Eriocrania semipurpurella
Eriocrania semipurpurella is a moth of the family Eriocraniidae, found from Europe to Japan and in North America. It was first described by James Francis Stephens in 1835. The species closely resembles Eriocrania sangii and the larvae of both species mine the leaves of birch.
Description
The wingspan is 10–16 mm. Edward Meyrick gives this description: Forewings elongate, bronzy-purple, more or less sprinkled with pale shining golden; an indistinct usually small transverse pale golden dorsal spot before tornus, sometimes almost obsolete; cilia bronzy-grey, on dorsal spot ochreous-whitish; 9 absent. Hindwings with hairscales except towards margins posteriorly, bronzy-grey, posteriorly purplish-tinged. Larva whitish; head pale ochreous-brown, mouth darker in blotch in leaves of birch. The moth flies from March to April depending on the location.The moth flies in sunshine around birch trees, sometimes in swarms in March and April. In dull weather, they rest on twigs.
;Similar species
E. semipurpurella looks similar to E. sangii and can only be told apart by microscopy of the genitalia.
;Other stages
Eggs are laid on the leaf bud and the larvae feed on the leaves in a mine from the end of March to early-May. The mine starts at or near the edge of a leaf and widens into a blotch. The frass is string-like. The larvae have dark markings on the head and prothorax which lighten as it matures. Pupation takes place in a tough silken cocoon in the soil.