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Exmouth, Western Australia, Australia
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Bovingdon Brickworks - Hemel Hempstead - Field TripDavid, Steve and myself made a trip to Bovingdon Brickworks on Thursday night to see what we could attract to the lamps.The day had been perfect with sunny intervals, plenty of cloud cover and a high of 27 degrees. The forecast was for clear skies towards the evening and this was indeed the case.With a near full moon we were just hoping that it was warm enough for the moths to emerge and venture out from the undergrowth.Indeed it was! With the temperature staying relatively mild and the car sensor still reading 13 degrees at 2.30am.The catch was phenomenal, plenty of species, but what made it even better was the sheer amount of some species of moths, some numbering well over 40 individuals, so numbers below are as close as I could record.Highlight for me was my first Gypsonoma oppressana.4 Green Arches and 2 Purple Clays were also great additions.It was also fantastic to see so many Cinnabar's (24).It just goes to show how important this site is for wildlife and on this occasion, Moths! Catch Report - 12/06/14 - Bovingdon Brickworks - Hemel Hempstead - 2x 125w MV Robinson Trap, 1x 160w MBT Robinson Trap & 1x 80w Actinic Suitcase Trap.86 Macros and 46 Micros (132 species)Macro Moths6x Angle Shades1x Beautiful Golden-Y3x Beautiful Hook-tip2x Bright-line Brown-eye8x Brimstone Moth6x Brown Rustic1x Brown Silver-line3x Buff Arches4x Buff Ermine1x Buff-tip2x Burnished Brass24x Cinnabar2x Clouded Border40+ Clouded Silver1x Clouded-bordered Brindle2x Common Carpet1x Common Emerald2x Common Footman10x Common Marbled Carpet5x Common Pug6x Common Swift1x Common Wave1x Common White Wave8x Coronet3x Dark Arches10x Double Square-spot1x Dusky Brocade2x Elephant Hawk-moth3x Engrailed1x Eyed Hawk-moth1x Figure of Eighty5x Flame1x Flame Carpet6x Flame Shoulder1x Foxglove Pug5x Freyer's Pug1x Garden Carpet4x Green Arches1x Green Carpet2x Green Pug5x Green Silver-lines10x Grey Pug10x Heart & Dart20x Ingrailed Clay2x July Highflyer1x Large Nutmeg8x Large Yellow Underwing1x Light Brocade5x Light Emerald2x Lobster Moth1x Maple Prominent10x Marbled Minor1x Middle-barred Minor5x Mottled Beauty1x Mottled Pug4x Mottled Rustic1x Nutmeg2x Orange Footman2x Pale Prominent1x Pale Tussock4x Peach Blossom1x Pebble Hook-tip3x Peppered Moth1x Poplar Grey2x Poplar Hawk-moth2x Purple Clay1x Red Twin-spot Carpet3x Riband Wave3x Rustic Shoulder-knot8x Scorched Wing2x Setaceous Hebrew Character5x Shoulder-striped Wainscot5x Silver-ground Carpet7x Small Angle Shades2x Small Elephant Hawk-moth3x Small Fan-foot1x Small Phoenix1x Small Square-spot3x Snout40+ Straw Dot2x Tawny Marbled Minor3x Treble Lines1x Uncertain3x White Ermine1x White-pinion Spotted5x Willow BeautyMicro Moths1x Gypsonoma oppressana [NEW!]1x Gypsonoma dealbana3x Crambus pascuella10x Crambus lathoniellus1x Nemapogon cloacella1x Phlyctaenia perlucidalis1x Stenoptilia bipunctidactyla2x Hedya nubiferana5x Hedya pruniana2x Coleophora sp20+ Cochylimorpha straminea1x Mompha propinquella1x Mompha raschkiella5x Metzneria metzneriella12x Pandemis heparana5x Pandemis cerasana2x Aphomia sociella10x Scoparia ambigualis2x Scoparia pyralella1x Scoparia subfusca 2x Eudonia pallida2x Dipleurina lacustrata30+ Pseudargyrotoza conwagana2x Celypha lacunana5x Udea olivalis1x Anthophila fabriciana1x Phyllonorycter harrisella5x Cnephasia sp2x Eurrhypara hortulata1x Strophedra weirana5x Epiblema cynosbatella5x Epiblema trimaculana2x Epiblema uddmanniana2x Agapeta hamana1x Caloptilia syringella5x Evergestis forficalis1x Eucosma cana2x Eucosma hohenwartiana1x Eucosma conterminana2x Tortrix viridana1x Archips podana1x Yponomeuta evonymella 1x Emmetia marginea5x Cochylis atricapitana1x Prays fraxinella/ruficeps1x Unknown Gelechid
