Having written about one of the bigger moths we see in the UK, Connie, the migrant Convolvulus Hawk-moth, it only seems fair to give a mention to a micro, as opposed to macro moth. So, here’s the Garden Rose Tortrix.
Now, the macro versus micro label may well have been historically about size. The larger moths being macro, the smaller moths being micro, as you might imagine, but there are so many enormous micro moths and so many tiny macro moths in the world that this really doesn’t hold. In fact, the division is one of evolutionary history, the micro moths being a much older grouping.
The micro grouping includes all of the butterflies, which are essentially just a family of micro moths. The only physiological difference between what British English thinks of as butterflies and moths is that the butterflies cannot unhook their forewings from their hindwings. That’s it. Asking what’s the difference between a butterfly and a moth is like asking what’s the difference between a ladybird and a beetle, or a dog and a mammal…
Anyway, back to today’s micro. This tiny two-toned moth is known as a Garden Rose Tortrix, Acleris variegana. It is one of about 11000 worldwide moths that are members of the tortrix family, the Tortricidae. They’re so-called because their larvae roll themselves up in a leaf to pupate and metamorphose into the winged, adult. The word tortrix has the same etymology as the word torque, the word for a twisting force – torquere, meaning to twist.
Earlier this year, our choir got invited to sing (again) with The London Community Gospel Choir, you know, the choir led by the Reverend Bazil Meade that are on the original Tender by Blur and have also worked with Justin Timberlake, Madonna, Gorillaz, and Kylie Minogue. Amazing, yes? What an opportunity. Big crowd too as we would see.
Anyway, there was a powercut during soundcheck, so we didn’t get as much of a chance to run through our supporting set before the show as we’d hoped. No matter. It would be fun, we’d have to wing it, and the crowd were there for the LCGC not us. We also had to run through the two songs we’d be singing with the choir itself during their set – a gospel classic and a Meade original.
The members of the choir, all very friendly, pulled us into their fold, told us to huddle among the numerous stage mics, to not be shy, to sing out loud, sing out proud, sing out strong. One of the soloists, a guy who towered over me by at least a foot and a half, nudge me forward during the soundcheck, basically pushed the mic into my face, “This is you, go for it!” So, I did…like I do…
Well, all rolled off stage, and headed to the “green room” as it was, realised it was all too hot and sweaty in there and wended our way on to the lawned area behind the venue. It was not quite the 2022 heatwave at this point, but that was fast approaching. It was well above 30 degrees on stage when we ran our support set…which went down well. We do an ironic mashup of Blur’s Tender with the Oasis song Champagne Supernova, arranged by our pianist, the inimitable Tim Lihoreau. Meade but on a good show of being impressed, even if it was his song and the Blue-Oasis tension may well have passed him by at the time anyway.
So far, so good. Always enjoy applause and plaudits even if there was one negative comment about the red flower in my black felt hat for the Harry Styles number we did.
Okay, so proper showtime…we’re in the audience at this point, enjoying the LCGC show proper. We’ll get a nod to head backstage towards the end to join them for Oh, Happy Day and then the Meade song as finale. Fun AND games.
We shuffle on, trying to look impressive, but paling into insignificance among the mighty LCGC. I take my place, but Mr Tall Guy isn’t giving any leeway on that mic, it’s up to his head height and I’m down below. Ah, well. It’s his show, just meant I had to sing louder, which I did. I’m not in a choir called bigMouth for nothing, after all.
As regular Sciencebase readers will know by now, this once workaholic science writer is now a highly dedicated mother. As in I am an enthusiastic amateur Lepidopterist. A moth-er, like a bird-er, birder, someone keen to see, observe, understand, and perhaps photograph the subject. This year and last, I’ve also been a bit more focused on being a butterflyer too.
Anyway, part of being a mother usually involves finding ways to see moths. Commonly that involves some kind of lure – a pheromone bung or an ultraviolet (or other) light. And, again, as you will know, I’ve got several lures for enticing moths for observation and the inevitable photoshoot. At the time of writing, I’ve lured and photographed about 450 moths of the 2600 species found in the UK.
