Hydrangea Leaftier

Strange Purse-Like Leaf Structures on Hydrangea boggs.47@osu.edu Fri, 05/23/2025 - 17:59
Hydrangea Leaftier Moth caterpillars develop inside strange-looking purse-like leaf structures on wild and cultivated hydrangeas. The beautiful, tiny native moths are referred to as “microlepidoptera,” a non-taxonomic classification based on the size of the adult moths.
Published on
Authors
Joe Boggs

Hydrangea Leaftier

The Hydrangea Leaftier Moth (Olethreutes ferriferana, family Tortricidae) is so named because the caterpillars tie together developing leaves on wild and cultivated hydrangeas to produce oddball “leaf-purse” structures. The caterpillars are completing their development in southwest Ohio but their handiwork remains.
Published on
Authors
Joe Boggs

Olethreutes has Left the Building

The Hydrangea Leaftier Moth (Olethreutes ferriferana, family Tortricidae) is so-named because the caterpillars tie together developing leaves on wild and cultivated hydrangeas to produce oddball “leaf-purse” structures. The caterpillars have completed their development in southwest Ohio but their handiwork remains.
Published on
Authors
Joe Boggs