All images on this website have been taken in Leicestershire and Rutland by NatureSpot members. We welcome new contributions - just register and use the Submit Records form to post your photos. Click on any image below to visit the species page. The RED / AMBER / GREEN dots indicate how easy it is to identify the species - see our Identification Difficulty page for more information. A coloured rating followed by an exclamation mark denotes that different ID difficulties apply to either males and females or to the larvae - see the species page for more detail.
Leaf-mines
Willows and Poplars
Sawflies (leaf mines on Willows and Poplar)
Hazel and Hornbeam
Bucculatrix demaryella and Ectoedemia minimella, usually on Birch, may also be found on Hazel.
Phyllonorycter messaniella does not have a specific host, although often present on oak and beech; mines are occasionally found on Hornbeam and are best confirmed by checking the pupal cremaster
We have grouped these two host species together because several species of moth mine both hosts.
Moths (leaf mines on Hazel and Hornbeam)
Beech
Phyllonorycter messaniella is not specific with regard to its host, and is frequent on beech as well as on oak; it is also found on sweet chestnut and other broad-leaved species
Beetles (leaf-mines on Beech)
Moths (leaf-mines on Beech)
Sycamore and Maple
The Horse-chestnut leafminer, Cameraria ohridella, occasionally mines Sycamore leaves.
Some moth species mine the samara - the winged part attached to the seed - rather than the leaf, but we have included them in the gallery although not strictly leaf-mines

















