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Hexton Chalk Pit Field Trip report - 21/05/14Another trip out last night, and I was debating for hours beforehand whether to chance it because of the forecast heavy rain, supposedly starting at around 7pm.I got to Hexton at 8.30pm and the sky was clearing slightly which I thought was odd but the temperature was a steady 15 degrees.I was quite surprised at how much the vegetation had grown up since my last visit 6 weeks ago, it was lovely seeing all the wildflowers at knee height now.I proceeded to setup and decided on running 3 lights.The moths started to fly almost instantly and well before dusk...maybe they knew something that I didn't!First to the light were loads of Common Swifts, oodles of Green Carpet and swarms of Cochylimorpha straminea.The species were steady coming to the light, then all hell broke loose and there was some big stuff coming in, lots of Pale Tussocks, a female Poplar Hawk-moth, Lime Hawk-moth, Elephant Hawk-moth and by the end of the session 9 Small Elephant Hawk-moth!A few chalk specialities turned up, notably Pretty Chalk Carpet and Shaded Pug, and then the heavens opened! Everything was soaked and it was a real mission packing up and using my coat to cover the generator! All good fun and games.There was also a small flurry of migrant activity with Silver-Y and Plutella xylostella turning up, no doubt off of the South-westerly winds. The Light Feathered Rustic did not turn up.Catch Report - Hexton Chalk Pit - 09/04/14 - 2x 125w MV Robinson Trap, 1x 160w MBT Robinson TrapLights run from 9.00pm until 11.00pmMacro Moths25+ Green Carpet1x Common Carpet1x Barred Hook-tip2x Silver-ground Carpet20+ Common Swift3x Chinese Character3x Grey Pug3x Marbled White spot4x White Ermine1x Small Waved Umber5x Small Phoenix8x Pale Tussock1x Purple Bar8x Flame Shoulder 5x Red Twin-spot Carpet1x Pretty Chalk Carpet9x Small Elephant Hawk-moth1x Lime Hawk-moth1x Poplar Hawk-moth1x Elephant Hawk-moth5x Common Pug2x Mottled Pug10x Shaded Pug3x Treble Lines1x Angle Shades1x Oak-tree Pug1x Setaceous Hebrew Character8x Brimstone Moth1x V-pug5x Clouded Silver1x Silver-Y1x Marbled Minor2x Waved Umber1x Common Marbled Carpet1x Light Brocade3x ShearsMicro Moths1x Celypha lacunana10x Elachista argentella15+ Scoparia ambigualis1x Monpis weaverella1x Nematopogon schwarziellus1x Endrosis sarcitrella1x Pschye casta1x Plutella xylostella40+ Cochylimorpha straminea5x Pseudargyrotoza conwagana5x Epiblema rosaecolana1x Metzneria metzneriella
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Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia
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ERDB last seen in Hatfield Forest 1992Thorndon Country Park, Brentwood
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Up to Beds! Home Wood - Field Trip - 02/07/14Hi allLast night I joined Matt and Trent (Or Lionel, confused.com lol), at Home Wood near Biggelswade in Bedfordshire, hopping Counties for the first time this year (in fact I shall be travelling to Essex tonight, two Counties in as many days).Conditions were absolutely spot on with dominant cloud cover and a warm sultry temperature we set about our business to cover a nice wide area of the woodland.But before that we had to do a spot of tractor pulling.. well van, as Trent's van got stuck in the mud (I wonder if that piece of rope ever came off the tow-bar?)The evening started well with plenty of micros and Geometers turning up first to the sheet.Then at about 11pm it all went a bit mental really, the traps that we had left wee