Saturday 30 March 2019

52 moths - 29/30 March

I almost chose not to put the trap out last night as the forecast suggested it would be cold and clear. Within minutes I knew I had done the right thing as moths were soon fluttering against the window and I was dividing my attention between watching West Brom beat Birmingham City and grabbing moths for identification.

This morning I peered into the trap and eventually tallied 52 moths of six species. These included one new for the garden (and a very attractive lifer for me) in the form of a Pine Beauty.

Pine Beauty
The full list was: 33 Common Quakers, 11 Small Quakers, five Clouded Drabs, a Double-striped Pug, a Light Brown Apple Moth, and a Pine Beauty.

The only other thing to report is a bee in the house yesterday morning which carefully removed, photographed, and placed on the Rosemary growing outside the kitchen window.

Red Mason Bee
I identified it as a Red Mason Bee.

Thursday 28 March 2019

Casual mothing

Since my last post I have seen three moths.

The first was a ridiculously tiny micro which I found on the inside pane of our back garden window. Getting any sort of image of a 2mm moth was quite a challenge, but I eventually came up with something which the Warwickshire Moth Group suggested was a leaf-miner, Stigmella sp.


On Wednesday, back at Selfridges, I spotted a moth behind the grating of a air duct. It was inaccessible, except that by standing on tiptoe I was able to photograph it with my mobile. Two people, a road sweeper and a hijab wearing young woman, asked if I needed any help. I think they were referring to my mental health! My tenth attempt came out well enough for me to identify it as a Common Quaker.

Finally this evening I was about to start cooking Spaghetti Bolognese when I noticed a pug sp fluttering outside the kitchen window. I was out in a flash and duly caught what turned out to be my first Double-striped Pug of the year.

Double-striped Pug
Shots taken under electric lights never come out very well. I nevertheless decided to let it go rather than keep it until morning.



Monday 25 March 2019

Another city centre moth

My journey to work has been enlivened by the discovery that moths are occasionally attracted to the discs which form the fascia of the modernistic Selfridges building.

This morning a Small Quaker was discovered. I potted it and transported it to my garden after work.

Small Quaker
I'm not sure what the moth makes of falling asleep in Birmingham City Centre and waking up in Redditch. Probably not very much. It should find more Small Quakers in the leafy suburbs than in the concrete jungle, so I reckon I have done it a favour.

Thursday 21 March 2019

More moths 20/21 March

With some warmer weather and a hint that the night could become cloudy I put the moth trap out and gained almost instant success when a largish moth on the window proved to be a Twin-spotted Quaker, only the second I have seen.

Twin-spotted Quaker
I was therefore very optimistic this morning as I stepped outside to check the trap. The immediate surroundings were disappointingly devoid of moths, so it was all down to what was in or on the trap.

Two hours later I had recorded 40 moths, but only five more species. Most were Common Quakers (26), plus Small Quakers (eight). However there were some new ones for the year including one, a micro identified as Acleris literana which is a lifer.

Acleris literana
I had vaguely decided I wasn't going to put myself through the stress of trying to identify micros this year, but this one looked pretty distinctive.

Other firsts for the year were a Light Brown Apple Moth (another micro), and three Hebrew Characters.

Hebrew Character
Ironically, there was no sign of the Twin-spotted Quaker which had been returned to the utility room window by the time I went to bed.

Friday 1 March 2019

Mothing - 28 Feb/1 Mar

I seem to remember declaring (or at least thinking) that this year I would only put the trap out once per month. Well that seems to gone by the board as the mild, rather damp, overnight conditions encouraged me to run it again.

I was up early and quickly spotted the back end of a moth poking out from a narrow cavity between the wall of the trap and one of the supports. It looked like a geometer (and therefore interesting). I eventually poked it out with a ruler, but before I could pot it, or even get a good look at it, it took to the air and fluttered around behind the trap with me in hot pursuit. Not hot enough though, because it seemingly vanished.

So a disappointing start but as soon as I started examining the inside of the trap I soon found there were lots of moths; 23 in all.

The majority, 18 of them, were Common Quakers. However I soon started to find some that were different. Three Small Quakers were new for the year, as was a Clouded Drab. There was also one that didn't look familiar at all, although it did eventually turn out to be a species JS had identified from a photograph last year. A Chestnut.

Small Quaker and Common Quaker
Clouded Drab
Chestnut
With almost as many moths trying to hide in recesses in the box as were in the egg boxes, I had the tricky task of extracting each one with the tip of my pencil before placing the dangling creature onto a green napkin I had spread out on the garden table. The eventual effect was quite impressive.


Or appalling if moths give you the collywobbles.