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Bennyboymothman|sourceurl=https://flickr.com/photos/33398884@N03/42838361641%7Carchive=https://web.archive.org/web/20200316193544/https://flickr.com/photos/33398884@N03/42838361641%7Creviewdate=2018-09-26 19:58:43|reviewlicense=cc-by-2.0|reviewer=FlickreviewR 2
Wikimedia Commons
Summary[
edit] Description: Some daytime finds from 04/06/18 and 08/06/18 A couple of hours wander around some verge grassland with mixed trees and shrubs and a plethora of wildflowers including Ox-eye Daisies yielded some great moths for me. On both days it was very warm and humid, and the sunnier day on the 4th yielded better results but I found the sunshine made the moths incredibly hard to pot up from the net, usually going skywards instantly and beyong my control. The little grass patch of approximately 1 acre was extremely abundant in life of all kinds, and I noted many species which unfortunately i've mislaid the piece of paper that I wrote them down on! Nevertheless, I potted many specimens of Dichrorampha for dissection. Many will probably be new to me. So far i've got 5 new species for my UK moth records. They are Commophila aeneana Dichrorampha sequana Elachista triatomea Endothenia oblongana Grapholita tenebrosana Pretty good going for 3hrs of sweeping and netting moths disturbed from Apple, Cherry, Dog-rose, Oak, Bramble and Blackthorn to name but a few native species of trees and bushes present on the site. Other species of note and ones I took photographs of include. 6x Dichrorampha sp (for dissection) Aproaerema anthyllidella Cauchas fibulella Cnephasia sp (for dissection) Cydia nigricana (lots) 2x Dichrorampha alpinana flavidorsana (for dissection) Dichrorampha petiverella Dichrorampha plumbagana Epiblema cirsiana/stictiana/scutulana (for dissection) Eucosma hohenwartiana Grapholita compositella Here are some photos, first of the habitat and then the moths. Date: 2 June 2018, 10:15. Source:
[1278] Dichrorampha sequana. Author:
Ben Sale from Stevenage, UK.
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Bennyboymothman|sourceurl=https://flickr.com/photos/33398884@N03/41937286415%7Carchive=https://web.archive.org/web/20200316193519/https://flickr.com/photos/33398884@N03/41937286415%7Creviewdate=2018-09-26 19:58:30|reviewlicense=cc-by-2.0|reviewer=FlickreviewR 2
Wikimedia Commons
Summary[
edit] Description: Some daytime finds from 04/06/18 and 08/06/18 A couple of hours wander around some verge grassland with mixed trees and shrubs and a plethora of wildflowers including Ox-eye Daisies yielded some great moths for me. On both days it was very warm and humid, and the sunnier day on the 4th yielded better results but I found the sunshine made the moths incredibly hard to pot up from the net, usually going skywards instantly and beyong my control. The little grass patch of approximately 1 acre was extremely abundant in life of all kinds, and I noted many species which unfortunately i've mislaid the piece of paper that I wrote them down on! Nevertheless, I potted many specimens of Dichrorampha for dissection. Many will probably be new to me. So far i've got 5 new species for my UK moth records. They are Commophila aeneana Dichrorampha sequana Elachista triatomea Endothenia oblongana Grapholita tenebrosana Pretty good going for 3hrs of sweeping and netting moths disturbed from Apple, Cherry, Dog-rose, Oak, Bramble and Blackthorn to name but a few native species of trees and bushes present on the site. Other species of note and ones I took photographs of include. 6x Dichrorampha sp (for dissection) Aproaerema anthyllidella Cauchas fibulella Cnephasia sp (for dissection) Cydia nigricana (lots) 2x Dichrorampha alpinana flavidorsana (for dissection) Dichrorampha petiverella Dichrorampha plumbagana Epiblema cirsiana/stictiana/scutulana (for dissection) Eucosma hohenwartiana Grapholita compositella Here are some photos, first of the habitat and then the moths. Date: 5 June 2018, 11:10. Source:
[1273] Dichrorampha petiverella. Author:
Ben Sale from Stevenage, UK.