teeming with moths, you could barely see the trap underneath them, peering into the skinner actinic was like something out of a tropical rainforest catch and inhalation was definitely not a good idea at this point!I have yet to write the list up as I have spent all morning photographing all of the moths which hasn't been easy with the warm weather and wind.I think we must be knocking on the door of 200 species of Macro and Micro for the night.Acleris kochiella, Assara terebrella, Eulamprotes atrella, Acleris holmiana, Hedya ochroleucana, Larch Pug, Mere Wainscot, Olindia schumacherana and Zeiraphera ratzeburgiana were new for meSo here are a few beauties from last night, mainly micros and several were new to me.I wonder if we get a first for Bedfordshire out of all the things we potted, and the sack load of tubes heading David Manning's way.Catch Report - 02/07/14 - Home Wood - Nr.Biggleswade - 1x 125w MV Robinson Trap, 1x 160w MBT Robinson Trap & 1x 80w Actinic Suitcase Trap.Numbers below are approximate106 Macros and 67 Micros ( 173 species)Macro Moths2x Barred Red2x Barred Straw1x Barred Yellow5x Beautiful Hook-tip1x Black Arches1x Blackneck2x Blood-vein2x Bright-line Brown-eye5x Brimstone Moth1x Broad-bordered Yellow Underwing4x Brown Rustic1x Brown Scallop1x Brown-line Bright-eye2x Brown-tail5x Buff Arches10+ Buff Footman3x Buff-tip1x Burnished Brass1x Chinese Character1x Cinnabar2x Clay20+ Clouded Border2x Clouded Brindle30+ Clouded Silver1x Clouded-bordered Brindle 1x Common Carpet3x Common Footman1x Common Pug2x Common Rustic1x Common Swift2x Common Wave10+ Common White Wave1x Coxcomb Prominent10+ Dark Arches2x Dingy Footman1x Dingy Shears1x Dingy Shell1x Double-striped Pug10+ Dun-bar15+ Dwarf Cream Wave1x Early Thorn1x Elephant Hawk-moth2x Engrailed5x Fan-foot1x Flame1x Garden Carpet1x Ghost Moth4x Green Pug1x Green Silver-lines2x Grey Pug1x Haworth's Pug3x Heart & Club3x Heart & Dart2x July Highflyer1x Larch Pug20+ Large Twin-spot Carpet5x Large Yellow Underwing1x Leopard Moth5x Light Emerald1x Lunar-spotted Pinion1x Maiden's Blush1x Map-winged Swift2x Maple Prominent5x Marbled Minor10+ Marbled White Spot3x Mere Wainscot10+ Mottled Beauty2x Oak Nycteoline2x Peach Blossom5x Peppered Moth1x Pine Hawk-moth1x Poplar Grey1x Poplar Hawk-moth2x Pretty Chalk Carpet1x Privet Hawk-moth1x Purple Bar15+ Riband Wave1x Rustic1x Satin Beauty2x Scarce Footman2x Scarce Silver-lines2x Setaceous Hebrew Character3x Shaded Broad-bar1x Shears3x Short-cloaked Moth5x Single-dotted Wave2x Slender Brindle5x Small Dotted Buff5x Small Fan-foot25+ Small Fan-footed Wave1x Small Phoenix5x Smoky Wainscot10+ Snout1x Spectacle1x Spruce Carpet15+ Straw Dot2x Swallow-tailed Moth1x Sycamore2x Tawny Marbled Minor1x Tawny-barred Angle4x Treble Brown Spot2x Uncertain1x V-Pug2x White Satin Moth1x Wormwood Pug8x Yellow-tailMicro MothsAcleris holmiana 1Acleris laterana/comariana 1Acleris kochiella 1Aethes rubigana 1Agapeta hamana 10+Agapeta zoegana 3Agriphila straminella 3Aleimma loeflingiana 50+Ancylis achatana 2Apotomis capreana 1Archips crataegana 5Archips podana 2Archips xylosteana 2Argyresthia albistria 1Argyresthia brockeella 2Argyresthia goedartella 1Assara terebrella 1Batia lunaris 1Batia unitella 3Blastobasis lacticolella 2Blastodacna hellerella 2Bryotropha terrella 5Catoptria pinella 1Celypa lacunana 8Celypa striana 5Chrysoteuchia culmella 10Cochylis hybridella 2Conobathra repandana 10Crambus lathoniellus 1Crambus pascuella 3Cryptoblabes bistriga 1Dipleurina lacustrata 2Ditula angustiorana 5Endrosis sarcitella 1Ephestia parasitellaEpiblema uddmanniana 3Epinotia bilunana 1Epinotia brunnichana 3Eucosma cana 5Eucosma hohenwartiana 1Eucosma obumbratana 10Eudemis profundana 1Eulamprotes atrellaGypsonoma dealbana 1Gypsonoma sociana 1Hedya ochroleucanaHedya pruniana 5Hedya salicella 1Hofmannophila pseudospretella 2Olindia schumacherana 5Orthopygia glaucinalis 2Pammene fasciana 1Pandemis cerasana 10+Pandemis heparana 2Paraswammerdamia nebulella 3Phycitodes binaevella 1Pleuroptya ruralis 10Prays fraxinella 5Pterophorus pentadactyla 2Rhopobota naevana 2Scoparia ambigualis 5Scoparia basistrigalis 8Spilonota ocellana 2Syncopacma larseniella sp 5Tortrix viridana 5Zeiraphera ratzeburgiana 1Zeiraphera isertana 10
