While perhaps
not quite as exciting as the previous year in the garden, 2019
still had its moments and there was plenty of activity from our
lepidoptera. The number of moths caught
in the garden traps was certainly way up on previous years and new species kept
on being found.
Butterflies
2019 saw an
improvement over 2018 in that more species were recorded in the garden (24 as
opposed to 21) and, like a lot of other people, we had a truly remarkable
number of Painted Ladies Vanessa cardui. The first garden record here of this migrant butterfly
was on 28th July and within three weeks we were regularly having counts of eight
or nine at any one time on our buddleias, the peak being ten on 23rd August.
Painted Lady, Westcott 9th August |
The other
nymphalids had an OK year, with peak counts of twelve for Red Admiral Vanessa atalanta on 23rd August, eight
for Small Tortoiseshell Aglais urticae
on 22nd August, nineteen for Peacock Aglais
io on 1st August and three for Comma Polygonia
c-album on 15th September. Peacock
numbers were actually considerably higher than in 2018 when there seemed to be
few of them about and they disappeared into hibernation very quickly.
A
Grizzled Skipper Pyrgus malvae on
30th May was perhaps the best butterfly sighting of all, although it has been recorded
in the garden once previously back in 2011.
I look forward to Dingy Skipper Erynnis
tages making a similar appearance one day because both are to be found in a
field less than 100 metres from our house.
The other surprise, although again not of a first-timer, was the all-too-brief
visit on 7th July of a female Silver-washed Fritillary Argynnis paphia. Luckily I
did have camera in hand for a record shot when she rested for a short while on
the stump of a recently felled Portuguese Laurel. I’ve had a handful of previous records in the
garden but this was the first since 2013.
Silver-washed Fritillary, Westcott 7th July |
Our
surviving elms produced sightings of adult White-letter Hairstreak Satyrium w-album again between 21st June
and 16th July but two more of the trees have now succumbed to dutch elm disease
and will need to be felled this winter.
An interesting find on 9th May was a caterpillar of this species
climbing up the side of our water butt, having presumably been washed or blown
off one of the nearby elms. I kept it
indoors where it continued to feed for another week before pupating.
White-letter Hairstreak larva, Westcott 9th May |
White-letter Hairstreak pupa, Westcott 18th May |
Butterflies
appearing in moth traps is not an unheard-of phenomenon and I’ve actually had 13
different species to light at night over the years although mostly away from
Westcott. However, there was a
remarkable number of them in the garden during 2019, with the MV bulb bringing
in a Red Admiral on 3rd August while the actinic managed Green-veined White Pieris napi (21st August), Painted Lady
(21st & 25th August), Red Admiral (24th August & 5th October) and
Meadow Brown Maniola jurtina (13th
July).
The Mothing Year
The
weather wasn’t quite as spectacular during the main summer months when compared
to 2018 and that seemed to have a bit of an effect on species diversity. 100 species in one night was exceeded on only
19 occasions (as opposed to 26 in 2018), the first being on 23rd June and the
last on 1st August. 150 species in one
night was exceeded just the once (as opposed to three times in 2018). That best night of the year was on 23rd July 2019
when 1,217 moths of 158 species were shared between the two traps, 768 moths of
137 species coming to the MV and 449 of 97 to the actinic. Despite the reduction in nights with very
high species counts, the overall species tally for the year actually came to 699 which exceeded
the previous record of 684 in 2018. The full list of species for 2019 can be seen on a Google Sheets spreadsheet here.