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Field Trip - Ashwell Quarry - 22/05/17 On Monday night and after a really warm day peaking at around 25 degrees, it was off to Ashwell Quarry with traps in tow. Trevor and myself set about setting up all of the lights spread across the reserve covering nearly all of it. We did a little bit of 'dusking' before it was time to switch the lights on and turned up a few micros, notably Cauchas fibulella (Is this moth on every patch of Germander Speedwell in the County of does it just favour chalky areas where the plant seems to flourish?). The night started well and we had a bit of cloud cover to boot, but that did disappear eventually to leave a large clear sky and a slight drop in temperature to 13 degrees by 2am. The thing that did hamper us slightly was the fact that the wind got up a bit as the night went on. It was good to get Netted Pug which is still a scarce moth in the County and cracking to look at, also Trevor saw his first ever Pseudargyrotoza conwagana, a pretty little tortrix moth. Also a Geometer had us really stumped. To Trevor's trap we potted up a dark grey Emerald looking species, which after much searching of books and the web I finally settled on the rare 'nigra' form of Blood-vein, minus the vein marking and with a hint of 'blood' along the fringe of the forewings There a few outstanding specimens to be gen det, a Cochylis species and a Scrobipalpa species. Generally numbers were a little down on what we had hoped and we didn't quite get to the target of 100 species but nevertheless some good fresh specimens were observed and it was a pleasure to just get out there and give it a go! Catch Report - 22/05/17 - Ashwell Quarry - North-west Herts - 8 traps in total - 3x 125w MV Robinson Trap 1x 160w MBT Robinson Trap 1x 40w Actinic + 15w LED Trap 1x 5w LED Trap Uva/uvb Trap & 1x 80w Actinic Trap 92 species Macro Moths Angle Shades Blood-vein Brimstone Moth Brown Rustic Common Pug Clouded Silver Common Carpet Common Marbled Carpet Common Swift Common Wainscot Figure of Eighty Flame Shoulder Garden Carpet Green Carpet Grey-pine Carpet Large Nutmeg Large Yellow Underwing Latticed Heath Least Black Arches Light Brocade Light Emerald Lime-speck Pug Marbled Minor Mottled Pug Netted Pug Oak Hook-tip Orange Footman Pale Tussock Poplar Grey Purple Bar Red-green Carpet Red Twin-spot Carpet Rustic Shoulder-knot Sandy Carpet Scorched Carpet Setaceous Hebrew Character Silver-ground Carpet Silver-Y Small Fan-foot Small Square-spot Small Waved Umber Snout Spectacle Treble Lines V-Pug Waved Umber White Ermine White-spotted Pug Willow Beauty Yellow-barred Brindle Micro Moths Aethes smeathmanniana Agapeta hamana Agonopterix alstromeriana Agonopterix arenella Aphomia sociella Argyresthia trifasciata Aspilapteryx tringipennella Blastobasis lacticolella Cauchas fibulella (Swept from Germander Speedwell) Celypha lacunana Cochylimorpha straminea Cochylis atricapitana Coleophora sp Crambus lathoniellus Depressaria radiella Dichrorampha alpinana Elachista argentella Endrosis sarcitrella Epiblema cirsiana/sticticana Epiphyas postvittana Esperia sulphurella Evergestis forficalis Glyphipterix simpliciella Hedya pruniana Homoeosoma sinuella Monopis crocicapitella Monopis laevigella Monopis weaverella Nemapogon cloacella Nematopogon swammerdamella Nematopogon schwarziellus Notocelia cynosbatella Notocelia trimaculana Plutella xylostella Pseudargyrotoza conwagana Scrobipalpa costella Scrobipalpa sp - to be gen det Scoparia ambigualis Scoparia pyralella Syndemis musculana Tinea semifulvella Udea olivalis