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Gladsaxe Municipality, Hovedstaden, Denmark
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Cradley, Malvern, Worcs, SO729470
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A muggy and drizzly nightNot last night, but the previous night, after a nice warm day and highs of nigh on 23 degrees, the sky clouded over as I was just debating whether to run the trap on the third consecutive night...I did indeed as the conditions looked perfect.A few more additions to the garden year list, Slender Pug and Teleiodes vulgella was the pick of the bunch.Ingrailed Clay seems to have stopped now and Dark Arches is probably going to increase now, Bright-line Brown-eye still having a cracking year and 5 examples of Common White Wave is the most I have ever recorded in one trap before.Also a second brood Engrailed was found on the side of the trap, the slightly early date of this second brood could suggest a third brood may be recorded in August.Also of interest, I haven't recorded Pandemis cerasana or heparana this year yet (both recorded last year) but I got my first corylana last night, suggesting I may have missed these two common species this year.Will try trapping again tonight, after a break last night (cool and clear)Catch Report - 17/06/14 - Back Garden Stevenage - 1x 125w MV Robinson TrapMacro Moths1x Slender Pug [NFY]1x Double Square-spot [NFY]4x Dark Arches3x Dot Moth1x Green Pug2x Freyer's Pug2x Large Yellow Underwing3x Common Footman1x Engrailed 2x Flame Shoulder 12x Mottled Rustic 22x Heart & Dart1x Poplar Hawk-moth1x Flame2x Grey Pug 2x Light Emerald 2x Marbled Minor2x Green Silver-lines 2x Garden Carpet 7x Brown Rustic 1x Vine's Rustic1x Clouded Silver1x Clouded Border1x Spectacle1x Maiden's Blush1x Orange Footman5x Common White Wave1x Common Swift1x Mottled Beauty6x Bright-line Brown-eye8x Uncertain1x Pale Mottled Willow1x Large NutmegMicro Moths 1x Epiblema uddmanniana [NFY]1x Endotricha flammealis [NFY]1x Amblyptilia acanthadactyla [NFY]1x Blastobasis lacticolella [NFY]1x Archips xylosteana [NFY]1x Pandemis corylana [NFY]1x Teleiodes vulgella [NFY]5x Tortrix viridana2x Dipleurina lacustrata1 Emmelina monodactyla 1x Epiphyas postvittana 4x Celypha lacunana1x Hedya nubiferana 1x Udea olivalis1x Udea prunalis 3x Aphomia sociella 4x Aleimma loeflingiana 3x Chrysoteuchia culmella 3x Scoparia ambigualis
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Cradley, Malvern, Worcs. SO729470
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Lateral. Scale bar 1 mm.Lectotype 6142:1
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A trip down to Dungeness in Kent on Saturday night proved to be the coolest conditions we have experienced for a while, with clear skies, bright moon and misty air coming from the sea. As you can imagine it wasn't great and the moths were few and far between, but I did manage a few new ones for me. Yellow Belle, Pale Grass Eggar, Antler Moth, Celypha cespitana, Aroga velocella and Cynaeda dentalis were all new for me. There are still some Bactra's to confirm and a few unidentified micros to sort out.All in all despite the catastrophic weather I was pleased to pick up some new ones.
