Ábrahám Levente (szerk.): Válogatott tanulmányok V. - Natura Somogyiensis 17. (Kaposvár, 2010)

FAZEKAS, I. & SCHREURS, A.: A Dél-Dunántúl molylepkéi, VIII. Adatok Dombóvár molylepkéinek ismeretéhez (Lepidoptera)

FAZEKAS, I. & SCHREURS, A.: MICROLEPIDOPTERA PANNONIAE MERIDIONALIS, VIII. 277 in Hungary unknown; Elsewhere in Europe, the moth flies from May to September, and is probably univoltine. Scythris sinensis Felder & Rogenhofer, 1875 (Scythrididae) - According to FAZEKAS (2008b) the specimen studied is deposited in the collection of Arnold Schreurs (Netherlands): Hungary, Dombóvár, Gunaras, 10.06.2006, leg. A. Schreurs; N 46°23'49.95", E 18°10'49.11"; 10 x 10 km UTM grid code: BS 84; altitude 116 m. The Dombóvár (Gunaras) locality lies a distance of more than 150 km from the old localities in Central Hungary (Tápióság). The habitat an old, abandoned rail track in agricultural country ain which there are some industrial areas. Typical habitats of the species in Hungary are places with industrial, commercial and agricultural ruderal sites. First recorded from Central Hungary (Tápióság): this specimen was found in a house; it is sooty-black, lacking the yellow spot on the forewing. Altogether, two specimens are now known from Hungary. The larva feeds on Chenopodium album. Moths have been col­lected in May and July. It is known to occur in Great Britain, Germany, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Belorussia, Ukraine and Moldova and outside Europe in C. Russia, S. Siberia, E. Asia, Japan, Korea and Taiwan. Scythris Hübner, 1825, the largest genus in the fam­ily Scythrididae, contains more than 30 species in Hungary. Borkhausenia fuscescens (Haworth, 1828) (Oecophoridae) - Material examined: Dombóvár, Gunaras, 2$, 14-28.07.2007. New to the fauna of the Transdanubian Hills. According to GOZMÁNY (1958) only collected in western Hungary areas (Transdanubia). Known also from the sand region of the Kiskunság: two specimens taken at light in Ocsa (GOZMÁNY, SZABÓKY 1986). The larvae feed on a wide range of dried plant matter such as dead leaves and birds' nests, normally within a silken tube (KIMBER 2010). Moth col­lected in July and August. Epicallima bruandella (Ragonot, 1889) (Oecophoridae) - Material examined: Dombóvár, Gunaras, 1$, 1-18.08.1992. - The species has been reported in Southern Transdanubia from only two localities ( FAZEKAS 2002): Baranya County, Villányi-Hills (Szársomlyó). The species occurs in white oak scrub woodlands and calcareous open rock grasslands (Sedo sopianae-Festucetum dalmaticae ); Kaposvár. Sporadically dis­tributed in Hungary: Budapest, Kaposvár, Párád ( GOZMÁNY 1958), Jászberény, Nagykáta, Jászfelsőszentgyörgy [open sand steppe oak woodlands] ( BUSCHMANN 2003), Gánt (TAKÁCS 2009). Biology: Larvae live on rotting wood particularly oak from decaying wood collected in April he raised in July several specimens. Moths have been collected in July and August in Hungary. Batrachedra praeangusta (Haworth, 1828) (Batrachedridae) - Material examined: Dombóvár, Gunaras, \S, 14-28.07.2007. Distributed in Hungary: Kaposvár, Budapest, Agasegyháza (poplar-juniper steppe woodlands), Dunaújváros (Pastorális pers.com.) and North Hungarian Mountains. Larva feeds on Populus alba L. and P. tremula L. (GOZMÁNY 1958). Adults are found in June-July. Augasma aeratella (Zeller, 1839) (Coleophoridae) - Material examined: Dombóvár, Gunaras, 5<$, 3$, 1-18.08.1998, det. H. v. d. Wolf. Localities in Southern Transdanubia: Kaposvár, Pécs. Sporadic and local in the Great Hungarian Plain (Szőcs 1977). The larva lives on Polygonum aviculare L. from October to April and the moth flies from May to August. Habitat: xerothermophilous species, found mainly in the closed loess and sand steppes, saline pasture, edge of agricultural land. Coleophora alnifoliae Barasch, 1934 (Coleophoridae) - Material examined: Dombóvár, Gunaras, 13-23.06.2006; 14-28.07.2007, det. H. v. d. Wolf. According to FAZEKAS (2010), new to the fauna of Hungary. This species has not been reported before from Hungary, which is surprising, because it is widespread all over Europe wherever Alnus grows. It is difficult to distinguish adults of Coleophora alnifoliae from C. milvi-

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