![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)

The animal itself is not visible, but the trail it made through the leaf helps identify the species.
Serpentine leaf-miner fly Ophiomyia quinta
There are at least three orders of insects "mine" plant leaves--moths, sawflies, and flies. Using the excellent field guide "Tracks and Sign of Insects and Other Invertebrates" by Charley Eiseman and Noah Charney, I was able to suspect that this leaf was mined by a fly larva. I asked Charley Eiseman on facebook if the species O. quinta was the likely culprit, and he replied "Yes I would say so." Good enough for me.
Leaf-mining is a feeding method where the maggot or caterpillar lives between the layers of leaf epidermis, eating material and moving along, creating a distinctive colorless path. The larva is less exposed to predators and parasitoids, and has a readily available food source. I've named this fly the "serpentine" leaf-miner because that's the shape of its leaf mine, and the word "Ophio" meaning snake is in the genus name.

The dark line within the light leaf-mine is the larva's excrement.
You really really should get the field guide.

no subject
Date: 2012-08-14 11:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-08-15 01:58 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-08-15 09:45 am (UTC)That's so cool about that dark line being the excrement. Because yeah, duh, they have to poop as well as eat.
no subject
Date: 2012-08-15 02:39 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-08-15 07:54 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-08-15 12:44 pm (UTC)Actually, no it's the cocoon of Climacia, a spongillafly.
no subject
Date: 2012-08-16 10:44 am (UTC)Leaf-mining flies
Date: 2012-08-15 01:02 pm (UTC)Re: Leaf-mining flies
Date: 2012-08-15 01:46 pm (UTC)cool!
Date: 2012-08-20 03:06 pm (UTC)