Heart and Dart was this year’s overall winner with 4,975 individuals coming to light, although perhaps surprisingly this was only its second best garden total (6,447 visited in 2011). It was given a good run for its money by Dark Arches which achieved the remarkable total of 3,936 on the first occasion that it has ever scored above 1,000 here. Large Yellow Underwing (2,313), Lunar Underwing (2,312) & Setaceous Hebrew Character (2,233) were relegated to also-rans despite achieving what might have been winning scores in any other year. Two ‘grass moth’ micro species producing almost 4,000 individuals between them was also unprecedented. Common Wainscot, Black Rustic, Vine’s Rustic, Common Quaker and Treble Lines also put in their best ever totals here. By co-incidence, the last spike in numbers for Treble Lines occurred in 2007 after a similarly good summer the previous year. The top 20 species for 2019 by overall count are tabulated below:
Of the aggregated species which mostly require dissection to separate, Common Rustic Mesapamea secalis, Uncertain Hoplodrina octogenaria and Rustic Hoplodrina blanda would certainly have gained a place somewhere in the top 20 if they had all been identified to species:
As detailed in the table below, a further 32 moths were new to the site list during 2019 and the all-time count has now reached 1,002 (559 micros, 443 macros). The prize for being the 1,000th moth species recorded in the garden at Westcott went to this individual:
Ypsolopha alpella was presumably a stray from one of the local oak woods in which I’ve seen it in the past. Carpatolechia alburnella was a nice find because most of my records in Bucks have been from heathland sites with a good deal of birch, mainly in the south of the county. Proving the wisdom of keeping back small, dark and obscurely marked gelechids for dissection, Scrobipalpa obsoletella and Scrobipalpa atriplicella were welcome sightings of uncommon species in Bucks.
Heart and Dart was this year’s overall winner with 4,975 individuals coming to light, although perhaps surprisingly this was only its second best garden total (6,447 visited in 2011). It was given a good run for its money by Dark Arches which achieved the remarkable total of 3,936 on the first occasion that it has ever scored above 1,000 here. Large Yellow Underwing (2,313), Lunar Underwing (2,312) & Setaceous Hebrew Character (2,233) were relegated to also-rans despite achieving what might have been winning scores in any other year. Two ‘grass moth’ micro species producing almost 4,000 individuals between them was also unprecedented. Common Wainscot, Black Rustic, Vine’s Rustic, Common Quaker and Treble Lines also put in their best ever totals here. By co-incidence, the last spike in numbers for Treble Lines occurred in 2007 after a similarly good summer the previous year. The top 20 species for 2019 by overall count are tabulated below:
1 |
Heart & Dart |
4,975 |
2 |
Dark Arches |
3,936 |
3 |
Large Yellow Underwing |
2,313 |
4 |
Lunar Underwing |
2,312 |
5 |
Setaceous Hebrew Character |
2,233 |
6 |
Agriphila tristella |
1,996 |
7 |
Chrysoteuchia culmella |
1,925 |
8 |
Common Footman |
1,032 |
9 |
Square-spot Rustic |
1,011 |
10 |
Common Wainscot |
963 |
11 |
Acentria ephemerella |
945 |
12 | Black Rustic |
934 |
13 |
Vine’s Rustic |
900 |
14 |
Common Quaker |
844 |
15 |
Smoky Wainscot |
683 |
16 |
Agriphila straminella |
640 |
17 | Treble Lines |
635 |
18 |
Eudonia lacustrata |
589 |
19 |
Scarce Footman |
555 |
20 |
Patania ruralis |
540 |
Of the aggregated species which mostly require dissection to separate, Common Rustic Mesapamea secalis, Uncertain Hoplodrina octogenaria and Rustic Hoplodrina blanda would certainly have gained a place somewhere in the top 20 if they had all been identified to species:
1 |
Uncertain/Rustic (Hoplodrina species) |
2,884 |
2 |
Common/Lesser Common Rustic (Mesapamea species) |
1,371 |
3 |
Minors (Oligia species) | 373 |
As detailed in the table below, a further 32 moths were new to the site list during 2019 and the all-time count has now reached 1,002 (559 micros, 443 macros). The prize for being the 1,000th moth species recorded in the garden at Westcott went to this individual:
Phyllonorycter klemannella, mine on alder 17th September, adult emerged 2nd October 2019 |
4.023 |
