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I had the same phenomenon this morning (Sunday) and have substituted this pic in order to show fine leggings |
Only two moths last - unseasonally cold - night: a Hebrew Character and this male Muslin. The latter prompts me to ask if anyone else has pondered why this moth almost always has its antennae out, even when inert in the eggboxes. The vast majority of others - indeed maybe all of them - tuck theirs away unless disturbed.
Is there any reasoning about this? The
Moth Bible is silent and I've not (yet) found enlightnement online.
Martin Wainwright, Thrupp, Oxon
Sounds like a good subject for a PhD thesis, Martin!
ReplyDeleteIt's not just Muslin moths that do this, but at the moment I can't think of another apart from Burnets? Of course butterflies are just pretty moths and they leave them out I think? I can't find much literature out there, this is the best: http://jeb.biologists.org/content/215/17/3096.full.pdf
ReplyDeleteSo Dave is right, Dr Wainwright.
How about the Emperor moth? The plumed antennae of both sexes aren't hidden away, from what i remember.
ReplyDeleteThanks everyone! A PhD thesis would be excellent but alas I failed phys-with-chem O level and didn't even try biology, so I am not the one to do it. I guess Oxford could furnish plenty of candidates.
ReplyDeleteThanks v much for the link, Peter, and the point about butterflies - plus the Emperor Moth, Dave. So I have plenty to go on
all warm wishes (warm being the word this lovely day)