Common in oak woodland and areas with scattered trees throughout Britain, as far north as Aberdeenshire; common in the south-east but rare in the west and north of its range; its apparent absence from much of the Midlands and central and southern Wales may be due to under-recording (MBGBI Vol 2).
In Hampshire and on the Isle of Wight seemingl more common than
C. alchimiella, although the true distribution of records historically is unknowable due to many records not being supported by critically examined specimens:
robustella was only separated from
alchimiella in 1972 and for many years, with reference to Heath & Emmet (1985) : 'The Moths and Butterflies of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. 2', the two species could be differentiated externally by a number of characteristics;
- apex in C. alchimiella purplish-brown, darker than the thorax; in C. robustella yellowish like the thorax.
- thorax in C. alchimiella golden-yellow with pale purple-brown tegulae; in C. robustella yellowish with similarly colored tegulae.
- forewing in C. alchimiella with sharply defined basal spot; in C. robustella diffusely defined.
- outer border of the costal spot in C. alchimiella extending almost to the apex; in C. robustella it meets the costa steeply at about five-eighths.
- small yellow spot on the tornus (inner angle) present in C. alchimiella , absent in C. robustella.
Critical examination of specimens have subsequently indicated that while these features can be used to provide an initial indication to species, they are not reliable for certain identification.
Wingspan 10-13 mm. As above, easily confused with
C. alchimiella, from which it can only safely be separated by dissection of the genitalia; both feed on oak, but
C. alchimiella is probably univoltine with a protracted emergence period, while
C. robustella is bivoltine. Larva mines leaves of Oak, subsequently living within a leaf-fold, over-wintering as a pupa: the larva and leaf mines cannot be distinguished from those of
C. alchimiella.