E Sudak, Sonyachna Dolyna, empty leaf-mines on
Prunus spinosa
L., fieldwork card no. 5011,
17
.vii.2011, leg. A. Diškus & A. Navickaitė;
8 km
S Sudak, Novyi Svit, empty leaf-mines on
Prunus spinosa
L., fieldwork card no. 5011,
18
.vii.2011, leg. A. Diškus & A. Navickaitė; Feodosiya, empty leaf-mines on
Prunus cerasifera
Ehrh.
, fieldwork card no. 5011,
05
.viii.2011, leg. J. R. Stonis, A. Navickaitė & G. Varačinskas;
49 km
S Simferopol, Alushta, empty leaf-mines on
Prunus spinosa
L., fieldwork card no. 5011,
08
.viii.2011, leg. J. R. Stonis, A. Navickaitė & G. Varačinskas;
12 km
N Alushta, Lavanda, empty leaf-mines on
Prunus cerasifera
Ehrh.
, fieldwork card no. 5011,
09
.viii.2011, leg. J. R. Stonis, A. Navickaitė & G. Varačinskas.
Remarks.
The species is very common in the Crimea: very widespread and very abundant.