Bronze Lundy cabbage flea beetle (Psylliodes luridipennis)

KingdomAnimalia
PhylumArthropoda
ClassInsecta
OrderColeoptera
FamilyChrysomelidae
GenusPsylliodes (1)
SizeLength: 2.8 - 3.6 mm (2)

Classified as Vulnerable in Great Britain (3).

The bronze Lundy cabbage flea beetle is a dark bronze in colour, and often has yellow translucent wing cases (elytra) (4).

A British endemic (occurs no-where else), this beetle is known only from the island of Lundy in the Bristol Channel, where its range reflects the distribution of its sole host plant, Lundy cabbage (Coincya wrightii). This plant is also endemic to Lundy, and is restricted to the south-east of the island, where conditions are more sheltered (4).

Lundy cabbage grows in a range of habitats, encompassing the foot of cliffs, sheer cliff faces and sloping cliff top grassland ('side-lands'), extending inland for about 500m (4).

Eggs are laid into the leaf stalks of Lundy cabbage. The white larvae mine the leaf-stalks and eventually enter the plant stems (4). They emerge in late summer and then pupate in the soil. Adults feed on the leaves of the Lundy cabbage (4).

Lundy cabbage (and therefore the beetles that depend on it) is threatened by the introduced weed plant Rhododendron (Rhododendron ponticum), which supplants the Lundy Cabbage by out-competing it (4). Introduced mammals also pose a threat; domestic sheep, goats and rabbits eat the cabbage, and have restricted it to steep cliffs and other inaccessible areas (4).

Both Lundy cabbage and the bronze Lundy cabbage flea beetle are listed as priority species under the UK Biodiversity Action Plan (UK BAP) (3). They are also included in English Nature's Species Recovery Programme; the National Trust (leading the action plan) is co-ordinating conservation action with English Nature, The University of Leeds and the Landmark Trust (4). Research into the distribution and life-history of the bronze Lundy cabbage flea beetle has been undertaken, monitoring is carried out annually, and rhododendron is being cleared regularly, even from dangerous steep cliff faces (4).

For more on English Nature's Species Recovery Programme see:
http://www.english-nature.org.uk/science/srp/default.asp

Information authenticated by Dr Roger Key of English Nature.
www.english-nature.gov.uk

  1. National Biodiversity Network Species Dictionary (September 2002) http://www.nhm.ac.uk/nbn/
  2. Key, R. (2002) Pers. Comm.
  3. UK BAP (September 2002) http://www.ukbap.org.uk
  4. Compton, S. G., Key, R. and Key, R.J.D (2002). Conserving our little Galapagos- Lundy, Lundy cabbage and its beetles. British Wildlife13 (3): 184-190.