Twenty-plume Moth
On a warm summer evening our garden smells of a mix of warm spice and mown hay, the particular scent of Golden-rod. This rather exuberant species, which has a habit of self-seeding wildlife, is great for late autumn invertebrates.
In the day it tends to be dominated by green-bottle flies. But at night a completely different set of creatures takes over - clouds of harmless male mosquitoes, lacewings, mayflies and a surprising variety of moths, mostly micro-moths.
The English name of the unusual Twenty-plume Moth is something of a misnomer, as each wing is separated into 6 'plumes' and it is now often referred to as the Many-plume Moth. The scientific name is more accurate, meaning 'six-fingered'. It's a common species of parks and gardens and can occur wherever Honeysuckle grows.
- 2
- 0
- Canon EOS R7
- 1/250
- f/13.0
- 100mm
- 320
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