Garden Moths – Diary 09 September

M Pink-barred Sallow

The images below of moths and butterflies found in September, are reproduced from the diary section of our DVD-ROM released in November 2008. Titled ” In A Different Light -A Garden’s Moths and Butterflies – A Photographic Diary”, all the images are copyrighted to us. Please contact us if you’re interested in purchasing a copy of the DVD-ROM, including a separate CD of the Dawn Chorus in our Garden for £10 plus P&P. There is much more information, and the images are of a much higher quality than the ones uploaded to the blog, on the DVD-ROM. There is additional information and reviews of the DVD-ROM on the Garden Moths ‘parent’ page, at the top of the home page.

The moths and butterflies are arranged in 4 size groupings – Large, Medium, Small, Tiny in each month, and the landscape, flower and ‘Moth Art’ images indicate a change of size category:

01i Medi September 09 mm L aa9clematisviticella L AAZ9 L Angle Shades L Black Arches 2 L Black Rustic L Blood-vein L Bordered Beauty L Brimstone Moth L Brimstone L Canary-shouldered Thorn 2 L Canary-shouldered Thorn L Convolvulus Hawkmoth 2 L Convolvulus Hawkmoth L Copper Underwing L Dark Arches L Dark Sword-grass L Dusky Thorn 2 L Dusky Thorn L Flounced Chestnut L Green-brindled Crescent L Grey Shoulder-knot L Herald L Large White ( B Female ) 2 L Large White ( B Female ) L Large Yellow Underwing L Lesser Broad-bordered Yellow Underwing 2 L Lesser Broad-bordered Yellow Underwing L Lesser Yellow Underwing L Merveille du Jour L Neglected Rustic (2) L Neglected Rustic L Painted Lady ( B ) L Peacock ( B ) L Pearly Underwing ( 2 ) L Pearly Underwing L Red Admiral ( B ) 2 L Red Admiral ( B ) L Rosy Rustic L Scarce Bordered Straw L Setaceous Hebrew Character L Small Tortoiseshell ( B ) L Speckled Wood (B) 2 L Speckled Wood (B) L Tawny-barred Angle L Treble-bar L Turnip Moth 2 L Turnip Moth M aa9Stipa M aa A9 M aaZ9 M Anomalous ( F ) M Anomalous ( M ) M Autumnal Rustic M Buff Footman M Burnished Brass M Centre-barred Sallow M Chestnut M Chevron M Common Carpet M Common Marbled Carpet (2) M Common Marbled Carpet M Common Rustic M Dark Marbled Carpet M Delicate (2) M Delicate M Devon Carpet M Dingy Footman M Flame Carpet M Flame Shoulder M Flounced Rustic 2 M Flounced Rustic M Frosted Orange M Garden Carpet M Gold Spot M Green Carpet M July Highflyer M Least Yellow Underwing M Lesser Common Rustic (2) M Lesser Common Rustic M Lunar Underwing M Marbled White Spot M Orange Swift M Peach Blossom 2 M Peach Blossom M Pebble Hook-tip M Pine Carpet M Pink-barred Sallow M Purple Bar M Red-green Carpet 2 M Red-green Carpet M Red-line Quaker M Sallow Kitten M Sallow M Silver Y M Small Copper ( B ) 2 M Small Copper ( B ) M Small Phoenix M Small Square-spot M Smoky Wainscot M Snout M Spruce Carpet M Square-spot Rustic 2 M Square-spot Rustic M The Flame M Yellow-line Quaker S aa9Globe art S aa A9Pencarreg S aaZ9 S Acleris emargana 2 S Acleris emargana S Agonopterix arenella S Agonopterix ocellana S Agriphila tristella S Amblyptilia punctidactyla S Brown China-mark (micro) S Brown House Moth (micro) S Chinese Character S Double-striped Pug S Eudonia truncicolella S Lime-speck Pug S Narrow-winged Pug S Rush Veneer (micro) S Rusty-dot Pearl (micro) S Scoparia pyralella S Small Wainscot (2) S Small Wainscot S Straw Dot S Twenty-plume Moth (micro) T aa9Hydrangeavillosa T aa A9 T aaZ9 T Acleris ferrugana T Acleris variegana 2 T Acleris variegana 3 T Acleris variegana T Bactra lancealana T Epiblema uddmanniana 2 T Epiblema uddmanniana T Mompha subbistrigella 2 T Mompha subbistrigella T Nettle-tap Moth (micro) T Pandemis heparana T White-shouldered House Moth T Ypsolopha parenthesella zz 9clematistangutica zz 10sunset zzzSep

Uploaded 13/03/2013

Thanks for reading. And do browse around the rest of the Blog Pages….

Our garden at Gelli Uchaf opens most of the year, when we’re around, by appointment, for charity under the National Garden Scheme. Please see the Garden Overview page for visiting details, or by clicking here. 

This blog, our home and garden are powered by our own home generated electricity. When this is insufficient we are backed up by the supply and resources of Good Energy. In a short space of time they have become the UK’s leading supplier to home generators on the FIT scheme, and are unique in the UK in delivering all their competitively priced electricity from renewable sources. For more information about this UK owned and Wiltshire based electricity supply company, click here.

1 thought on “Garden Moths – Diary 09 September

  1. Pingback: In the wake of National Moth Night…. | Carmarthenshire Meadows Group – Grŵp Dolydd Sir Gaerfyrddin

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