Monday, June 2, 2025

Green dock leaf beetles

 There are lots of broad-leaved dock Rumex obtusifolius plants around at the moment with foliage that looks like this, resembling green lace.

It's the handiwork of the larvae of the green dock leaf beetle Gastrophysa viridula - turn over a leaf where damage is just beginning and you'll find several on the underside, eating the soft tissue between the leaf veins. When fully fed they burrow down into the soil and pupate, emerging as adult beetles within a couple of weeks.





And here are the rather beautiful adult leaf beetles, mating. The abdomen of the female is so distended with eggs that it displaces her wing cases. She'll lay as many as 1000 eggs and, with a short generation time, the numbers of these insects can rise rapidly as summer progresses.


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