As a way to add 'attraction' to the moth trap I hang an old bath towel on the
garden cabin door. Not quite as proper mothy as a white sheet perhaps, but it
seems to work. Before turning in last night I glanced out at it, and did the
classic double-take. Because something enormous was clinging to it. As I had
instantly guessed, our second Convolvulus Hawk-moth...
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One very battered Convolvulus Hawk-moth.
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There can't be many more nights left in such a beaten-up specimen, so I left
it in situ, hoping it might wander off later. But this morning it was in the
trap. I think I'll walk the old warrior down the road a bit before releasing
it this evening; I wouldn't want to catch it again.
Some other moths from the last couple of nights...
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Pale Eggar - a new one for the garden. So well-behaved it was
almost comatose. Didn't need to bother with the fridge.
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A small Green Carpet with slightly unusual markings.
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One aspect of mothing that takes some getting used to is the variation in size
and markings that some species exhibit. Normally this is acknowledged in the
field guide, with a number of typical examples being illustrated. Other
species, however, seem to vary little. These will have just one illustration
and a note in the text to tell you how similar they all are.
Green Carpet is one of those latter types. The trouble is, I have come
to realise how easily you could write off a rarer moth as something common.
So, unless a moth looks exactly like its illustration, I tend to worry.
Thankfully there is usually a hint in the text, under the heading 'Similar
species'. In the case of Green Carpet it said 'None'. Phew...
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Regular Green Carpet on the left (exactly as per field guide);
today's tiddler on the right.
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Our second record of this nice little micro.
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Easily the freshest, cleanest Red Twin-spot Carpet of the few we've caught. A lovely little thing, considerably smaller than a Common Blue butterfly. It stayed put for just one press of the shutter release. Glad I didn't muck it up.
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Least Yellow Underwing. Another new one.
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Angle Shades. A familiar moth to lots who don't really do moths, and this one is an absolutely pristine example. One of a few over the last week or so.
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Dark Sword-grass. Our first (and so far, only) example of this immigrant.
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Between 5 and 10 most nights recently.
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A micro big enough to ID quite easily with the naked eye.
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During August the trap was out on 30 nights. It caught between 13 and 166 moths per night, of between 13 and 47 species. The mean was 83/34. I suspect we would catch more with a 125W MV (mercury vapour) Robinson trap, but that would be a bit impractical for our situation. Also, as a beginner I am finding the catch rate manageable, and can usually have it done and dusted within an hour, sometimes a lot less. Then there is the nocmig recording to analyse, birding to think about - but mostly not do - and other, more mundane aspects of life to get on with. Hopefully, when the nights are a bit longer, I will get some sleep too...
Great work on the moths Gav. I think last night when putting food out (Badgers and Foxes) I had one of those Convolvulus Hawk-moths fly past me. A low frequency zhzzzzum past my ear. I doubt many bats make that noise.
ReplyDeleteJudging by the number featuring on Twitter it's a pretty good year for them. 😊
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