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Tag Archives: Agriphila tristella

228/366 Mothing, accidentally

15 Saturday Aug 2020

Posted by sconzani in insects, nature

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Tags

Agriphila tristella, Autographa gamma, British moths, Common grass-veneer, Common purple & gold, moths, Pyrausta purpuralis, Scotopteryx chenopodiata, Shaded broad-bar, Silver Y

It seems surprising to me that a rainy day walk can turn up moth sightings. I’m not talking about heavy rain – I probably wouldn’t be out in that – just a very slight drizzle, which in this week’s heat was actually quite refreshing. Only a few hardy Meadow brown butterflies flitted up as I passed by but the moths were more frequent than I expected.

200815 silver y

Silver Y (Autographa gamma)
Late summer through to mid autumn is probably the best time to see these distinctive immigrants, though some hardy souls do manage to breed in Britain. I imagine this one wafting in from the Continent on last week’s hot southerly winds.

200815 pyrausta purpuralis

Common purple-and-gold (Pyrausta purpuralis)
I’ve seen quite a few of these tiny moths during my daily meanders, presumably because they have two broods each year and the second brood emerges right about now, July-August.

200815 Shaded broad-bar

Shaded broad-bar (Scotopteryx chenopodiata)
Two of these beauties have popped up for me recently, one at Grangemoor Park, the other at Cosmeston, both quite light in colour, though a quick look at the images on the Butterfly Conservation website will show how variable they can be.

200815 Agriphila tristella

Common grass-veneer (Agriphila tristella)
I tend to avoid photographing the many grass moths that, like crickets and grasshoppers, flit up as my legs disturb them when I’m walking through longish grass or wildflowers, because they can be difficult to identify. Luckily, my local Twitter pal George, a senior moth ecologist at Butterfly Conservation, was able to put a name to this one very quickly. It’s a common grassland species that flies from June through to September.

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A selection of Grass-veneers

29 Tuesday Aug 2017

Posted by sconzani in insects, nature

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Agriphila straminella, Agriphila tristella, British moths, Chrysoteuchia culmella, Crambus lathoniellus, Crambus pascuella, Grass moths, Grass-veneer, micro moth

If you have a tendency, as I do, to wander through grassy meadows, you may have noticed small pale-looking flying creatures that are disturbed by your passing. They flit up and disappear again so quickly – their wings gathered tightly to their sides and often perched head-down on a grass stem – that they can be very hard to spot, and you may not, as I initially didn’t, realise that they’re moths. There are 39 species of Crambinae (the Grass moth family) in Britain – so far I’ve only managed to photograph these five.

170829 Agriphila straminella Straw Grass-veneer
170829 Agriphila tristella Common grass-veneer

Agriphila straminella Straw Grass-veneer (left) and Agriphila tristella Common grass-veneer (right)

170829 Chrysoteuchia culmella Garden Grass-veneer (1)
170829 Chrysoteuchia culmella Garden Grass-veneer (2)

Chrysoteuchia culmella Garden Grass-veneer

170829 Crambus lathoniellus Hook-streak Grass-veneer (1)
170829 Crambus lathoniellus Hook-streak Grass-veneer (2)

Crambus lathoniellus Hook-streak Grass-veneer

170829 Crambus pascuella Inlaid grass-veneer (1)
170829 Crambus pascuella Inlaid grass-veneer (2)

Crambus pascuella Inlaid grass-veneer

I am extremely grateful to my friends from the South Wales Butterfly Conservation Group on Facebook for their help in identifying these moths.

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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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