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Gastes, Aquitaine, France
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Field Trip - Scales Park - 16/05/17 + New for County record! On Tuesday night I joined several fellow moth'ers to a very large Wood in the North-east corner of Hertfordshire for some moth trapping. We had been granted permission to be there because this is quite a highly guarded site with reasonable tight security as it has a shooting ground in the vicinity and use to be a main RAF/USAF base in WW2, in fact looking on a map from 1944, my traps were positioned right over where the bomb dump use to be! The weather was warm and sunny and up to 24 degrees in the afternoon but extremely windy which made netting nearly impossible! But by the evening the wind had dropped but the rain started as soon as we turned up and with less wind, it wasn't going to be blown through anytime soon. We got soaked and the equipment suffered as well with no less than 5 blown bulbs, luckily my gear just about survived although I had to throw a load of egg trays out as they were completely sodden and ripped. Firstly though, I managed to do some day-time netting before the night trapping effort and was rewarded with some great moths, including a new one for me, Pammene rhediella (unfortunately it was quite worn). Adela croesella also turned up, and is the County 3rd record after both 1st and 2nd County records were found in 2011 by myself and Andrew Wood on the same night! A joint County first record doesn't happen very often. In fact...was this to be a sign? Spookily Andrew and I may have caught the same moth again on the same night and a County first once again. Mine has been confirmed as of last night as the first South-east record of Pammene ignorata and the 12th County that it has been recorded in. Some great moths were found and a few are still pending identification including two possible Epinotia tetraquetrana which would also be a new moth for me, but having never seen it before I thought I would get it checked. I'm not pretty confident that it is Epinotia tetraquetrana. Day-time 16/05/17 - Scales Park - North-east Herts 1x Adela croesella 2x Adela fibulella 15+ Anthophila fabriciana 15+ Cauchas rufimitrella 5x Celypha lacunana 1x Common Pug 1x Crambus lathoniellus 2x Dichrorampha sp (to be gen det by Graeme Smith) 1x Dichrorampha plumbana 1x Epiblema scutulana sp (to be gen det by Graeme Smith) 2x Epinotia subocellana 1x Epinotia tedella 100+ Glyphipterix simpliciella 100+ Micropterix calthella 1x Monopis weaverella 1x Nemapogon schwarziellus 1x Notocelia cynosbatella 1x Orange Footman 1x Pammene rhediella [NEW!] 3x Pseudargyrotoza conwagana 1x Pyrausta aurata 1x Red Twin-spot Carpet 1x Rivulet 1x Silver-ground Carpet 1x Silver-Y 1x Syndemis musculana 3x Psyche casta (Case) Catch Report - 16/05/17 - Scales Park - North-east Herts - 2x 125w MV Robinson Trap 1x 160w MBT Robinson Trap 1x Synergetic Skinner Trap & 1x 40w Actinic Trap 70 species Macro Moths 1x Angle Shades 1x Barred Hook-tip 2x Brimstone Moth 1x Brindled Pug 1x Broken-barred Carpet 2x Chinese Character 2x Clouded Border 2x Common Carpet 2x Common Pug 1x Common Swift 1x Common White Wave 15x Cream Wave 4x Flame Shoulder 2x Grey pine Carpet 2x Hebrew Character 1x Iron Prominent 5x Latticed Heath 1x Least black Arches 1x Light Emerald 2x Maiden's Blush 1x Maple Prominent 15x Mottled Pug 2x Nut-tree Tussock 5x Oak-tree Pug 60x Orange Footman 1x Pale Oak Beauty 2x Pale Prominent 