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 meridionaus X.. 187 and the larvae feed on various grasses (e.g. Calamagrostis epigeios and Agropyron repens) during the spring and summer. Metzneriana aestivella (Zeller, 1839): Dombóvár, Gunaras, Iá', 10.08.1998, gen. prep. A. Schreurs, No. 1096. The only Transdanubian Hills record of the moth is from the surroundings of Nagyharsány (Villányi Hills; Szársomlyó hill, 300 m, calciferous, rocky habitat) from 2000 (Szabóky 2000). In Hungary the species not but its habitats became strictly protected. The moth is very rare in Hungary too and its occurrence is restricted only to the Danube-Tisza Intrefluve of country. Distribution abundantly in the entire area. Preferred of habitat: open sand steppes and sand dune. Its food plant is definitely the Carlina vulgaris. Monochroa elongella (Heinemann, 1870): Dombóvár, Gunaras, 1$, 02.08.2008, gen. prep. A. Schreurs, No. 1091. From lowland (Sárvíz region) to the highland (Mátra and Bükk Mts) occurs in Hungary but very local. According to Gozmány and Szabóky (1986) characteristic species of the fens and swampy Danube-Tisza Interfluves regions; recorded also from the cold swamp of the Bátorliget Nature Reservation. Only a single recorded published from Transdanubian Hills (Fazekas 2001, Gozmány 1958): near Kaposvár. Pexicopia malvella (Hübner, 1805): Dombóvár, Gunaras, 1$, 16.07.2011, gen. prep. A. Schreurs, No. 1139. Widely distributed in much of Hungary. A bivoltine species flying from May to September. The food plants of the larva include: malvaceous plants, Malva and Althaea spp., medicinal herbs and ornamentals, and also cotton. Only few record in the Transdanubian Hills: e.g. Csamóta, Pécs and Vokány. Teleiopsis diffinis (Haworth, 1828): Dombóvár, Gunaras, 2 ex, 20.07.2012, gen. prep. A. Schreurs A., No. 1133. Widely distributed in much of Hungary, but only a single specimen captured at light in Transdanubian Hills (Villányi Hills; Szársomlyó hill, 300 m). The moth has never been recorded in Mecsek Mountains. URODIDAE Wockia asperipunctella (Bruand, 1851): Dombóvár, Gunaras, iS, 18.07.2012. The moth rare and very local in Hungary. The first population of the moth in Hungary found by Petrich (1984) during a light-trap on 23th July 1981 on Velence Mountains (Kanca- hill). New recent data are known in Hungary: Aggteleki National Park, Jászság region and Old Juniper Woodland of Barcs (Somogy County). The moth has been recorded from central and northern parts of Europe, but it is absent from the westernmost parts, i.e., the Iberian Peninsula, the British Isles, Belgium, the Netherlands and Denmark. In addition it is present in North America. In Europe the moth flies in one or two generations from the end of May to the beginning of July. In south Europe are locals the two generations populations: April to early June and July to early September. According to literature the larva feeds in July-August on leaves of Populus tremula, P. nigra and Salix elaeagnos. The pupa hibernates in an open network cocoon on the ground. TORTRICIDAE Ancylis unculana (Haworth, 1811): Dombóvár, Gunaras, 1S, 29.07.2010, det. F. Groenen. A not common but widely distributed species in Hungary. Aphelia viburnana (Denis & Schiffermüller, 1775): Dombóvár, Gunaras, 1S, 29.07.2010, det. et gen. prep. F. Groenen, No. 2309. Wide spread in Hungary but local in Transdanubian Hills: e.g. Mecsek Mts and Villányi Hills. Argyroploce roseomaculana (Herrich-Schäffer, 1851): Dombóvár, Gunaras, iá, 18.07.2012. These second localities of the moth in Hungary. The first specimen of the moth in Hungary was caught by I. Fazekas (2002) near Kárász (Mecsek Mts) in 1985.