A NEW WEBSITE!

As of March 2015, an official website for Surrey Moths has been set-up here. There you'll find information on everything to do with the Surrey Branch of Butterfly Conservation, including the updated events calender for 2015. Hope to see you there!




Showing posts with label mullein wave. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mullein wave. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 July 2010

Mullein over one Shell of a moth

Back to old faithful last evening, my garden. Less than perfect conditions produced a surprisingly large number of moths, that included two new for the garden. Amongst 66 moths of 25 species was a Mullein Wave, and a gorgeous Scallop Shell, which is a first for me. I tried to get a more natural shot of the latter, but it got away! That brings my macro garden year list to 144.
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5th July:
15 Dark Arches
10 Heart and Dart
5 Mottled Beauty
4 Double Square-spot
4 Buff Arches
3 Riband Wave
2 Beautiful Hook-tip
2 Flame
2 Uncertain
2 Heart and Club
2 Common Lutestring
1 Small Dusty Wave
1 Clouded Silver
1 Barred Red
1 Minor sp.
1 Broken-barred Carpet
1 Light Arches
1 Scallop Shell NFG
1 Elephant Hawk-moth (an also-ran now!)
1 Green Pug
1 Minor Shoulder-knot
1 Buff Ermine
1 Fan-foot
1 Dunbar
1 Mullein Wave NFG


A squadron of Dark Arches

Small Dusty Wave

Minor Shoulder-knot

Buff Arches

Beautiful Hook-tip




Mullein Wave


Scallop Shell

Sunday, 27 June 2010

Brockham leaves me speachless

What an incredible night, I don't have any superlatives left. I went trapping at Brockham Quarry near Dorking last night with David Gardner, hoping to get some chalk specialists.
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I must admit I expected there to be a few moths, including lifers, at this honey-pot site on a warm night, but I was not prepared for the onslaught we experienced. To seasoned moth'ers, this was probably only an above-average night at best, but for me it was incredible, with 65 macros recorded by the end of the night.
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In the end, I managed to see seven new species, including some specialists such as Reddish Light Arches and Galium Carpet. Nice to get a visit from only my second Privet Hawk-moth too. Plenty of pretty micros were seen as well, such as Oncocera semirubella.
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By morning we got (* = lifer):
3 Brown Rustic
2 Common Carpet
6 Brimstone
5 Riband Wave
8 Mottled Beauty
10 Willow Beauty
3 Barred Yellow
3 Beautiful Hook-tip
2 Common Emerald
9 Light Emerald
4 Peach Blossom
1 Small Yellow Wave*
7 Coronet
2 Flame Shoulder
5 Common Marbled Carpet
5 Fern*
2 Marbled White Spot
4 Pretty Chalk Carpet
1 Mullein Wave
2 Large Yellow Underwing
1 Small Phoenix
1 Privet Hawk-moth
1 Clay
2 Buff Arches
3 Double Square-spot
2 Currant Pug (as well as a large amount of unidentified pugs!)
1 Setaceous Hebrew Character
1 Common Wainscot
2 Clouded Brindle*
1 Reddish Light Arches*
3 Treble Brown Spot
2 White Ermine
1 Lobster
2 Dark Arches
5 Heart and Dart
1 Swallow-tailed Moth
1 Middle-barred Minor
1 Light Feathered Rustic*
2 Green Carpet
4 Grey Arches
1 Lilac Beauty
1 Purple Clay
1 Uncertain
2 July Highflyer
1 Shears
1 Silver-ground Carpet
1 Barred Straw
1 Orange Footman
1 Treble Lines
1 Galium Carpet*
3 Peppered Moth
2 White-pinion Spotted
1 Short-cloaked Moth*
2 Mottled Rustic
3 Purple Bar
5 Common White Wave
2 Clouded Border
1 Clouded Silver
2 Scarce Footman
4 Common Wave
1 Heart and Club
1 Marbled Minor
1 Small Blood Vein
3 May Highflyer
1 Green Pug
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Small Yellow Wave
Short-cloaked Moth
Oncecera semirubella
Reddish Light Arches
Privet Hawk-moth
Peach Blossom
Mullein Wave
Lobster Moth
Light Feathered Rustic
July Highflyer
Galium Carpet
Fern
Common Emerald
Clouded Brindle