Stigmella crataegella (mine on hawthorn) |
11 Aug |
4.062 |
Stigmella samiatella * |
30 May |
4.071 |
Bohemannia pulverosella (mine on apple) |
17 Oct |
4.088 |
Ectoedemia heringella * |
23 Jun |
10.001 | Tischeria ekebladella * |
24 Jun |
15.082 |
Phyllonorycter klemannella (mine on alder) |
17 Sep |
17.008 |
Ypsolopha alpella * |
27 Aug |
35.116 |
Scrobipalpa obsoletella * |
29 May |
35.117 |
Scrobipalpa atriplicella * |
21 Apr |
35.149 |
Carpatolechia alburnella |
10 July |
37.009 |
Coleophora milvipennis * |
8 July |
37.077 |
Coleophora lassella * |
29 July |
38.022 |
Elachista gleichenella * |
29 Jun |
38.048 |
Elachista consortella * |
24 Jun |
38.049 | Elachista stabilella * |
24 Jun |
49.017 |
Choristoneura diversana * |
23 Jun |
49.133 |
Cochylis nana |
30 May |
49.256 |
Epinotia cinereana * |
26 July |
49.343 |
Cydia amplana
|
25 Aug |
63.017 |
Anania lancealis |
12 July |
63.109 |
Pediasia contaminella |
29 July |
| ||
52.008 |
Red-tipped Clearwing Synanthedon formicaeformis |
22 May |
70.032 |
Birch Mocha Cyclophora albipunctata |
26 July |
70.046 |
Oblique Carpet Orthonama vittata |
25 Aug |
70.155 |
Netted Pug Eupithecia venosata |
27 May |
70.276 |
Bordered White Bupalus piniaria |
19 June |
70.284 |
Barred Red Hylaea fasciaria |
8 July |
73.010 |
Dewick’s Plusia Macdunnoughia confusa |
14 Sep |
73.119 |
Crescent Helotropha leucostigma |
3 Aug |
73.139 |
Twin-spotted Wainscot Lenisa geminipuncta |
29 July |
73.221 |
Suspected Parastichtis suspecta |
10 Jul |
73.223 |
Oak Rustic Dryobota labecula |
24 Nov |
* confirmed via dissection, with grateful thanks to Peter Hall.
Micro-moths
There were three additions to the garden list as leaf-mines, of which Bohemmania pulverosella on apple was probably the most interesting discovery (there are only two or three previous Bucks records). An active mine of Phyllonorycter klemannella on our alder was also a nice find and, reared indoors, the adult emerged on 2nd October. I've also got another alder-feeding species to look out for next year: a single vacated mine of either Stigmella alnetella or Stigmella glutinosae was found on 17th September but unfortunately the presence of a larva is required to separate those two species. For once I remembered to search for mines of the relatively common Stigmella crataegella on hawthorn at the correct time of year and found the two illustrated below. It is active as a larva during the summer while Stigmella oxyacanthella (whose larvae and mines look identical) is active during the autumn.
Mine of Stigmella crataegella, Westcott 11th August |
Another
nice find on 8th August was a single vacated mine of Stigmella tiliae on our lime, the first here since 2013 and only
the third record for Bucks. It was also
interesting to see how quickly Stigmella
aceris has established itself in the garden. This northwards-spreading species was first
recorded on our Norway Maple in 2016 and a search of the accessible lower
leaves on 11th August 2019 produced 33 vacated mines in no time at all, so I’m
sure there will have been many more. Rather
strangely, three adult nepticulids were recorded in and around the house during
the course of what turned out to be an unexpectedly warm February (very early
indeed for any of these species) and they are also likely to have been Stigmella aceris although only one was
confirmed via dissection. An adult of Stigmella incognitella (19th May) also
had its genitalia checked, that species having only been added to the garden
list in 2018 when an active mine was found on our apple. Adults of Stigmella
samiatella (30th May) and Ectoedemia
heringella (two males on 23rd June and one female on 31st July, all
dissected) were unexpected because we have only one deciduous oak in the
immediate vicinity and no evergreen oaks at all. The evergreen Holm Oak Quercus ilex is an introduced Mediterranean tree species and although
I’m not aware of any in Westcott there are actually a few dotted around within
a radius of ten miles, mostly in churchyards and parkland or gardens. All seem to have been “found” by Ectoedemia heringella, so these tiny
moths must be very good indeed at dispersal, very much like Phyllonorycter platani (on London Plane)
and Cameraria ohridella (on Horse
Chestnut) which are similarly both recent invaders from continental Europe.
