Ábrahám Levente (szerk.): Válogatott tanulmányok IX. - Natura Somogyiensis 24. (Kaposvár, 2014)
Fazekas I. - Schreurs A.: Microlepidoptera Pannoniae meridionalis, X. Data to the knowledge of micro-moths from Dombóvár, No. 3. (SW Hungary) (Lepidoptera)
Fazekas, I. & Schreurs, A.: Microlepidoptera Pannóniáé meridionals X.. 185 Britain, Ireland, the Iberian Peninsula and the Balkan Peninsula), east into Russia. The first specimen of the moth in Hungary near Budapest (Gozmány 1955, Szőcs 1977). Local in country and mountainous fauna element: Vértes Mountains, Bükk Mountains, Aggteleki National Park. Oligophagous on Poaceae spp.: Arrhenatherum, Avena, Dactylis glomerata, Deschampsia flexuosa, Festuca ovina, Festuca rubra, Holcus lana- tus, Phleum, Poa annua, Poa pratensis, Trisetum flavescens. Known three specimens from Dombóvár and this is new record to the fauna of Transdanubian Hills. COLEOPHORIDAE Coleophora pseudociconiella Toll 1952: Dombóvár, Gunaras, 1$, 10.08.1982, gen. prep. 4939 ”W. F”, No. 4939, det. H.W.v.d. Wolf. The author wrote the species down from Vienna. Distribution in Palaearctic: China, Central Siberia, Southern Russia, Caucasus, Turkey, Croatia, Italy and Central Europe (Baldizzone et al. 2006). Rare and local in Hungary: Bakony Mts. (Pécsely), Mátra Mts. (Sár hill) and Danube-Tisza Interfluve (Jászság; own data: F. Buschmann pers. comm.). Only two specimens from Transdanubian Hills: Komló and Dombóvár. Coleophora pulmonariella Ragonot, 1875: Dombóvár, Gunaras, 1$, 15.06.2006, det. et gen. prep. H.W. v.d. Wolf, No. 10838. Known from Altai Mountains to Northern and Western Europe. Hungarian old records are single localities: Tahi settlement is in Pilis Mountains; ex larva, 3 ex, from 1974, leg. J. Szőcs, (in coll. NHM, Budapest) but requiring confirmation (own data: F. Buschmann pers. comm.). Genital examination may be needed to confirm identity. This was the first record from Transdanubian Hills. MOMPHIDAE Mompha subbistrigella (Haworth, 1828): Dombóvár, Gunaras, 10.06.2003, gen. prep. A. Schreurs, No.1079; 1 $, 10.06.2003. Only very few specimens are known from Hungary. Known in Villányi Hills (Szársomlyó hill, 442 m); the range is made up of limestone; on its southern slopes the climate is submediterranean. The karsts shrub forest of the Szársomlyó hill (Inulo spiraefoliae-Quercetum pubescentis) is closed on the ridge and on the north slope and the plant cover is transitional on the south slope. The open plant associations’ of the hills are steppe grassland {Cleistogeni-Festucetum rupicolae) and rocky grasslands. In Palaearctic this habitat atypical to the species. The other locality is very distant in the North Hungarian Mountains (Bükk Mts; Miskolc), this is one very isolated record. Range: from Central Asia through the regions of Caucasus to Central and North Europe. According to Koster and Sinev (2003) the adults can be found throughout the year, but most frequently after hibernation; in late spring and early summer. Larva monophagous on Epilobium. Recorded on Epilobium montanum, E. palustre, E. parviflorum and E. tetragonum. SCYTHRIDIDAE Scythris buszkoi Baran, 2004: Dombóvár, Gunaras, 2$, 20.07.2012, gen. prep. A. Schreurs, No.l 112 and 1113, det. I. Fazekas. According to Fazekas (2013b) the habitats are areas that are extensively used, lowland-, colline- and submontane areas: thermophilous woodland fringes; dry and semi-dry closed grasslands; semi-natural road verges, embankments and flood-control dams; large parks and botanical gardens with surviving native vegetation; arable land with fine soil, often low-intensity agriculture vegetation; fine soil vineyards and orchards; sand, clay and gravel quarries, bare loess cliffs; former goose grazing land and cemetery. The first generation flies from the end of April until June, the second one from July to the mid-September. According to the observations in the Hungarian and Slovakian populations the adults are the most active in the late mom-