10x Pale Tussock 5x Pebble Hook-tip 1x Pebble Prominent 1x Peppered Moth 3x Poplar Hawk-moth 5x Poplar Lutestring 5x Red Twin-spot Carpet 1x Rustic Shoulder-knot 1x Sandy Carpet 8x Scalloped Hazel 1x Scalloped Hook-tip 2x Scorched Carpet 4x Seraphim 1x Setaceous Hebrew Character 2x Silver-ground Carpet 5x Small Phoenix 1x Spectacle 1x Streamer 3x V-Pug 1x Waved umber 3x White Ermine 1x Yellow-barred Brindle Micro Moths 1x Agapeta hamana 1x Agonopterix arenella 1x Argyrotaenia ljungiana 5x Bucculatrix nigricomella 1x Caloptilia robustella/alchimiella 1x Crambus lathoniellus 1x Cryptoblabes bistriga 10+ Glyphipterix simpliciella 20+ Epinotia subocellana 5x Epinotia tedella 2x Epinotia tetraquetrana [NEW!] (to be gen det by Graeme Smith) 1x Endrosis sarcitrella 2x Eulia ministrana 1x Monopis weaverella 1x Notocelia cynosbatella 1x Pammene Ignorata [NEW!] (Gen det by Graeme Smith) 2x Pseudargyrotoza conwagana 1x Strophedra sp (to be gen det by Graeme Smith) 1x Swammerdamia caesiella?? (to be gen det by Graeme Smith) 3x Syndemis musculana 1x Tinea semifulvella
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Field Trip - 09/06/16 - Roughdown Common - Hemel Hempstead The Herts Moth Group assembled at Roughdown Common for their third official outing of the year. Roughdown Common is an exceedingly important site for wildlife on the doorstep of the hustle and bustle of sub-urban Hemel Hempstead. Predominantly chalk grassland with an intersecting wooded section and split right down the middle by the A41, Roughdown Common is an outstanding site for a variety of moth species. We arrived at 7.30pm, early enough to have a walk around with a net and pots and we quickly added 17 species to kick-start our list, amongst the swarms of Diamond-back moths for which we netted 2/3rds of the time there was plenty of other species to keep us interested. Species such as Eupoecilia angustana, Micropterix aruncella and Cauchas fibulella were absolutely stunning to observe. By 8.30pm the rest of the team had arrived...we would need the extra hands to set up the 11 traps! We decided to cover all areas of the reserve with traps out in the open field, some along the border of the A41 and then running through the wood and over-looking the Dell. Conditions were pretty much perfect, no wind, warm at 22 degrees and with a smattering of thin cloud which would hopefully be just enough to lock the warmth in and it was, with a comfortable 13 degrees when I left at 2am. The variety of moths was pretty astounding and despite quite possibly the slowest Spring on record things are beginning to pick up. Highlights from the traps were Small Angle Shades, Dark Sword-grass, Puss Moth, Figure of Eighty and Alabonia geoffrella, the latter typically being a day-flying moth but both of my records have been to light! I think we were a little bit early for the typical chalkland species such as Pretty Chalk Carpet and Royal Mantle, the vegetation being about 2 weeks behind he norm would suggest so. Final list is pending- 142 species so far Numbers below are approximate as it really was hard trying to count them all! Catch Report - 09/06/16 - Roughdown Common - 5x 125w MV Robinson Trap 1x 125w MV + Sheet 1x 26w BLB Robinson Trap 1x 80w Actinic Suitcase Trap 1x 40w Actinic and 2 Actinic Bucket Traps Macro Moths - 90 Species 2x Angle Shades 1x Beautiful Golden-Y 3x Brimstone Moth 4x Broken-barred Carpet 5x Brown Rustic 1x Buff Ermine 2x Buff-tip 1x Cinnabar 2x Clouded Border 1x Clouded-bordered Brindle 1x Clouded Brindle 1x Common Carpet 