Ypsolopha alpella was presumably a stray from one of the local oak woods in which I’ve seen it in the past. Carpatolechia alburnella was a nice find because most of my records in Bucks have been from heathland sites with a good deal of birch, mainly in the south of the county. Proving the wisdom of keeping back small, dark and obscurely marked gelechids for dissection, Scrobipalpa obsoletella and Scrobipalpa atriplicella were welcome sightings of uncommon species in Bucks.
Neither Choristoneura diversana nor Epinotia cinereana are common in Bucks
and these were each the third county records.
The latter was originally considered to be a form of Epinotia nisella but is now a full
species in its own right although it needs dissection to confirm. Cochylis nana is rather more widespread
in VC24 and it appeared in the garden five times between 30th May and 11th July
so must now be resident somewhere quite close by.
Cydia amplana was
probably a migrant here but it does seem to be established now in some southern
counties so it will be interesting to see if it appears again. The grass moth Pediasia contaminella, with its distinctive nose-down resting
posture, seemed to have a good year and turned up in other places within the
county for the first time too. It seems
to be quite thinly spread and may well be under-recorded.
Macro-moths
For a
further eleven macro species to be added to the site list in 2019 was nothing
short of amazing. Red-tipped Clearwing
became the fifth member of this day-flying family to be tempted into the garden
using pheromone lures, with single specimens appearing on two occasions (22nd
May & 5th July) both to the FOR lure.
In fact it was my most successful year ever using pheromones and all of
the other Clearwing species already known from Westcott turned up as well: Red-belted Clearwing Synanthedon myopaeformis to the MYO lure (23rd & 29th June),
Currant Clearwing S.tipuliformis to
the TIP lure (17th & 23rd June, 5th July), Yellow-legged Clearwing S.vespiformis to the VES lure (16th July)
and Orange-tailed Clearwing S.andrenaeformis
also to the VES lure (22nd & 29th June, 5th July). All came as singletons apart from
Orange-tailed Clearwing, of which no less than 16 appeared on 29th June then
three more on 5th July.
Birch
Mocha, Bordered White and Barred Red are reasonably widespread and have all
been found previously in the local area so it didn’t come as a complete
surprise to see them in the trap.
However, the Oblique Carpet record was the fourth for Bucks since the
millennium and only the tenth ever. It
seems to be restricted to the damper areas of the clay vale and this was the
first sighting since it was found on BBOWT’s River Ray Reserves during 2010. Although seemingly in decline, Netted Pug is still
fairly widespread in the southern half of the county but very rare north of the
Chilterns so this was a very welcome sighting of a very smart-looking species.
Dewick’s
Plusia and Oak Rustic were both on my radar as species to be expected here
sooner or later. The other noctuids new
to the garden list were again moths found reasonably locally, Crescent and
Twin-spotted Wainscot being wetland species known from the reed-beds at nearby Calvert
amongst other places, while Suspected is a birch-feeder more associated with
the heathland areas of Bucks although I have found it in a couple of nearby woods
on the clay. Suspected appeared in the
garden on three different occasions over the period of a week and the second example,
more typically marked than the first, is illustrated below.
Many moths did really well in 2019 but a couple which stand out from the crowd are Mallow Larentia clavaria (32 visited in 2019, the previous highest annual total being 3 individuals) and Light Emerald Campaea margaritaria (221 recorded, more than twice the previous highest annual total). There were only 12 sightings of Old Lady Mormo maura here, but that was double what I’ve ever had before of a species which isn’t even a guaranteed annual visitor. In 2019 a caterpillar of the species was found in the garden for the first time.
Westcott specialities included Fox Moth Macrothylacia rubi (1 visit), Lappet Gastropacha quercifolia (4 visits), Garden Tiger Arctia caja (2 visits) & Double Dart Graphiphora augur (1 visit). A final-instar Fox Moth caterpillar was also found walking across the lawn towards the light trap in October, quite possibly the progeny of the adult female which visited on 24th May.
