Euleia heraclei is a
bivoltine species, with two generations per year. The males display on the upper surfaces of leaves on sunny days during April–May. Mating takes place when a female arrives. The females' winter fly lay the eggs in April and May into the leave of the host plants, a few eggs in one leaf. After 6–8 days, the eggs hatch and the larvae
mine the leaves, initially in a short corridor and later, a yellow or brown blotch. After four weeks, adult larvae enter into the soil at a depth of 4–5 cm. The second generation develops in September–October and overwinters in the upper layers of soil, at a depth of about 10 cm. Larvae feed on the leaves of a wide variety of plants, especially of
Apiaceae species (
Heracleum sphondylium,
Angelica sylvestris,
Apium graveolens,
Apium nodiflorum,
Conium maculatum,
Heracleum sphondylium,
Pastinaca sativa,
Smyrnium olusatrum,
Ammi species,
Anthriscus cerefolium,
Berula erecta,
Bupleurum species,
Cicuta virosa,
Coriandrum sativum,
Daucus carota,
Eryngium campestre,
Falcaria vulgaris,
Heracleum mantegazzianum,
Levisticum officinale,
Ligusticum scoticum, etc.). ==References==