10x Common Marbled Carpet 5x Common Pug 30x Clouded Silver 15+ Common Swift 2x Common Wainscot 2x Common White Wave 1x Coronet 1x Dark Arches 1x Dark Sword-grass 2x Double Square-spot 1x Dwarf Cream Wave 1x Elephant Hawk-moth 1x Figure of Eighty 2x Flame 1x Flame Carpet 4x Flame Shoulder 2x Foxglove Pug 1x Garden Carpet 10+ Green Carpet 2x Green Pug 5x Grey Pug 1x Haworth's Pug 10x Heart & Dart 3x Ingrailed Clay 5x Large Nutmeg 1x Large Yellow Underwing 1x Least Black Arches 5x Light Brocade 2x Light Emerald 1x Lime Hawk-moth 1x Maiden's Blush 10x Marbled Minor 1x Marbled White-spot 1x Middle-barred Minor 1x Miller 3x Mottled Pug 2x Mottled Rustic 5x Orange Footman 1x Pale Oak Beauty 1x Pale Prominent 3x Pale Tussock 1x Peach Blossom 1x Pebble Prominent 2x Peppered Moth 1x Poplar Hawk-moth 1x Privet Hawk-moth 2x Purple Bar 1x Puss Moth 10x Rustic Shoulder-knot 1x Scorched Carpet 2x Scorched Wing 6x Setaceous Hebrew Character 3x Shears 1x Shoulder-striped Wainscot 2x Shuttle-shaped Dart 4x Silver-Y 2x Silver-ground Carpet 1x Small Angle Shades 1x Small Clouded Brindle 1x Small Dusty Wave 2x Small Elephant Hawk-moth 1x Small Rivulet 2x Small Square-spot 1x Snout 1x Spectacle 2x Straw Dot 1x Swallow Prominent 1x Treble Brown Spot 2x Tawny Marbled Minor 1x Toadflax Brocade 10+ Treble Lines 1x Vine's Rustic 3x White Ermine 1x White-pinion Spotted 1x White-spotted Pug 2x Willow Beauty 2x Yellow Shell 1x Yellow-barred Brindle Micro Moths - 52 Species 1x Tinea trinotella 2x Endothenia gentianaeana 2x Dichrorampha sp - TBC 3x Eupoecilia angustana 1x Dichrorampha alpinana/flavidorsana - TBC 3x Micropterix aruncella 4x Nemophora degeerella 1x Eudonia angustea 2x Cnephasia sp 10+ Hedya pruniana Lots+ Plutella xylostella 8x Celypha lacunana 10+ Crambus lathoniellus 1x Chrysoteuchia culmella 1x Cauchas fibulella 1x Bryotropha terrella 5x Cochylimorpha straminea 1x Eucosma cana 2x Agonopterix arenella 1x Aphelia paleana 3x Agapeta hamana 2x Agapeta zoegana 1x Cydia pomonella 1x Notocelia uddmanniana 2x Notocelia trimaculana 1x Notocelia cynosbatella 3x Metzneria metzneriella 10+ Scoparia ambigualis 4x Scoparia pyralella 2x Epiphyas postvittana 1x Epiblema costipunctana 4x Pseudargyrotoza conwagana 1x Coptotriche marginea 1x Pseudatemelia flavifrontella/josephinae - TBC 2x Eulamprotes unicolorella/Monochroa tenebrella - TBC 1x Eudonia pallida 1x Eudonia lacustrata 1x Alabonia geoffrella 1x Cryptoblabes bistriga 2x Aphomia sociella 1x Udea olivalis 1x Endrosis sarcitrella 8x Teleiodes luculella 4x Pandemis cerasana 2x Epinotia bilunana 1x Archips podana 1x Parornix sp 1x Eudonia mercurella 2x Mompha raschkiella 1x Triaxomera parasitella 1x Nematopogon swammerdamella 2x Caloptilia syringella
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Bennyboymothman|sourceurl=https://flickr.com/photos/33398884@N03/41937290035%7Carchive=https://web.archive.org/web/20200316193530/https://flickr.com/photos/33398884@N03/41937290035%7Creviewdate=2018-09-26 20:05:27|reviewlicense=cc-by-2.0|reviewer=FlickreviewR 2
Wikimedia Commons
Summary[
