The moths showed up in force with many new species recorded for the reserve. The list stand at over 180 species for this year alone.
Scallop Shell is always a crowd pleaser - one of two
Two of these in the trap last thing were taken for ID - Dark-barred Twin-spot Carpet
This Small China-mark was near the top of my wants list. The larvae are semi-aquatic, feeding on duckweed (Lemna spp.). They build floating cases made from fragments of the foodplant. Perhaps there is a colony in the nearby wheel wash ponds?
It's always special to find new Pyralids so this fresh looking Acrobasis advenella was a nice surprise.
Scanning the contents of the trap in the pre-dawn gloom I found a couple of these with moth-like markings but they were tiny - c3mm. After a couple of photos I soon realised the hairy forewings were not mothly at all - a caddisfly species perhaps?
5 comments:
An excellent report on a very successful night as always Charlie. The pictures are superb.
We need a moth bin/hotel next time....I will knock one up this week..did you get a photo of Scalloped Hook tip.??
Yes, got a pic of the hook-tip but it didn't come out too great - I need daylight to get the best results.........
Hi guys, I have some decent side shots of that one. Please let me know if you want any emailing or just putting on this blog?
Yes - I was thinking about your suggestion, very good idea when you get 50off each species of the same 3 moths all night long, & 10 off each of another 20 species. It gets a little bonkers by the end of the night.
Barry,
Can you put these on the blog: Scalloped + Pebble Hook-tips and Pebble Prominent.
And YES, definitely need a moth hotel knocking up!!!!
Cheers.
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