Light and Dark Arches

Dark Arches is one of the commonest moths in the moth trap during the summer, but its light-coloured relative is less common and its believed less attracted to light. As such, this Light Arches moth, with its very fine mohawk, was a new garden species (#930). Both are grassland species, their caterpillars living on grass stems and roots.

Blood-vein & Buff Tip

Blood-vein (Timandra comae, #929) was a new species for the list; a pretty moth with a red line and pink border to the wing, its larval food-plants are docks & sorrel. Buff-tip (Phalera bucephala) is a regular summertime looking like a snapped-off birch twig. Narrow-winged Grey (Eudonia angustea) is normally an autumn flier, but a few, like this one, emerge earlier. Small Magpie moth (Anania hortulata) is a common moth in June/July too, especially around nettles.

Eyed Hawk-moth (Smerinthus ocellata)

A beautiful hawk moth in the trap this morning; my first this year. This one is an Eyed Hawk-moth, which is not a species I’ve caught before in the moth-trap. My previous garden record was one that was caught, and mostly shredded, by the cat back in 2020. This moth is not especially rare, though it’s not the commonest hawk moth here. Its caterpillars are found in sallows, apple and crab apple trees.

Sabre Wasp - Rhyssa persuasoria (#928)

This large and rather scary parasitic wasp trapped itself in the greenhouse. At 40 mm long, excluding an ovipositor longer even than the body, it’s an impressive bug and UK’s biggest parasitic wasp. The females (like this one) detect beetle larvae deep in dead wood, and their ovipositor can pass through the wood to lay eggs in or near the grub. The wasp larvae then eats the beetle larva. This species is normally found in woodland with dead logs, so it is a good find for my garden which is not very near a wooded area.

Peppered Moth (Biston betularia)

Another cold night, another lean morning in the moth trap. Only 9 moths of 8 different species, compared with 24 moths of 15 species on the same date last year (3 June). This Peppered Moth was not something I catch that often. The species has a pale form (like this), one with darker grey markings and one that is nearly black. In polluted areas where the trees are blackened by soot, etc, the darker forms predominate - but no issues with air quality here, just currently with night-time air temperature.

Woolly beech aphid (Phyllaphis fagi)

A large beech tree shades a chunk of the garden, plus it is being used as a roost for woodpigeons which crap all over the patio (just how much does a single pigeon produce in a day!?). Anyhow, cutting some low hanging branches in the hope the pigeons find a new roost site, they were all sticky and the under-sides of the leaves covered in clusters of fluffy white insects. These are Woolly Beech Aphids (Phyllaphis fagi, #927), which secrete copious honeydew. I didn’t notice them previous years, or that the tree was buzzing with insects attracted by the honeydew.

#927 Woolly beech aphid Phyllaphis fagi

Beech Tree Seedling

It took me an effort to work out what this tiny seedling that popped up among the bluebell plants was. It’s a baby Beech Tree (Fagus sylvatica). The first pair of leaves really doesn’t look like anything to do with a beech tree, but if you look closer at the young leaves forming in the middle, those do. The plant didn’t make it: now gone, presumably eaten by something.

Cockchafers & Moths

It’s always nice to catch cockchafer beetles; two in the moth trap this morning. Not a big catch of moths again, but several species caught for the fist time this year, as the season moves on.

Raspberry Yellow Rust (Phragmidium rubi-idaei)

The yellow/orange spots on many of the lower leaves of my raspberry plants are from a fungus called Raspberry Yellow Rust (species #924). This is not something I’ve seen before in the garden, but it thrives in wet conditions, as we have had for most of this Spring. The pustules appear on the leaves in the spring and slowly darken over the summer. Apparently it’s harmless and won’t reduce the raspberry crop, so that’s good news.

#924 Raspberry Yellow Rust (Phragmidium rubi-idaei)

Mid-May Moths

A few more moths this weekend, but not yet a big catch. Puss Moth is always a welcome visitor, and this is only my second Silver Cloud, which is a local specialty only really found along the Severn Valley in UK, for some reason. Female Muslin Moths are white and often found flying in the daytime, while the males and dark like this one and strictly nocturnal. Meanwhile the last moth is a rather beaten-up looking Clouded-bordered Brindle (Apamea crenata), actually my first of this springtime species.

Hazelnut Weevil (Curculio nucum, #922)

We found these larvae in hazel nuts from last autumn. The weevils lay their eggs in the growing nut, then normally after a few weeks when they have eaten the nut kernel the larvae burrow out (see the exit hole in the nut shell), and relocate to the ground beneath the tree where they remain as pupae until the next spring when they emerge as beetles. In several cases there were live larvae in this batch of dried out nuts; their normal lifecycle presumably interrupted by our harvesting & storing the nuts.

#922 Hazelnut Weevil (Curculio nucum)

Garlic Mustard (Alliaria petiolata)

I have been expecting to find this plant, as it’s pretty common around the area, but until now not located in my garden. Garlic Mustard, or Jack-by-the-Hedge as it is sometimes called, is a tall member of the brassica family with white flowers that appear in April/May and leaves that have a hint of garlic when you crush them. You can eat the young tender leaves in a salad and the roots apparently have a horseradish flavour. From a gardening point of view it can be a very invasive plant, so probably I should pull it out, but it is a handsome plant and also the food-plant for Green-veined White butterflies there’s no rush …

#921 Garlic Mustard (Alliaria petiolata)

Not Exactly Brimming

A dry, calm night over the weekend was not enough to get the moths flying. Only 10 moths of 7 species caught, including these two favourites. Getting impatient, but it’s still early in the season, especially this year where Spring is quite cool.

New Plants in the Alley

Found a couple of new plants along the alley leading to the house. There are a couple of patches of White Stonecrop growing between the stones of the limestone wall. Meanwhile at the base of the wall by the path, these are the first Ground Ivy (sometimes called Creeping Charlie!) plants I have noticed.