Welcome

Hello and welcome to my moth Blog. I now reside in a small village in East Cambridgeshire called Fordham. My Blog's aim is to promote and encourage others to participate in the wonderful hobby that is Moth-trapping.
Moth records are vital for building a picture of our ecosystem around us, as they really are the bottom of the food chain. They are an excellent early indicator of how healthy a habitat is. I openly encourage people to share their findings via social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter & Instagram.
So why do we do it? well for some people it is to get an insight into the world of Moths, for others it is to build a list of species much like 'Twitching' in the Bird world. The reason I do it....you just never know what you might find when you open up that trap! I hope to show what different species inhabit Cambridgeshire and neighbouring counties.
On this Blog you will find up-to-date records and pictures.
I run a trap regularly in my garden and also enjoy doing field trips to various localities over several different counties.
Please also check out the links in the sidebar to the right for other people's Blogs and informative Websites.
Thanks for looking and happy Mothing!

KEY

NFY = New Species For The Year
NFG = New Species For The Garden
NEW! = New Species For My Records

Any Species highlighted in RED signifies a totally new species for my records.

If you have any questions or enquiries then please feel free to email me
Contact Email : bensale@rocketmail.com

My Latest Notables and Rarities

Monday 20 June 2016

Field Trip - Ashwell Quarry - 18/06/16


On Saturday night the Herts Moth Group made a trip to the far North of the County to Ashwell Quarry.
Having been granted permission from the local land-owner, HMWT and a local neighbour who kindly got us access to the site via a locked gate, we went about setting up 8 lights spread around the Chalk grassland, Quarry and scrub.
Ashwell Quarry is an important site for wildlife and is to be found just outside of the village of Ashwell with it's rich wildflower meadows and chalk grassland. Unfortunately the site in certain parts was swathed in long grass, great for Crambus species but not ideal for the low-growing chalk plants for which the specialist moth caterpillars feed upon.

The weather through the course of the day had been grey, overcast but with little wind and as there was no sun the temperature had struggled to reach 16 degrees.
Upon a arrival at 8pm we were greeted with clearing skies and a bright near-full moon or the 'enemy' as Colin put it.
Thankfully by 10pm as it was just getting dark, cloud began to roll towards us from the North-east and granted us the cloud cover that we so desperately needed if we were to actually catch some moths on the night.
With 8 traps set-up it may have seemed a bit over-kill but I find that the more effort you put in, the more you get out and this was the case tonight where the suitcase Actinic trap attracted both Marbled Coronet and Phtheochroa sodaliana, completely new moths for me and well worth the brave effort of running cables along the chalk cliff face.

The third most interesting moth was a single specimen of the unusual looking Luquetia lobella, a moth that seems to be quite scarce in he County, another new moth for me.

Netted Pug was also a hit with everyone, two stunning examples trapped on the night.

We also got two wetland wanderer's possibly blown in on the breeze which picked up at around midnight, they were Southern Wainscot and Dotted Fan-foot.

All in all a pleasing 108 species were recorded with a few outstanding micro moths to check.

List in Alphabetical order.
 
Numbers below are approximate.
 
Catch Report - 18/06/16 - Ashwell Quarry - 6x 125w MV Robinson Trap 1x 26w & 40w Actinic Trap and 1x 80w Actinic Suitcase Trap

103 Species in total

Macro Moths - 72 Species

Angle Shades 1 
Barred Straw 2
Beautiful Hook-tip 5
Bright-line Brown-eye 1
Broken-barred Carpet 1
Brown Rustic 4
Buff Ermine 1
Burnished Brass 3
Clouded Border 1
Clouded Brindle 2 
Clouded-bordered Brindle 1
Common Carpet 4
Common Marbled Carpet 3
Common Pug 1
Clouded Silver 6
Common Swift 20+
Common Wainscot 5
Dark Arches 1
Dotted Fan-foot 1
Flame 4
Flame Shoulder 1
Freyer's Pug 2
Ghost Moth 1
Green Carpet 15+
Green Pug 5
Grey Pug 3
Heart & Club 2
Heart & Dart 30+
Ingrailed Clay 1
Large Nutmeg 20+
Large Yellow Underwing 5
Light Arches 2 
Light Brocade 2
Light Emerald 4
Marbled Coronet 1[NEW!]
Marbled Minor 2
Middle-barred Minor 3
Mottled Beauty 5
Mottled Pug 2
Mottled Rustic 3
Netted Pug 2
Pale Oak Beauty 4
Peppered Moth 1
Pretty Chalk Carpet 2
Purple Bar 1
Rustic Shoulder-knot 2
Sandy Carpet 1
Setaceous Hebrew Character 40+
Shaded Broad-bar 1
Shaded Pug 20+
Shoulder-striped Wainscot 1
Silver-ground Carpet 3
Silver-Y 2
Small Clouded Brindle 2
Small Dotted Buff 1
Small Fan-foot 1
Small Waved Umber 1
Snout 5
Southern Wainscot
Spectacle 1
Straw Dot 10
Tawny Marbled Minor 3 - Gen Det
Treble Brown Spot 1
Treble Lines 5
Turnip Moth 1
Uncertain 1
Vine's Rustic 1
White Ermine 3
White-point 1
Willow Beauty 2
Yellow Shell 1
Yellow-barred Brindle 1

Micro Moths - 36 Species

Agapeta hamana 5
Agapeta zoegana 4
Anania hortulata 1
Aphomia sociella 1
Argyresthia spinosella 1
Blastobasis lacticolella 1
Celypha lacunana 3
Chrysoteuchia culmella 10+
Clepsis consimilana 1
Cnephasia asseclana 1 - Gen Det
Cochylimorpha straminea 2
Cochylis hybridella 3
Cochylis molliculana
Crambus lathoniellus 10+
Crambus pascuella 1
Ditula angustiorana 1
Ephestia parasitella 1 - Gen Det
Epiphyas postvittana 2
Eucosma cana 5
Eucosma obumbratana 1
Hedya nubiferana 1
Hedya pruniana 8
Homoeosoma sinuella 2
Luquetia lobella 1 [NEW!]
Metzneria metzneriella 2
Notocelia trimaculana 4
Notocelia uddmanniana 2
Phtheochroa rugosana 1
Phtheochroa sodaliana 1 [NEW!]
Plutella xylostella 15+
Pseudargyrotoza conwagana 3
Scoparia ambigualis 10+
Scoparia pyralella 2
Stenoptilia pterodactyla 1

Luquetia lobella











Marbled Coronet












Netted Pug












Phtheochroa rugosana & sodaliana













Stenoptilia pterodactyla












White-point


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