35.081 BF731  –  Gelechiidae –  Anomologinae – Oxypteryx atrella – Hypericum Neb – ([Denis & Schiffermüller], 1775) Adult Micro:  CAT 2 – Confusion Species –       PDF Icon – click for General Verification Guidelines  |   PDF Icon – click for Specific Verification Guidelines
Brown –  Significant Record / Very Rare / Vagrant    
Taxonomy:   Micro   >>  Gelechiidae  >> Anomologinae
Other Name/s: Two-spotted Neb, Eulamprotes atrella
ID Difficulty:  amber  – care required in the identification process, as confusion with similar species is likely – quality photographs required.
Confusion Species:  Oxypteryx immaculatella
ID pointers: A tiny moth, overall dark sooty-brown, orange coloured palps and two conspicuous orange-buff spots on each forewing, 1 on the costa and the other on the turmen.
Distribution:  (First record: 1953 )  –  (Last record: 11 July 2025 at Cromford )  –  First records appear to be in 1953 & 1985, then one record in 2007 (Calke Park) and one in 2017. One in 2025 (11/7/2025 Cromford)
Flight Period: July /  August /  –  On the wing July & August. Moth Activity: Nocturnal   – and is attracted to light Photographed: Yes –  Photographed By: Tony Davison, Will Soar, Clive Ashton  © All Rights Reserved
*** Last updated on 2 October 2025 by RP ***
Wingspan: 11-13mm
Food Plant: St. John’s Wort.
Last Recorded Year: 2025
First Recorded Year: 1953
Last Recorded By – Clive Ashton
Last Recorded General Area – Cromford

Selected Images:  26/07/2017 – Kings Newton, Derbyshire – Tony Davison © / Cromford 11/7/2025 – Clive Ashton©

 
 


 

Distribution Map for Oxypteryx atrella

Found 6 records
    ↳ 1 from After 2025
    ↳ 0 from 2020 - 2024
    ↳ 5 from Before 2020
Flying
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec

If the Map Layers function fails, just refresh the page and it should be OK after. Use the +- zoom on the top left, or on a tablet, use two fingers to zoom. Remember, the last layer you ticked is the one which displays the popup information - they sit on top of each other - de-select then re-select, to see the popup values.

Bedrock Geology ** indirectly affects moth distribution by influencing the type of habitat and food plants available in an area. In turn, this may affect the types of moths that can thrive, or where they can most likely be found.


NBN Atlas UK Distribution for – Oxypteryx atrella

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Note – the NBN Atlas datasets are listed in the map below and vary in their currency (uptodateness) – however, the map does give a general indication of the moth's distribution across the UK.

Visit NBN Site


Monthly Records By Year: Oxypteryx atrella
( data includes both Larvae and Adult Stages )

Monthly Counts By Year: Oxypteryx atrella
( data is based on 'Adult' stage records only. )


First/Last Recorded Dates: Oxypteryx atrella
Adult-only & Anything [Larvae, Pupae, Adult, Mines]

Shading shows moth presence between dates

Click the colour discs below to Select/De-select as Required

Recordings By Year: Oxypteryx atrella
( All data includes both Larvae and Adult Stages )
Annual Growth Rate (AGR): Oxypteryx atrella
AGR: -13.28%   |   Total % Change: -92.3%


CUSUM Analysis: Oxypteryx atrella
About this chart: CUSUM (Cumulative Sum) charts track long-term trends in moth populations [ filtered by 'Adult' and 'Mine' life stages ] by showing whether each year’s counts are above or below the historical average. Even small shifts build up over time, making trends of growth, stability, or decline easier to see. CUSUM highlights trend-consistency — asking: “Across the years, have moth counts mostly stayed above or below average?”
The data sample has 22 gap year/s here (zero records) between 2000 and 2025. The moth may have been present in those gap years, but no data was available. Too many year-gaps may exaggerate or skew the chart.

Counts for the current year (2025) are pro-rated based on data available up to month 8 (August) to provide a full-year equivalent.

Purple line rises = years better than average; falls = years worse than average.
Peak (best year) Trough (worst year) Growth periods Decline periods
Population peaked around 2007, reaching above average levels. The lowest population point occurred near 2025, showing a significant decline.

What the Y-axis "Cumulative Deviation" means: Cumulative Deviation shows the running total of how each year’s moth population count differs from the long-term average. i

Hectad (10kmx10km) Coverage: Oxypteryx atrella
( data includes both Larvae and Adult Stages )

Flight Periods – Indicative –vs– Recorded Data
Oxypteryx atrella
( data includes Adult Stage only )

Flight Period chart – the grey hatched area above, which can cross one or more months, pictorially represents the best guess we have for this moth's flight periods [month/s]. The coloured lines represent the actual months seen in flight, from site observation records received between 2020-2025.

Records Behind the Map and Charts - Oxypteryx atrella – 6 records available

Listed by Year - descending - scroll across to see all table columns

Site NameTetradDateCountStageSource
upper cromford gardenSK25Y11/07/20251adultvc57_irecords_extract
Main Street, Kings NewtonSK32Y26/07/20171Adultvc57_irecords_extract
DovedaleSK15K30/07/20101Adultvc57_danes_bc_data
DovedaleSK15K25/07/20101Adultvc57_danes_bc_data
Calke Park Ticknall Lime YardsSK32R22/07/200713adultvc57_irecords_extract
Ticknall Limeyards,TicknallSK32R22/07/200713Adultvc57_danes_bc_data

 
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