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Saturday, 5 July 2014

For confirmation / ID

This is a catch up from the last three days - I have a few more but this is most of them.

I caught a couple of smoky wainscot candidates and despite a trip to the fridge they got a bit agitated - I managed to get some shots.



I've been getting a few Common Footmen - this one on the basis of the shape I thought might be a Dingy Footman?




Think this one is  Endotricha flammealis



I found this apparently moribund moth the other day - along with I think a few dead ones - I was thinking it would be a hopeless case but it looks like a Water Veneer? If so it's a fascinating thing - used for biological control apparently. 


This one I had as Light Arches



Small Angle Shades


Lesser Yellow Underwing?



I went over this one several times - so maybe just another form of the Common Marbled Carpet?


Mark Griffiths, Garsington, Oxford.

3 comments:

  1. You are doing well. From top to bottom they are: Smoky Wainscot, Dingy Footman, Endotricha flammealis, Acentria ephemerella, Light Arches, Small Angle Shades, Lesser Yellow Underwing and Garden Carpet

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  2. As you say, Acentria ephemerella is an interesting moth. Like the China-marks, its early stages are aquatic and at this time of year you can get hundreds of them to a light trap seemingly anywhere - often well away from any water which seems a bit odd as in my experience they are such weak creatures that few seem to survive being caught.

    A tip on how to quickly differentiate between Large Yellow Underwing and Lesser Yellow Underwing when you've got lots of them sitting head-out inside the recesses of your egg-boxes is to learn what their faces (particularly the eyes) look like - they're both completely different.

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  3. thanks both. I'll try Dave's tip on the Yellow Underwings. The other one I get here is the Broad Boarded but that is very different.

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