The temperature at night has been consistently good for as long as I can remember, maybe 2 months now?
Micro Moths
Musotima nitidalis
L-album Wainscot
Feathered Ranunculus
Agonopterix nervosa
Blossom Underwing
Beautiful Marbled
Lampronia fuscatella
Gravitarmata margarotana
Perittia obscurepunctella
Black-spotted Chestnut
Cydia pactolana
The temperature at night has been consistently good for as long as I can remember, maybe 2 months now?
Well, where do I start...
I returned to one of very few large woods in East Cambs, right on the border with West Suffolk, in fact you have to drive through Suffolk to get to it.
This wood has been very hit and miss for me over the years, and on the last trip it did not fare too good, although it was a bit breezy and cool a few hours in.
Last Friday the weather looked absolutely perfect, with massive highs of 37 degrees and with lows expected in the region of 22-24 degrees, it couldn't get much better.
In all honesty, it was ridiculous, to a point where I could barely get near the traps for fear of inhaling a moth snack, being so warm everything was super active and it made picking out certain species nigh on impossible.
Early doors, I missed a lovely pied form of Pseudosciaphila branderiana, but luckily did nab a darker form later on at one of the less busy traps.
I then fumbled potting up a county first Acleris umbrana!! ARGH, the one that got away so cannot count it, a new moth for me as well.
I must have missed loads, and typing up each new species as it came in was hard to keep up with at one point.
Best moth of the night that I actually managed to keep hold of was, what appears to be a Choristoneura species in the region of diversana/lafauryana. Certainly a new moth for me and is retained for dissection.
Other good moths included Olive, Shaded Fan-foot, Pseudosciaphila branderiana, Psoricoptera gibbosella and Eudemis porphyrana.
It was rather exhausting and as I quote the late Don Down, 'There's now too many moths'.
More field trips when my sleep catches up a bit!
Macro Moths
Beautiful Golden Y
Beautiful Hook-tip
Black Arches
Blood-vein
Blue-bordered Carpet
Bright-line Brown-eye
Brimstone Moth
Broad-bordered Yellow Underwing
Brown Scallop
Buff Arches
Buff Ermine
Buff Footman
Buff-tip
Chinese Character
Clouded Border
Clouded Brindle
Common Footman
Common Swift
Common Wave
Common White Wave
Dark Arches
Dotted Fan-foot
Double Lobed
Double Square-spot
Drinker
Dun-bar
Dwarf Cream Wave
Early Thorn
Elephant Hawk-moth
Engrailed
Flame
Fan foot
Gold Swift
Green Pug
Grey Dagger
Heart & Dart
Herald
July Highflyer
Kent Black Arches
Large Emerald
Large Twin-spot Carpet
Large Yellow Underwing
Latticed Heath
Least Carpet
Leopard Moth
Lesser Broad-bordered Yellow Underwing
Lobster Moth
Lunar-spotted Pinion
Lunar Yellow Underwing
Maple Pug
Marbled Minor
Marbled White-spot
Minor Shoulder-knot
Mottled Beauty
Mottled Rustic
Oak Hook-tip
Olive
Pale Oak Beauty
Pale Prominent
Poplar Hawk-moth
Privet Hawk-moth
Riband Wave
Rosy Footman
Ruby Tiger
Rufous Minor
Rustic
Scarlet Tiger
Short-cloaked Moth
Silver Y
Single-dotted Wave
Slender Pug
Small Dotted Buff
Small Elephant Hawk-moth
Small Emerald
Small Fan-footed Wave
Small Mottled Willow
Smoky Wainscot
Snout
Southern Wainscot
Straw Dot
Swallow-tailed Moth
Uncertain
Vapourer Moth
V-pug
Willow Beauty
Yellow Shell
Yellow-tail
Micro Moths
Acentria emphemerellaYet another warm night on Friday night, in fact the warmest night I've ever experienced.
When I got back from a field trip at 2:30am, it was still 24 degrees! Absolutely insane, and after a hot day of 36 degrees the traps out and home were heaving to say the least, with mainly micros.. o goody!
The trouble is, with such warm temperatures and high humidity, the moths are unbelievably active and hard to pot.
I did my best to go through my trap before dawn and shuffled myself to bed.
The Rose Plume (Cnaemidophorus rhododactyla) was a welcome new addition to the garden list, probably drifting from nearby Chippenham or Wicken Fen, where they appear sporadically.
Other highlights included a smart Rosy Minor, the first of many Yponomeuta rorrella, the last of the expected Yponomeuta species to arrive here, and a rather smartly coloured Oak Nycteoline, my third this year alone.
Things carried on warm until Sunday evening when things finally started to cool down, but an early hint of another heatwave a week from now!
| Ypsolopha scabrella |
| Cnaemidophorus rhododactyla |
| Common Rustic |
| Limnaecia phragmitella |
| Maple Prominent |
| Oak Nycteoline |
| Phtheochroa inopiana |
| Rosy Minor |
| Tawny-barred Angle |
| Yponomeuta rorrella |
There seems to be no let-up from these warm nights recently, I've forgotten what a cooler night is! Day in and day out high humidity is taking its toll on tiredness that's for sure.
As a result, the trap has been busy beyond belief.
| Sitochroa palealis |
| Agapeta zoegana |
| Ancylosis oblitella |
| Dioryctria sylvestrella |
| July Highflyer |
| Lesser Broad-bordered Yellow Underwing |
| Silky Wainscot |
Breaking records, and not just temperature records, moth records as well! With some extremely high overnight temperatures from mid last week, the heat continued to build each day.
It was to be the biggest garden catch on Tuesday night here in my garden, although sleep depravation was kicking in a bit, what with working out in this heat during the day and then struggling to sleep.
The list was more like a field trip by the morning.
I decided to do a full count of species, not quite stretching to a full count of individuals though.. I did have to work the next day!
A grand total of 165 species was noted, a garden record smashing the previous best of 122.
Obscure Wainscot was new for the garden, expected eventually I suppose and moth no.940. Sadly it was a bit of a ratty ole' specimen.
| Sorhagenia sp |
| Argyresthia pruniella |
| Blastobasis adustella |
| Chilo phragmitella |
| Coleophora betulella |
| Dichomeris alacella |
| Epiblema sp |
| Rosy Footman |
| Scarce Silver-lines |
They're back! And what an entrance. I have never had more than one Dusky Clearwing in a day (peak was 11 specimens on 11 different days between late June and mid August in 2022) last year I only caught a couple. To get 4 today is incredible. Fordham, East Cambs to TAB lure.