edit] Description: Some daytime finds from 04/06/18 and 08/06/18 A couple of hours wander around some verge grassland with mixed trees and shrubs and a plethora of wildflowers including Ox-eye Daisies yielded some great moths for me. On both days it was very warm and humid, and the sunnier day on the 4th yielded better results but I found the sunshine made the moths incredibly hard to pot up from the net, usually going skywards instantly and beyong my control. The little grass patch of approximately 1 acre was extremely abundant in life of all kinds, and I noted many species which unfortunately i've mislaid the piece of paper that I wrote them down on! Nevertheless, I potted many specimens of Dichrorampha for dissection. Many will probably be new to me. So far i've got 5 new species for my UK moth records. They are Commophila aeneana Dichrorampha sequana Elachista triatomea Endothenia oblongana Grapholita tenebrosana Pretty good going for 3hrs of sweeping and netting moths disturbed from Apple, Cherry, Dog-rose, Oak, Bramble and Blackthorn to name but a few native species of trees and bushes present on the site. Other species of note and ones I took photographs of include. 6x Dichrorampha sp (for dissection) Aproaerema anthyllidella Cauchas fibulella Cnephasia sp (for dissection) Cydia nigricana (lots) 2x Dichrorampha alpinana flavidorsana (for dissection) Dichrorampha petiverella Dichrorampha plumbagana Epiblema cirsiana/stictiana/scutulana (for dissection) Eucosma hohenwartiana Grapholita compositella Here are some photos, first of the habitat and then the moths. Date: 2 June 2018, 10:32. Source:
[1275] Dichrorampha alpinana flavidorsana. Author:
Ben Sale from Stevenage, UK.
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Gladsaxe Municipality, Hovedstaden, Denmark
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Summary[
edit] Description: Deutsch: Dichrorampha sequana, am 23.5.2017 in der Schwetzinger Hardt. Date: 23 May 2017. Source: Own work. Author:
Slimguy.
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Bennyboymothman|sourceurl=https://flickr.com/photos/33398884@N03/41937287665%7Carchive=https://web.archive.org/web/20200316193523/https://flickr.com/photos/33398884@N03/41937287665%7Creviewdate=2018-09-26 19:58:32|reviewlicense=cc-by-2.0|reviewer=FlickreviewR 2
Wikimedia Commons
Summary[
edit] Description: Some daytime finds from 04/06/18 and 08/06/18 A couple of hours wander around some verge grassland with mixed trees and shrubs and a plethora of wildflowers including Ox-eye Daisies yielded some great moths for me. On both days it was very warm and humid, and the sunnier day on the 4th yielded better results but I found the sunshine made the moths incredibly hard to pot up from the net, usually going skywards instantly and beyong my control. The little grass patch of approximately 1 acre was extremely abundant in life of all kinds, and I noted many species which unfortunately i've mislaid the piece of paper that I wrote them down on! Nevertheless, I potted many specimens of Dichrorampha for dissection. Many will probably be new to me. So far i've got 5 new species for my UK moth records. They are Commophila aeneana Dichrorampha sequana Elachista triatomea Endothenia oblongana Grapholita tenebrosana Pretty good going for 3hrs of sweeping and netting moths disturbed from Apple, Cherry, Dog-rose, Oak, Bramble and Blackthorn to name but a few native species of trees and bushes present on the site. Other species of note and ones I took photographs of include. 6x Dichrorampha sp (for dissection) Aproaerema anthyllidella Cauchas fibulella Cnephasia sp (for dissection) Cydia nigricana (lots) 2x Dichrorampha alpinana flavidorsana (for dissection) Dichrorampha petiverella Dichrorampha plumbagana Epiblema cirsiana/stictiana/scutulana (for dissection) Eucosma hohenwartiana Grapholita compositella Here are some photos, first of the habitat and then the moths. Date: 5 June 2018, 11:11. Source:
[1273] Dichrorampha petiverella. Author:
Ben Sale from Stevenage, UK.