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Gladsaxe Municipality, Hovedstaden, Denmark
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Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia
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Well the onslaught of the usual suspects is still going strong, but the amount of species turning up to the trap has really ground to a halt.I have just listed extras that I got on this night, that did not feature in the previous nights catch, as time is of a premium lately.Rusty Dot Pearl was new for the garden albeit extremely washed out, and heralds probably the end of migrant activity for now, as we are expecting the wind to swing around from the north.Another possibly good record would be the micro, Gelechia nigra. It is a scarce moth nationwide and there is only one confirmed record from Hertfordshire in 1890! Labeled as extinct at present.Unfortunately needs must and the moth has been pinned ready for genitalia dissection, see what you think, I hope I am right.Another good one for the garden was the Tortrix, Cochylis molliculana. This species is certainly spreading northwards, having first seen it on the coast a few years back, then last year on my parents farm South-east of here.Catch Report - 21/08/13 - Back Garden Stevenage - 1x 125w MV Robinson trap Macro Moths1x Lime-speck Pug [NFY]1x Oak Hook-tip2x Marbled Beauty1x Maple ProminentMicro Moths1x Gelechia nigra???? pending1x Udea ferrugalis[NFG]1x Cochylis molliculana [NFG]1x Clepsis consimilana1x Catoptria falsella2x Acleris variegana1x Carcina quercana1x Cydia splendana1x Evergestis forficalis1x Cacoecimorpha pronubana
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Dorsal.Nontype MZLU-LEP00004659
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13th July 2013: Broxbourne Wood, Hertfordshire13th July 2013: Broxbourne Wood, HertfordshireI am not sure if it was the phenomenally hot day on Saturday, with temperatures reaching 30 degrees Celsius, or the fact that this trip was to one of the county hot-spots for all things ecological, but we did have a staggering 27 people turn up for the Herts Moth Group trip to Broxbourne Wood National Nature Reserve on 13th July 2013. The West Car Park was completely filled; at one point a police car nosed in, looked, probably thought we were a bunch of weirdos and immediately drove off having turned on his blue lights! In addition to myself, five other people had brought traps and so, as darkness approached, we made use of the fact that the wood has a long and straight ride up the middle; traps were loaded into my Landrover and dropped off at intervals along the ride where they were set up by their owners. In all we ended up with 10 lights here, stretched over a linear distance of 700 metres but, of course, dipping into the sides and various clearings. I confess that I was rather lazy and only one of these (the furthest from the car park) was mine, but as it turned out we really did not need the other five I had in the vehicle. Once these lights were fired up, I also set up a sheet on the side of the Landrover in the West Car Park. People were then free to wander along the trap line and/or stay at the sheet and see what came in.Almost immediately, the moths started coming and they were still coming as the last four of us packed up the last trap at just after 3 am (most people having left in stages between midnight and about 2 am). I am pretty sure that if we had stayed another hour until daybreak we could easily have added a dozen or more further species to the list, but as it is we had to make do with a total of 208 moth species! Very recently, I was moaning that hundred nights were a thing of the past (and of course, when moth-ers talk of hundred nights they mean 100 macros). Well our macro total on Saturday night was 116 species. The astute will realise that this means we had 92 species of micro, but to my knowledge there are at least 3 further species awaiting dissection and it is possible that when this list appears that someone will e-mail me with others that I have overlooked. There are some rather good moths for Hertfordshire in the list use the Herts Moth Book (or if you are under 50, the web site) to look them up. In number order, I might perhaps suggest you look up, amongst others, 397: Glyphipterix thrasonella (rare in the county); 1088: Pseudosciaphila branderiana (very local); 1449: Elegia similella (nationally scarce); 1494: Capperia britanniodactyla (last recorded in the county at this site); 