70.051 Xanthorhoe spadicearia (Red Twin-spot Carpet)
fw: 12-13mm; bivoltine in S.England Apr-Jun, Jul-Aug, univoltine further north May-Jul; various herbaceous plants especially bedstraws (Galium spp); common throughout GB
ID: Very similar to the red-barred form of X.ferrugata (Dark-barred Twin-spot Carpet) and some individuals are indistinguishable on external features. According to Waring 1st Ed. the crucial distinguishing feature is a notch in the proximal margin of the dark central band close to the costa; however it seems that this is unreliable (Ref: Difficult species guide); and Waring acknowledges this in 3rd Ed. Specimens with a black band lacking any red-purple colour can safely be identified as X.ferrugata f.unidentaria. The difficult species guide referred to above states that 'well-marked X.spadicearia are quite distinctive', referencing Townsend 2010, however it does not provide us with any of the features that are supposed to be distinctive. It seems that X.spadicearia can have quite a lot of blackish in its median band. Waring 3rd Ed gives the following features for distinguishing the two species - features for X.spadicearia are given first: 1) brighter markings vs duller; 2) Median fascia more distinctly edged white vs less distinctly edged white; 3) Pale band immediately distal to the pale postmedian line is broader and contrasts more with the ground colour of the subterminal fascia vs narrower and little contrast; 4) Forewing underside orange-brown near apex vs grey. 4) seems untrue in that X.ferrugata can show some orange-brown on the forewing underside and 1)-3) are largely comparative, though the colour contrast in 3) may provide an absolute distinction if it can be determined with confidence. Some specimens will still require genital dissection for confident assignment to species. X.quadrifasciata (Large Twin-spot Carpet) is larger (fw 14-16mm) and has a more prominent elongate dark central forewing spot.
Male genitalia: readily distinguished from X.ferrugata by the costa of the valva which tapers to a long hook the apex of which points towards the valvula in X.spadicearia; while in X.ferrugata the sub-apical portion of the costa is deeply emarginate and the apex is a toothed spine pointing away from the valvula.
Female genitalia: In X.ferrugata the sclerotisation of the ductus bursae is continuous from ostial plate to bursa copulatrix without any hyaline interruption. In X.spadicearia there is a clear hyaline gap between the ostial plate and the sclerotisation of the ductus bursae
Male genitalia: readily distinguished from X.ferrugata by the costa of the valva which tapers to a long hook the apex of which points towards the valvula in X.spadicearia; while in X.ferrugata the sub-apical portion of the costa is deeply emarginate and the apex is a toothed spine pointing away from the valvula.
Female genitalia: In X.ferrugata the sclerotisation of the ductus bursae is continuous from ostial plate to bursa copulatrix without any hyaline interruption. In X.spadicearia there is a clear hyaline gap between the ostial plate and the sclerotisation of the ductus bursae
§1 Newborough Forest, Anglesey; 01/08/2007; fw 10.8mm
§2 Foulness, Essex; 19/05/2013; male; fw 12.4mm
§3 Foulness, Essex; 03/05/2020; female; fw 11.9mm; netted by day
§4 Pound Wood, Essex; 13/08/2020; male; fw 9.8mm
All images © Chris Lewis
§2 Foulness, Essex; 19/05/2013; male; fw 12.4mm
§3 Foulness, Essex; 03/05/2020; female; fw 11.9mm; netted by day
§4 Pound Wood, Essex; 13/08/2020; male; fw 9.8mm
All images © Chris Lewis
Page published 04/04/2013 (§1) | §2 added 05/06/2013 | §3 and female genitalia text added 14/05/2020 | §4 added 07/02/2021