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Canvey Island - 21/05/11 Made our first trip of the year to Canvey Wick at Canvey Island last night. Equipped with 2 traps, 1 with a 160w Mercury Blanded Bulb + 22w Actinic Robinson style trap, the other with a 150w Halogen bulb and dual 40w Actinic Skinner trap. We opted to leave the 125w Robinsion's at home as we would no be able to carry them with the heavy chokes that you need to run them. Walking along the path towards our trapping spot, there was lots of evidence of moth activity, so we did a quick recce and positioned our traps on the large circular tarmac areas which were left when the massive Oil drums where removed some years back now. Moth activity at the lights was slow, but did pick up as full darkness approached, we were very concerned at how clear it was as the daytime temperature had reached 21c, at nearly 10pm it had fallen to 14c, throughout the next few hours the temperature did fluctuate as we got a few fine wisps of cloud over our heads. First moths to arrive were a few micro's which were quickly potted up and then lots of Common Swifts arrived. There seemed to be periods where there were lots of moths flying in and then it would go completely quiet. Nevertheless we managed some good species including 8 Cream-spot Tiger's, 1 Fox Moth, 12+ Light Brocade and a single Sloe Pug, all being new for me and that is pretty good going considering i've been regularly trapping for over 4 years now. Graham had one new species to a trap, a Puss Moth, which came in right at the last minute of packing up. Here is the list of Moths recorded on the night and amounts Macro Moths - (45 species) 6x Common Swift 1x Fox Moth [NEW] - Female 4x Pebble Hook-tip 1x Figure of Eighty 2x Mullein Wave 1x Cream Wave 2x Common Carpet 1x Waved Umber 1x Mottled Pug 3x Common Pug 1x Freyer's Pug 1x Sloe Pug [NEW] 1x Clouded Border 2x Peacock Moth 4x Sharp-angled Peacock 1x Peppered Moth 1x Willow Beauty 2x Pale Oak Beauty 7x Common White Wave 2x Common Wave 2x Clouded Silver 8x Light Emerald 1x Poplar Hawk-moth 1x Elephant Hawk-moth 1x Puss Moth 2x Pebble Prominent 4x Pale Prominent 2x Iron Prominent 8x Cream-spot Tiger Moth [NEW] 1x White Ermine 5x Heart & Dart 3x Shuttle-shaped Dart 4x Flame Shoulder 1x Ingrailed Clay 7x Setaceous Hebrew Character 12x Light Brocade [NEW] 1x Bright-line Brown-eye 2x Clay 1x Shoulder-striped Wainscot 1x Grey Dagger 3x Rustic Shoulder-knot 10x Marbled Minor 10x Mottled Rustic 8x Cream-bordered Green Pea 1x Straw Dot 1x Snout Micro Moths - (19 species) 1x Argyresthia curvella 1x Coleophora sp. 3x Cochylis hybridella 2x Cochylis nana 1x Cochylis sp. to id 1x Cyclamen Tortrix Clepsis spectrana 1x Cydia nigricana 1x Dichrorampha alpinana 6x Epiblema trimaculana 1x Gypsonoma sociana [NEW] 3x Hedya pruniana 1x Phycitodes maritima 3x Dark Fruit-tree Tortrix Pandemis heparana 1x Syndemis musculana 1x Bramble Shoot Moth Epiblema uddmanniana 1x Epinotia biluna 2x Epiblema cynosbatella 2x Chrysoteuchia culmella 2x Cnephasia sp.
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Summary[
edit] Description: Deutsch: Dichrorampha sequana, am 22.5.2017 in der Schwetzinger Hardt. Date: 22 May 2017. Source: Own work. Author:
Slimguy.
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