Scrobipalpa instabilella, the saltern groundling, is a moth in the family Gelechiidae. It was described by John William Douglas in 1846.
A species of saltmarshes and other muddy habitats around the coasts of England, it is also known from North Wales, Ireland and rarely in Scotland.
Fairly common along salt-marshes, sometimes in large numbers. Most saltmarsh inhabiting Scrobipalpa species S. salicorniae, S. obsoletella, S. instabilella, S.
Kingdom. Animalia · Phylum. Arthropoda · Class. Insecta · Order. Lepidoptera · Family. Gelechiidae · Genus. Scrobipalpa Janse, 1951.
Larva yellowish grey with three reddish brown length lines. Head and prothoracic shield light brown. Anal shield pale to dark brown; thoracic feet blackish ( ...
Recent Status: A salt-marsh species in Suffolk. Life Style: A single brooded species flying from June to September. The larvae feed on Atriplex portulacoides.
Find out about the status of Scrobipalpa instabilella (Saltern Groundling) in Kent. Learn more on its distribution, phenology and ecology.
Oct 19, 2019 · Leaf-miner: The mine on Sea purslane can look inflated and the frass is emptied by a round hole in the leaf. The food plant leaves can be ...
The moth usually occurs singly or sparingly to mv light in a very few coastal habitats in both vice-counties. Single-brooded, flying mainly during June and July ...
Nationally scarce (Nb) on saltmarshes, mud-flats and estuaries along parts of the coast of England and Wales, uncommonly in Scotland and Ireland.