The Indicia Warehouse that powers our recording service will be offline from
5 pm, Wednesday 27 May until 12 pm, Thursday 28 May
for a major update to the species dictionary.
This will cause some disruption to logging in, recording and viewing records.
Other pages should be unaffected.
Pashford Pot Beetle Cryptocephalus exiguus
The Pashford Pot Beetle, Cryptocephalus exiguus, is a tiny and exceptionally rare leaf beetle belonging to the family Chrysomelidae, and one of the most celebrated invertebrate rarities in Britain. Adults are minute – barely 2 mm in length – and yellowish-brown with variable dark markings. The common name derives from the cylindrical faecal case, or ‘pot’, that the larvae construct and carry – a behaviour typical of the Cryptocephalus genus – while the ‘Pashford’ element refers directly to Pashford Poors Fen in Suffolk, one of the species’ last known British strongholds. C. exiguus is associated with cross-leaved heath (Erica tetralix) and wet heathland habitats that have been severely reduced through drainage, agricultural improvement, and succession. It is a species of the highest conservation concern and an iconic emblem of the fragile invertebrate communities dependent on the careful management of lowland wet heath. Image: © ukbeetles.co.uk.
Find out more: iNaturalist, UK Beetle recording, Buglife – Pot beetles
Suffolk’s Priority Beetle Species
Key
Listed as a conservation priority in Suffolk’s Biodiversity Action Plan.
Closely associated with Suffolk’s landscape and natural identity.
Identified as a key priority for recovery under Suffolk’s Local Nature Recovery Strategy.
Has a Species of the Month article attached.