Summary[edit] Description: The evening party assembled as planned at the Ivinghoe Beacon car park. It was almost immediately agreed that the air temperature was far too low for any trapping in this area – in spite of the theoretical possibility of catching Wood Tiger and/or Light Feathered Rustic. However, having come all this way we felt that we ought to do something, so we drove to the Bridgewater Monument on the Ashridge Estate about a mile down the road and split into two camps within the (theoretically warmer) woodland. We set up 6 lights (a sheet on the side of the Landrover plus five traps) on the Hertfordshire side of a ditch whilst the chaps (and one chap-ess) from Buckinghamshire ran a further three lights on the other side of the ditch in their own county – a couple of hundred yards away. The intended inter-county competition was largely forgotten as both teams considered it increasingly likely that the most probable result would be a “no score” draw, but eventually a moth did appear to set the ball rolling. The 9 lights ran from about 21.30 to midnight, but in the last hour, perhaps the last hour and a half, the moths stopped flying altogether as the temperature plummeted to a depressing 7 degrees Celsius (an interesting situation, given that we were a mere 29 days from mid-summer and only 26 days off the longest day of the year!). We eventually managed 10 macros and a micro – with a grand overall total of 22 individual moths in our 6 Hertfordshire lights. Two traps had absolutely zero moths. The Buckinghamshire crew scarcely did better; one of their traps also scored a duck, though they did get a Brimstone moth, which we did not. Words such as “dire” do not adequately convey the situation. Can it possibly get any worse? Is this the future of mothing as we know it? The Hertfordshire list was as follows: Macro Moths 1x Frosted Green 1x Water Carpet 2x Small Phoenix 2x Common Pug 1x Brindled Pug 1x Purple Thorn 5x White-pinion Spotted 1x Coxcomb Prominent 1x Common Quaker 2x Nut-tree Tussock Micro Moths 5x Nematopogon swammerdamella. Date: 26 May 2013, 10:01. Source: Abax parallelepipedus. Author: Ben Sale from UK.
Summary[edit] Description: Abax parallelepipedus from Chambers' Farm Wood, Lincolnshire, UK (identified by Charlie Barnes, Greater Lincolnshire Nature Partnership). Date: August 2014. Source: Own work. Author: Shyamal.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Abax parallelepipedus (Piller & Mitterpacher, 1783). Female. Body length 17.7 mm without antennae. Determined by kerbtier.de. Germany: S Bayern, Landkreis Bad Tölz, Walchensee, Zwergern peninsula, inside forest, 820 m. Date: 27 July 2020. Source: Own work. Author: Francisco Welter-Schultes. Camera location47° 35′ 06.28″ N, 11° 18′ 50.31″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 47.585078; 11.313975.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Abax parallelepipedus (Piller & Mitterpacher, 1783). Male. Body length 17.4 mm without antennae. Determined by kerbtier.de. Germany: Niedersachsen, Göttingen, Göttinger Wald. Date: 8 June 2020. Source: Own work. Author: Francisco Welter-Schultes. Camera location51° 31′ 46.1″ N, 9° 58′ 25.96″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 51.529472; 9.973877.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Abax parallelepipedus (Piller & Mitterpacher, 1783). Male. Body length 17.4 mm without antennae. Determined by kerbtier.de. Germany: Niedersachsen, Göttingen, Göttinger Wald. Date: 8 June 2020. Source: Own work. Author: Francisco Welter-Schultes. Camera location51° 31′ 46.1″ N, 9° 58′ 25.96″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 51.529472; 9.973877.
Longitude (deg): -1.1. Latitude (deg): 51.4. Longitude (deg/min): 1ð 10' W. Latitude (deg/min): 51ð 30' N. Vice county name: Berks. Vice county no.: 22. Country: England. Stage: Imago. Identified by: Malcolm Storey. Comment: under piece of wood. Category: macro-photograph. Real world width(mm): 20.78566666667. Photographic equipment used: Specimens directly scanned on Black Widow 9630 SP flatbed scanner.