The standard approach to nocturnal mothing is to have a box above which a bright light or bright UV source is suspended, often above a funnel or vent. Moths are drawn to the lamp, like moths to a flame but without the fire risk. They might circulate a while and will often spiral or dive into the funnel opening or the vent and then find it rather difficult to navigate their way out again. A good mother will have pre-filled the trap with lots of empty cardboard egg trays. The trapped moths will settle down in the nooks and crannies of these trays for the night ready to be logged and photographed in the morning.
Moth-trap lamps do not only attract moths, beetles, flies, wasps, hornets, worms, snails, slugs, all kinds of creatures will be drawn. But, it also seems so will the larvae of moths, the caterpillars. A few mornings back, while logging the night’s moth haul (before release into undergrowth away from the garden) I found in one of the egg trays, a couple of caterpillars, larvae of the Toadflax Brocade moth. They must have wriggled all the way from the other side of the garden, about 12 metres where there is a patch of Purple Toadflax or perhaps 15 metres from the Common Toadflax (Butter-and-Eggs) patch to the patio whereupon the moth trap sits on lighting-up nights.
The two larvae were pupating and using tiny fragments of the cardboard egg tray to make their protective cocoon. One had made a good start and was almost completely enclosed ready for its metamorphosis, the other had a long way to go and so was still very exposed and so obviously a Toadflax Brocade larva. I’ve relocated the egg tray to an under-cover bench outside the garden shed where hopefully the two will finish their transformation and emerge at some point in 2023 as adult moths. I’ll keep you informed as to their progress if anything changes in the meantime.
TL:DR – The Convolvulus Hawk-moth is an infrequent visitor to British gardens, but they do occasionally turn up, having crossed the channel, and there is evidence of breeding here, but not over-wintering yet. Several were attracted to Nicotiana I grew especially for them.
UPDATE: 8 Sep 2024 Finally, annother Connie, no Nicotiana, just turned up, hung around the wisteria, flew off.
UPDATE: 1 Sep 2022 Another arrived in the garden tonight less than a week after the first, it nectared on the still blooming Nicotiana before diving into the actinic moth trap. I lifted the lid to let it out and it soured away into the night sky, like a whirring wraith in a pink and black stripey mohair rollneck.
The Convolvulus Hawk-moth, named for its larval food plant convolvulus (bindweed) and its hawk-like appearance, is a relatively rare visitor to the UK from mainland Europe.
The books usually say it migrates rarely and will be seen only in the South West of England if it does, but it has appeared elsewhere, often carried in on the same weather as other migrants, such as the Hummingbird Hawk-moth. There’s also the likelihood of the offspring of Spring migrants appearing as adults in the late summer.
The species’ wingspan can be 85 to 120 millimetres, as big as the British Privet Hawk-moth and with those pink and black stripes it’s almost like a close cousin.
The Convolvulus Hawk-moth likes to nectar on tobacco plants and ginger lilies among other flowers and I have been growing the former in our back garden since I started mothing in the hope of seeing a Convolvulus. After our trip to the New Forest with the LepiLED,* I reverted to my trusty 40W actinic trap next to the tobacco plants for the first evening lighting up back home. Within 20 minutes or so I could hear a whirring, humming insect near the plants and with a torch caught site of it with its huge compound eyes glowing like embers in the air. It did not stay long and flew off over neighbouring gardens. I mused on it being another migrant, perhaps a Striped Hawk-moth of which there had been many recent reports across East Anglia and the southern counties, but this moth was bigger, a lot bigger.
I could confirm the Convolvulus ID when it (presumably the same insect) made another appearance in the garden five minutes later. There have been several reports of Convolvulus in the county this year already, so this wasn’t the first.
The one in our garden, sucked a little nectar from the flowers of the garden tobacco plants before heading for the UV lamp and diving into the trap. I quickly took the trap indoors and got setup for a photoshoot. I snapped a few closeups of this beautiful moth before releasing it back to the night air.
As you can see from my photos it has some of the character of the Privet Hawk-moth, another member of the Sphingidae (what the Americans call Sphinx moths as opposed to Hawk-moths). Wingspan can be between 85 and 120mm, this one, I estimated was about 110mm across.
