Читать книгу Extreme Insects - Richard Jones - Страница 20

Most back-to-front insect

Оглавление
NAME apple leaf-miner moth Lyonetia clerkella
LOCATION Western Europe
ATTRIBUTE appears to have legs, eyes and antennae at the tips of its wings

Apple, pear and cherry leaves are prone to attack from the caterpillars of a tiny moth. The caterpillars are so small that rather than eat the leaves from the outside, they burrow along inside them, leaving a winding, pale, air-filled space behind. But what is most remarkable about this insect is that when the adult moth emerges it appears to have its head at the wrong end. Careful inspection of the moth’s tiny 4-mm wings shows that they are entirely white apart from the grey and black marks at their tips. The pattern of dark scales against white is clearly arranged to look like a separate miniature insect, with dark body outline, six legs, two short antennae and two round black eyes.

False eyes, heads and antennae are quite common in butterflies, with many species having prominent dark eye spots at the hind wing edges alongside short or long tails which resemble antennae. Swallowtails unsurprisingly have tails, as do many hairstreaks and blues. Lyonetia is one of a range of micromoths with false legs and heads at the tips of the wings. Some leafhopper bugs, which also have wings folded tent-like over the abdomen, have similar patterns.

Until recently, the conventional wisdom was that false heads attracted the attentions of predators to bite at the relatively expendable wing extremities, preventing fatal damage to the vital organs. However, an intriguing theory suggests that rather than attracting bites to the ‘wrong’ end, the false head at the tail encourages attack on the true head. A predator seeing the moth might reasonably feel its best chance is to sneak up from behind, but it will in reality be making a frontal advance on the insect’s real head, where it is more likely to be detected by the moth’s real eyes and real antennae.

Extreme Insects

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