You can see how big the Red Underwing is compared with the Orange Swift behind and the Snout (Pinocchio nose just discernible) below |
The other particularly attractive arrivals were the two metallically-scaled moths below, a Burnished Brass of the form juncta - where the two main areas of reflective and refractive scales are joined by a narrow line across the brown - and a Lempke's Gold Spot. Taxonomists are still trying to decide whether to declare juncta and the alternative form aurea to be distinct species rather than varieties of the same moth, as happened when Lempke's Gold Spot was declared different from the original and extremely similar Gold Spot. Good luck to them in their deliberations; the rest of us can just enjoy the beauty of these little creatures of the night.
Other pleasures on the guest list, below, included the tiny, bird-dropping-like Chinese Character on the trap's cowl, the 'character' being the silvery-white squiggle on the grey patch in mid-wing, the Dusky Thorn on the bulbholder and two Willow Beauties showing the very slight variations in pattern which always get me in a tizzy over separating this kind of moth from other, very similar-looking species.
3 comments:
Contrast between two pretty but very dissimilar moths often enhances their beauty.
Do you have any comment notification system in place? (see post below)
PS - I would be more than glad if you somehow found a way to avoid putting your blog into diapause just because your mothy subjects are doing the same thing in winter. I live in an area where snow is nonexistent (though not weak frosts), so insects tend to be out year-round.
Hi there. I tend to wind down over the UK winter simply because there are fewer moths around, but i put out a post from time to time.
All v best
M
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