Although last night was very wet and exceptionally windy (gusts in excess of 30kts here, probably higher elsewhere) I ran the trap anyway and was somewhat surprised this morning to get 129 moths of 20 species. I expected noctuids to cope with the conditions but even a few micros made it into the trap, including 14 examples of the migrant
Plutella xylostella (Diamond-back Moth) blown in on the north-easterly wind. There will presumably have been some more interesting migrants around as well but they avoided my garden!
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Plutella xylostella, Westcott 10th June |
The others in the trap comprised
Argyresthia trifasciata (1),
Cnephasia sp (1),
Celypha lacunana (1),
Crambus lathoniellus (1),
Udea olivalis (1), Common Swift (7), Broken-barred Carpet (1), Lesser Treble-bar (1), Light Emerald (1), White Ermine (2), Turnip (4), Heart & Dart (69), Setaceous Hebrew Character (2), Brown Rustic (1), Marbled Minor sp (1), Treble Lines (6), Uncertain (3), Rustic (1) & Vine's Rustic (11).
Dave Wilton
Westcott, Bucks
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