Nature Done Wright

Incorporating the Celery Farm and Screech Owl Companion blogs

June 19, 2013

Moths! Moths! Moths!

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Here is an assortment of moths photographed at 11 p.m on Sunday in my backyard on a wonderful linen sheet donated by Gaby Schmitt.  (Thanks, Gaby!)

I now have a Mercury Vapor Light and a Blacklight from BioQuip, plus a Halogen light and a CFL blacklight. Different types of bugs seem attracted to different types of light.

Some of the moths I have seen from previous years (including the one above — Lesser Maple Spanworm Moth??) and have in my little moth folder, which I brought to work for some inexplicable reason. The one below I found to be almost butterfly-like.  Almost all are tiny guys….  

Bugs posted tomorrow!

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Common Spring Moth?

 

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(This one is from a week earlier…) Denise Farrell says:

American Idia (Idia americalis) - Hodges #8322       http://bugguide.net/node/view/16249
Larvae Host:  Lichen;  Listed among the "Litter Moths" in the Peterson guide. (Thanks, Denise!)
(They have invaded our garage, and we are not necessarily lichen it…)

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Another Spanworm-like Moth?

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1 comment

  • Denise F.

    I’ll give it a try. In picture order:
    1. Yes – Lesser Maple Spanworm
    2. Common Spring Moth – My pick also as best match
    3. Green Pug
    4. Already IDed – American Idia
    5. Red-headed Inchworm
    6. Oak Leaftier
    7. Brown Panopoda

Leave a comment.

1 comment

  • Denise F.

    I’ll give it a try. In picture order:
    1. Yes – Lesser Maple Spanworm
    2. Common Spring Moth – My pick also as best match
    3. Green Pug
    4. Already IDed – American Idia
    5. Red-headed Inchworm
    6. Oak Leaftier
    7. Brown Panopoda

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