1771a: Thera cupressata Cypress Carpet (recent colonist first county record was in 2006); 1943: Hypomecis roboraria Great Oak Beauty (extremely local we had several in the traps and at the sheet); 2039: Atolmis rubricollis Red-necked Footman (almost certainly part of the recent immigration we had 6). Two species, in the form of 0926: Phalonidia manniana and 1375: Ostrinia nubilalis have recently been split into two species each we have retained specimens but not yet looked at these critically. It was good to have both Aethes cnicana and Aethes rubigana so they could be compared and there were other species pairs too, which made the evening informative as well as fun (e.g., Clouded Brindle and Clouded Bordered-brindle). Happily, the numbers of individuals of each species appear to have resumed a near normal setting, although there were singles of just a few species. There were several Satin Beauties, mostly in my trap at the far end of the line and at the end of the session around 2.30 am. Here too, I am told by others, Violet Ground Beetles (Carabus violaceus) were making off with large numbers of Leopard Moths that had not made it all the way to the safety of the trap! Good numbers of Great Oak Beauty emphasise the nature of the woodland habitat at Broxbourne.Those marked with an asterisk (*) have been named by genitalia dissection. Thanks to all the trap operators who gave me lists of moths from their traps throughout the course of the evening. Please tell me if I missed anything.C.W.PlantBelow I have listed the species that were present in my traps.As the group was spread out, my traps got different species to what the others got, the best species by far were 2 scarce Map-winged Swifts that came to the Actinic.Also the rare micros wee very pleasing to see in my traps.12/07/13 Broxbourne Woods - 1x 125w MV Robinson Trap, 1x 160w MBT Trap & 1x 80w Actinic Trap run from 9.45pm until 3.00amGhost MothMap-winged SwiftTischeria ekebladellaLeopard MothCaloptilia alchimiellaArgyresthia goedartellaScythropia crataegellaYponomeuta evonymellaParaswammerdamia nebulella [NEW!] Cedestis gysseleniella [NEW!]Prays fraxinellaPlutella xylostella Ypsolopha ustellaColeophora flavipennellaBatia unitellaCarcina quercanaPseudatemelia flavifrontella [NEW!]Parachronistis albiceps [NEW!]Teleiodes vulgellaTeleiodes luculellaBlastodacna hellerellaPhalonidia mannianaAgapeta hamanaAethes cnicanaCochylis atricapitanaPandemis cerasana Pandemis heparana Archips podana Archips xylosteana Lozotaeniodes formosanus Epagoge grotiana Ditula angustioranaPseudargyrotoza conwaganaCnephasia asseclana*Aleimma loeflingianaTortrix viridanaSpatalistis bifasciana [NEW!]Celypha lacunanaHedya prunianaHedya nubiferanaHedya salicellaApotomis turbidanaAncylis achatana Zeiraphera isertanaEpiblema uddmannianaEucosma canaEucosma obumbratanaSpilonota ocellanaRhyacionia pinivoranaChrysoteuchia culmellaCrambus lathoniellusCatoptria pinellaDipleurina lacustrataEurrhypara hortulataPerinephela lancealisUdea prunalisUdea olivalis Endotricha flammealis Phycita roborellaEphestia parasitellaCapperia britanniodactyla [NEW!]Pterophorus pentadactylaAdaina microdactylaDrinkerPebble Hook-tipPeach BlossomBuff ArchesFigure of EightyBlotched EmeraldCommon EmeraldClay Triple-linesBlood-veinLeast CarpetSmall Fan-footed WaveTreble Brown SpotRiband WaveSilver-ground CarpetCommon CarpetBarred StrawCommon Marbled CarpetBarred YellowBlue-bordered CarpetGrey Pine Carpet July HighflyerSmall RivuletFoxglove PugWormwood PugCurrant PugGrey PugGreen PugDouble-striped PugSmall White WaveSmall Yellow WaveClouded BorderTawny-barred AngleBrown Silver-lineBordered BeautyLilac BeautySwallow-tailed MothPeppered MothWillow BeautyMottled BeautySatin Beauty [NEW!]Great Oak BeautyPale Oak BeautyEngrailedBrindled White-spotBordered WhiteCommon White WaveCommon WaveClouded SilverLight EmeraldBarred RedPoplar Hawk-mothElephant Hawk-mothBuff-tipLobster MothIron ProminentPebble ProminentMaple ProminentPale ProminentYellow-tailRosy FootmanRed-necked FootmanScarce FootmanBuff FootmanCommon FootmanBuff ErmineShort-cloaked MothHeart and ClubFlameFlame ShoulderLarge Yellow UnderwingIngrailed ClayDouble Square-spotSmoky WainscotMinor Shoulder-knotPoplar GreyMillerGrey DaggerBird's WingSmall Angle ShadesDark ArchesLight ArchesClouded-bordered BrindleClouded BrindleDusky BrocadeRufous Minor*Tawny Marbled MinorSmall Dotted BuffUncertainMarbled White SpotScarce Silver-linesOak NycteolineBurnished BrassBeautiful Golden YSpectacleBeautiful Hook-tipStraw DotSnoutFan-footSmall Fan-foot