Convolvulus often appears alongside other migrants. It has been a particularly good summer for the distant, much smaller cousin, the Hummingbird Hawk-moth, as I’ve mentioned here and on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram. The Striped Hawk-moth has been reported widely, and I am still hoping that one will turn up here, it would be a grand end to our holiday period if it were to join the Convolvulus in making a late Summer appearance.
*The holiday mothing was limited to lighting up with the LepiLED and logging the Lepidoptera in the morning, most of our adventures were out and about in the local countryside and on the coast. The more general photos from our trip will appear in good time, but right now I am focused on the Convolvulus.
FINAL UPDATE: Back home, checked through the records. 12 species I’d not seen before, at least two of which are usually confined to the South coast and hinterland.
The list of moths I’d not photographed before our New Forest 2022 trip is as follows: Black Arches, Chequered Fruit-tree Tortrix, Cydia amplana, Dusky Thorn, Hedge Rustic, Lesser Swallow Prominent, Lesser Treble Bar, Light Crimson Underwing, Plain Wave, Dark-barred Twin-spot Carpet, Rosy Footman, Six-striped Rustic.
Records now dispatched to Hampshire County Moth Recorder, Mike Wall.
UPDATE: Seventh Night: A warm and dry night, 60 or so moths of 26 species, including one final new for me: Small Square-spot.
UPDATE: Sixth Night. Started off rather dry and balmy, I’d lit up before we left the holiday house for the pub and there was quite a lot of European Hornets hanging around when we got back well after dark. I also caught sight of a Rosy Footman (new for me), a Light Emerald, and a few veneers. But, it started raining heavily during the night.
By Thursday morning there was quite a lot of water in the trap and the egg cartons were soaked, there were still 40 moths of 23 species, with two or three escapees that eluded identification. Once again a few clipped wings present suggesting that the local Robins had been dining at the trap after dawn too.
I managed to fish out the Rosy Footman and another new for me, Light Crimson Underwing (this completes the set of Catocala underwings I’ve photographed). There’s a short video clip of the LCUW on the Sciencebase Instagram, with Going to the Chapel as the background music for good reason given the scientific names of these large underwing moths.
UPDATE: Fifth night. Cool, but not wet. About six moths of 23 species. Some new for the week, like Yellow Shell, Straw Underwing, Mother of Pearl, and Canary-shouldered Thorn. Also, new for me Dark-barred Twin-spot Carpet (very worn, most likely Dark-barred than Red though) and Hedge Rustic. Numerous clipped wings in the trap and bird droppings on the top from avian activity.
UPDATE: Fourth night. Drizzly night, around 70 moths of 30 species. Probably overlooked a couple but also had my first Dusky Thorn and Lesser Swallow Prominent, numerous Small Bloo-vein, lots of Flounced Rustic and Agriphila tristella again, and at least a dozen Red-legged Shield Bug.
UPDATE: Third night numbers were down a lot, but there was still a Buff Footman, another Jersey Tiger, Oak Hook-tip, and a Plain Wave (NFM) and various others (mainly Agriphila tristella and Flounced Rustic). Added some video of the Jersey Tiger to my Instagram with a snippet of appropriate ABBA.
UPDATE: Second night of lighting up, quite a lot more moths around 40-50, including Black Arches (3, NFM), Jersey Tiger (2), Light Emerald (6), Maiden’s Blush, also a European Hornet.
First night off-site with the LepiLED and a portable Robinson-type moth trap was in North Poulner in the New Forest. We ate fairly late but there were Pipistrelle bats circling the trees in the garden overlooking the valley long before dusk felel.
I lit up with the trap right under an oak tree, I had high hopes. Numbers weren’t huge, but there were a couple of species I had not seen before – Six-striped Rustic (Xestia sexstrigata, one of the many noctuid, or owlet moths) and Chequered Fruit-tree Tortrix (Pandemis corylana). The latter is also known as the Hazel Tortrix Moth, the Filbert Tortricid or the Barred Fruit-tree moth and sits within the Tortricidae family.