Many moths did really well in 2019 but a couple which stand out from the crowd are Mallow Larentia clavaria (32 visited in 2019, the previous highest annual total being 3 individuals) and Light Emerald Campaea margaritaria (221 recorded, more than twice the previous highest annual total). There were only 12 sightings of Old Lady Mormo maura here, but that was double what I’ve ever had before of a species which isn’t even a guaranteed annual visitor. In 2019 a caterpillar of the species was found in the garden for the first time.
Of the moths which are currently expanding
their range locally, Cypress Pug Eupithecia
phoeniceata (10), Oak Processionary Thaumetopoea
processionea (4),
Scarlet Tiger Callimorpha dominula
(10), Jersey Tiger Euplagia
quadripunctaria (3), Tree-lichen Beauty Cryphia
algae (72), Clifden Nonpareil Catocala
fraxini (2), White-point Mythimna
albipuncta (119) & Kent Black Arches Meganola albula (11) appeared again as expected and all achieved
their highest yet annual totals – and it was certainly a significant jump in
the case of Tree-lichen Beauty and White-point.
A male Gypsy Moth Lymantria dispar
also visited for the third year in a row.
Other macro species which it was really good to see again included Narrow-bordered Five-spot Burnet Zygaena lonicerae (the first since 2005), Buttoned Snout Hypena rostralis (two appearances in the autumn, one found by torchlight on ivy blossom and the other found indoors), Garden Dart Euxoa nigricans (the first here since 2011) and two examples of Dotted Rustic Rhyacia simulans (making it six years with sightings here out of the last nine of this rather enigmatic species).
Other macro species which it was really good to see again included Narrow-bordered Five-spot Burnet Zygaena lonicerae (the first since 2005), Buttoned Snout Hypena rostralis (two appearances in the autumn, one found by torchlight on ivy blossom and the other found indoors), Garden Dart Euxoa nigricans (the first here since 2011) and two examples of Dotted Rustic Rhyacia simulans (making it six years with sightings here out of the last nine of this rather enigmatic species).
Westcott specialities included Fox Moth Macrothylacia rubi (1 visit), Lappet Gastropacha quercifolia (4 visits), Garden Tiger Arctia caja (2 visits) & Double Dart Graphiphora augur (1 visit). A final-instar Fox Moth caterpillar was also found walking across the lawn towards the light trap in October, quite possibly the progeny of the adult female which visited on 24th May.
As in
most years there were a few unexpected absentees but in 2019 they were
species which only ever appear here in small numbers at best. In 2019 they included Small Rivulet Perizoma alchemillata, Poplar Kitten Furcula bifida (whereas close relative Sallow
Kitten Furcula furcula had its best ever
year), Pale-shouldered Brocade Lacanobia
thalassina, Cabbage Moth Mamestra
brassicae and Ingrailed Clay Diarsia
mendica.
Migrant Moths
It was a
reasonable year for migrants at Westcott and they are tabulated below with
first and last noted dates. As mentioned
earlier, Cydia amplana was a first
timer for the garden, otherwise the most interesting visitors were Pearly
Underwing Peridroma saucia and
Delicate Mythimna vitellina (last
noted here in 2006 and 2013 respectively).
Plutella xylostella
|
191
|
10th
June
|
24th
Nov
|
Cydia amplana
|
1
|
25th
August
|
-
|
Udea ferrugalis
|
25
|
29th
July
|
26th
Nov
|
Nomophila noctuella
|
5
|
5th
July
|
3rd
Oct
|
Hummingbird
Hawk-moth
|
26
|
3rd
July
|
12th
Oct
|
Vestal
|
1
|
3rd
October
|
-
|
Dark
Spectacle
|
1
|
23rd
Sep
|
-
|
Silver Y
|
83
|
7th
January
|
25th
Nov
|
Bordered
Straw
|
1
|
4th
July
|
-
|
Scarce
Bordered Straw
|
2
|
25th
Sep
|
30th
Sep
|
Pearly
Underwing
|
1
|
23rd
Oct
|
-
|
Delicate
|
1
|
30th
July
|
-
|
Dark Sword-grass
|
6
|
6th
April
|
29th
Sep
|
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