Pages

Wednesday, 10 January 2018

Westcott, Bucks


It has been particularly quiet here over the past week with no moths seen other than the occasional Pale Brindled Beauty, the garden's first example for this season having appeared back on 30th December.

Pale Brindled Beauties, Westcott 5th January

Peter Hall is currently working his way through my dissections for 2017 and has completed those for Westcott so I can now produce some accurate garden statistics for the year to bore you with.  2017 was definitely a good one so far as I'm concerned!

  • The garden twin-30wt actinic trap was run on 279 nights throughout the year as follows:  Jan (6 nights), Feb (20), Mar (31), Apr (27), May (31), Jun (29), Jul (29), Aug (13), Sep (30), Oct (31), Nov (19) and Dec (13). 
  • The actinic was joined by a 125wt MV for 32 nights between May and October (no trapping was done using the MV on its own).
  • 16 nights between mid-June and late-July produced a 100+ species count. Three of them were by the actinic on its own, the remainder using the two traps.
  • The top ten highest nightly species counts were 148 (21st June), 146 (6th July), 143 (18th June), 135 (19th July), 134 (9th July), 133 (17th July), 128 (10th July), 125 (5th July) and 121 (19th June & 1st July), all using two traps except for 19th June which was achieved by the actinic on its own.
  • 28,860 individual moths were caught in the garden.  This was better than 2016 but nowhere near as good as the totals achieved in 2014 (32,910) or 2015 (33,941).  The 2017 total might have passed the 30k mark if I hadn't been absent in Devon for a significant part of August.   
  • 662 moth species were identified in the garden (326 micros, 336 macros), significantly better than the previous highest annual count of 633 in 2015.
  • 25 of those 662 species currently have national status:  20 Nationally Scarce B-list (known from between 31 and 100 10km squares in the UK), four Nationally Scarce A-list (16-30 10km squares) and one Red Data Book (15 or fewer 10km squares). The RDB species was Pauper Pug which seems to be spreading and may no longer deserve that status. 
  • 30 moth species were new for the garden list (21 micros, 9 macros).  One of them (Cosmopterix scribaiella) was a county first while three more (Ptocheuusa paupella, Elachista utonella & Phaulernis dentella) appear to have been only the second records for Bucks.
  • After 13 years of recording at this site the garden Lepidoptera species list now stands at 967, comprising 31 butterflies and 936 moths (423 macros).  At current progress the magic 1,000 could be in reach within a year or three.
  • Which makes me wonder ... have any specific sites in our three counties already achieved that figure?  Pucketty Farm near Faringdon strikes me as a possibility.  Several of our 10km squares certainly have done so, for example those which include Bernwood Forest and Burnham Beeches.  Other than being a countryside rather than an urban location, the habitat here at Westcott is nothing particularly special and the garden species list is probably down to perseverance in holding on to otherwise unidentifiable micro-moth species for dissection and having someone keen (and kind) enough to do the job!
 
Dave Wilton
Westcott, Bucks

3 comments:

  1. If you send me mouldy ones again you can delete the words "keen" and "kind" and check your letterbox for return to sender packages! Good luck on getting the thousand though. Here after 3 years of recording I've reached 712 species (excluding butterflies)so I have some catching up still to do.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Far from being boring I find this really interesting. What I would find very useful would be if you could share your species list (at least for the macros) with the numbers of each species caught. This would help to identify anything noteworthy in my own catches and species that are represented more or less than might be expected. I find it quite interesting to consider species that I have not recorded (yet?) that I think I would expect to. Spring Usher is top of my list at present and I am hoping I might add it to my garden list in the next few weeks when the weather finally gets a bit better for moth trapping.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It helps having oak woodland nearby if you want to see Spring Usher in the garden. I don't get it every year probably because there's only one small oak in sight of the house and my nearest oak woodland is a kilometre or two away.

      You are welcome to my complete garden species list for 2017 but I won't place it here (rather too long and Blogger sometimes does strange things with format when you try to cut-and-paste). I'll send it via email as an Excel attachment.

      Delete

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.