Full list for the first lit-up night was: Brimstone, Chequered Fruit-tree Tortrix (NFM), Chrysoteuchia culmella (6), Flame Shoulder, Lesser Broad-bordered Yellow Underwing (2), Light Emerald (3), Maiden’s Blush, Rosie Rustic, Six-striped Rustic (2, NFM).
Just to note, when I got up in the middle of the night and took a breath of fresh air, as it were, there was a fox trotting slowly past the moth trap in the relative dark, I don’t think it even saw me standing there, certainly didn’t seem perturbed.
I didn’t have my usual macro kit and “studio” with me, so just basic record shots of the new moths taken with my phone camera or non-macro SLR lens. Note to self: take macro lens and tripod and LED staging kit and flashgun on next trip or regret it!
UPDATE: 2 Sep 2022 We (I) took the LepiLED with a portable trap to the New Forest in August and added 12 or so moths to the list, when we returned from our trip, first night lighting up we saw a Convolvulus Hawk-moth turn up to nectar on the Nicotiana (garden tobacco plants) before diving into the home garden moth trap. Another turned up later that evening and another on night of 1st September.
It was four years in July 2022 that I had been mothing in our back garden with a 40W actinic/UV trap. In that time I’ve photographed well over 400 species of macro and micro moth. I keep logs for the County Moth Recorder, so it’s not only a photographic venture it’s citizen science too.
By 2020/2021 I felt like I had probably seen most of the species of moth that are in this area, but there are always surprises that turn up and in those years there were 31 and 37 species that turned up that I hadn’t seen before. It’s the middle of August and so far in 2022, I have logged well over 300 species in the garden (and elsewhere as noted) this year, with 45 of them being species new to me.
Arches, Black (Lymantria monacha, Linnaeus, 1758) NF*
Beauty, Pine (Panolis flammea, Denis & Schiffermüller, 1775)
Bell, Crescent (Epinotia bilunana, Haworth, 1811)
Bell Pale Lettuce (Eucosma conterminana, or could be E. fulvana)
You can find photos of all these species in my Lepidoptera galleries over on my Imaging Storm website. Photos of 47 species of butterfly and 460 moths as of 1st September 2022.
The annual Cambridge Folk Festival was on hiatus thanks to the pandemic and so a lot of people had missed out on their musical fix at Cherry Hinton Hall for three years…us?
Mrs Sciencebase and myself had not been back since 1991 having attended three years on the trot from 1989 when I first went up to Cambridge (working, not as a student, haha). Mrs Sciencebase wasn’t Mrs at the time, and Sciencebase itself was still a few years away yet.
We were excited to see all the new bands and performers and checked the lineup: Clannad and Suzanne Vega among others…interesting…they were on last time we attended too! Both gave ripping performances this time around.
As did (in no particular order): The Young’uns, Spiers and Boden, Show of Hands, The Spooky Men’s Chorale, St Paul and the Broken Bones, Magpie Arc, Billy Bragg, The Gipsy Kings, Seasick Steve, Findlay, Passenger, Afro Celt Sound System, O’Hooley and Tidow, Chico Trujillo, Brooks Williams, Davina and The Vagabonds, N’Famady Kouyate, The Copper Family, VRï, Beans on Toast, Black Fen Folk Club, the “Irish pub”, Orchestra Baobab, Janice Burns & Jon Duran, Tapestri, Mishra…I may have missed a few of the acts we saw, will fill the gaps as and when. So many acts we missed…always the way with festivals.
There were lots of highlights: meeting The Young’uns and Jon Boden, taking part in two singing workshops (with Nancy Kerr from Magpie Arc and The Spooky Men, as well as observing a melody workshop with John Spiers). Trying out some lovely (expensive) guitars, having a cajon jam with Adam from C5 the band, lots of surprise meet-ups with friends, and eating and drinking some lovely food and drink with Mrs Sciencebase and great weather (it poured and was cold last time). We camped from the Thursday night onwards, but had to decamp late Sunday evening. It was a relief to get home to have a shower, but I’d love to be back at another festival next week, and I’d take a guitar next time to sit in on some of the jams.
I took most of the photos on pocket Lumix camera (a DMC-TZ35). Those with no logo or with an angled dB/ logo I snapped with my phone camera and processed in SnapSeed. The photo of yours truly taken by Mrs Sciencebase with her phone.
TL:DR – You can keep up with more of my nature-oriented photos and other images on the Sciencebase Instagram.
Photos are mostly taken on a Canon 7D mark ii with either a Sigma 150-600mm for the bird shots and a Tamron 90mm 1:1 for the macro shots of moths and butterflies. Older photos would have been taken on a Canon 6D with those and other lenses and older still on various compact digital cameras, Lumix, Canon, Nikon. Occasionally phone photos. As of February 2021, 600 followers. 730 followers as of the end of July 2022. 780 followers as of March 2023.
I asked ChatGPT to write me a marketing blurb to try and persuade you to follow me on Instagram. Do you feel persuaded?
Attention all nature lovers! Are you looking for an Instagram account that will transport you to the beauty of the natural world? Then look no further! The Sciencebase Instagram page is the perfect place for you. Creator, David Bradley, specializes in capturing the intricate details of moths and butterflies, the majesty and beauty of birds, and serene landscapes in a special style he likes to call “smallscapes”. You could say, every photo is a masterpiece that will hopefully leave you feeling awestruck and inspired.
Not only will you be able to enjoy stunning imagery, but you’ll also learn fascinating facts about each species featured. The Sciencebase Insta is perfect for those who are passionate about nature and want to deepen their knowledge of the world around us. Plus, if you’re someone who is interested in photography, you’ll love seeing the creative ways David captures these natural wonders.
So what are you waiting for? Follow Sciencebase on Instagram and let’s embark on a journey through the incredible beauty of the natural world together!
I have put in a bit of effort to see more butterfly species over the last couple of years. Not travelling much farther than local nature reserves but homing in on ancient woodlands and sites where a few target species are known to thrive. So here are my lifers, six this year, six last year, several others in the year or two before that I’ve not listed.
Adonis Blue (Devil’s Dyke 2022)
Black Hairstreak (Monks Wood 2022)
Chalkhill Blue (Devil’s Dyke 2021)
Dark Green Fritillary (Devil’s Dyke 2021)
Green Hairstreak (Les King Wood 2021)
Grizzled Skipper (Woodwalton Marsh 2022)
Purple Emperor (Woodwalton Fen NNR 2021)
Purple Hairstreak (2021)
Small Blue (Trumpington Meadows 2022)
Wall (Seahouses 2022)
White Admiral (Brampton Wood 2022)
White-letter Hairstreak (Overhall Grove 2021)
I should perhaps add that I was first to log two new butterfly colonies – White-letter Hairstreak in Manor Farm Wood, Rampton and not far from there a colony of Purple Hairstreak on an ash tree close to the Cottenham Lode. I was also first to log a large number of Clouded Yellow (perhaps as many as two dozen) on a wildflower meadow along the Earith Bridleway just as you step off RSPB Ouse Fen close to the River Great Ouse.
My butterfly photo gallery is available on my Imaging Storm website where you can see my photos of all of the species mentioned above and more. Follow me on Instagram for more Lepidoptera as they emerge.
I had my first Lymantria dispar sighting of the year in the garden last night. He was very battered and worn and had a chunk missing from his left wing. As such, I let him on his way without potting him to photograph and then release. So this is perhaps one of his ancestors photographed on my finger last year!
There’s a call in the US to remove inappropriate vernacular names for organisms and such from the textbooks. So, Stateside the moth is now often referred to as the Spongy Moth. The proposed name comes from the common name used in France and French-speaking Canada, Spongieuse, and alludes to the spongy mass of eggs laid by the females.
Incidentally, Geoffrey de Havilland was an amateur Lepidopterist, hence many of the names he gave his aircraft referring to moths, Tiger Moth, Gypsy Moth etc. I doubt there will be a name change of those vintage aircraft though.
Anyway, we always have the pseudo Latin scientific binomial, Lymantria dispar, to fall back on. I am not entirely sure whether that is a more politically correct name than the original English name of this species because it loosely translates as the “sexually dimorphic destroyer”.
Lymantria dispar is commonly still known as the Gypsy Moth in the UK, a name with racist connotations, hence the need to adopt an alternative vernacular name for the species.