Gilbert White's Ghost Olive Crescent coming to a moth trap near you


IMG_0509asf 10/10/2016 Green Brindled Crescent moth, Allop… Flickr

Olive Crescent (Trisateles emortualis) - The Moths of Devon. Erebidae : Boletobiinae.


Rare moth on the move Butterfly Conservation

There were 115+ moths of 35 species today, which included a superb Olive Crescent moth, a true immigrant to the UK and a good record for Hampshire apparently. I thought at first it was a rather unusual Riband Wave at first, but I put a photo of the moth on the Hampshire Moth Facebook page and the County Recorder confirmed it as an Olive Crescent.


Olive Crescent Suffolk Biodiversity Information Service

Trisateles is a monotypic moth genus of the family Erebidae described by Tams in 1939. Its only species, Trisateles emortualis, the olive crescent, was first described by Michael Denis and Ignaz Schiffermüller in 1775. It is found in most of Europe, east to Siberia, northern Iran and China. [1] Technical description and variation


Jersey Moths Night of 4th August

Olive Crescent Trisateles emortualis ( [Denis & Schiffermüller], 1775) 2495 / 72.070 Davey, P., 2009: A rare deciduous woodland species that still occurs in Essex, and was found to be widespread in the Chilterns in Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire in 1962, but has not been seen there since the 1980s.


IMG_6955 Greenbrindled Crescent moth found on my kitchen … Flickr

Moth Conservation Officer The Olive Crescent has always been rare in Britain. It used to be known from a few sites in the Chilterns and from the RSPB's Stour Woods reserve in north Essex but the Chilterns colonies died out, leaving just one colony in the country.


Olive Pearl Udea olivalis Moth 1392 63.037

Olive Crescent Trisateles emortualis ( [Denis & Schiffermüller], 1775) 72.070 Status in the region uncertain. A woodland species formerly resident very locally in the Chilterns, and recent records suggest the existence of new populations in the southeast.


Olive Crescent Adult UKmoths

The map below shows the distribution of records of Olive Crescent ( Trisateles emortualis) within Kent. Use the control below to show data for a certain time period. If you've got a dot to add, please submit your records to us. Click here for more information on how to submit data. Filter by Time Period: All Pre-1950 1950 - 2000 2000 - 2022 + −


Gilbert White's Ghost Olive Crescent coming to a moth trap near you

Olive Crescent (Trisateles emortualis) - Norfolk Moths - The macro and micro moths of Norfolk. Login Erebidae : Boletobiinae Prev | Next Upload a Photo Similar Norfolk Species: None < Beautiful Hook-tip | Small Marbled > Show Details | 1990 to 2022 | 2000 to 2022 | Graph Key Express Record Olive Crescent Click Map for Details


Butterfly Conservation Hertfordshire and Middlesex Branch Sightings page

The body of the adult moth is olive-brown, with the head and thorax covered with white stripes and big black-and-white side spots, while the abdomen has a black-and-white region. The antennae are a dark olive-brown with white tips. Forewing: When open, the wings are beige or olive-brown, covered with white stripes.


GreenBrindled Crescent Naturally

A pearl crescent caterpillar is chocolate brown, with a white mid-dorsal line that is more visible as the caterpillar matures. They have tiny white dots and eight rows of brown spines.. After pupation, the large brown caterpillar emerges as an olive green moth that looks like a leaf. The caterpillar feeds on grape foliage and Virginia.


SMG meeting 16/06/2017 Old Hall wood, Bentley. Olive crescent hunt

Hyalophora cecropia, the cecropia moth, is North America's largest native moth. It is a member of the family Saturniidae, or giant silk moths.Females have been documented with a wingspan of five to seven inches (13 to 18 cm) or more. These moths can be found all across North America as far west as Washington and north into the majority of Canadian provinces.


Olive Crescent (Trisateles emortualis) Norfolk Moths The macro and

( [Denis & Schiffermüller], 1775) Wingspan 29-35 mm. A rare species, which is resident in one or two scattered deciduous woodland areas in the south of England. There have also been a handful of probable migrant records on the south coast. The foodplants are sweet chestnut ( Castanea sativa ), oak () and beech ( ).


Greenbrindled Crescent Allophyes oxyacanthae Moth 2245 73.068

Olive Crescent Moth Trisateles emortualis Schiffermüller 1776. collect. overview; data; media; articles; maps; names; Drepanostoma cc-by-nc-4. Trisateles emortualis (Olive Crescent Moth) is a species of Lepidoptera in the family erebid moths. EOL has data for 7 attributes, including:


Batia lunaris (Lesser Tawny Crescent Moth) 10,000 Things of the

Trisateles emortualis ( olive crescent) is a species of moth of the family Erebidae. It is found in most of Europe, east to Siberia, northern Iran and China. More Info Computer Vision Model Included The current Computer Vision Model knows about this taxon, so it might be included in automated suggestions with the "Visually Similar" label.


Jersey Moths Night of 4th August

Olive Crescent (Trisateles emortualis) - The Moths of Norfolk. In association with the Norfolk Moth Survey. Home . bedfordshiremoths.co.uk. Olive Crescent (Trisateles emortualis) - Exit Recorder. News . News; Events Calendar; Facebook Page; Facebook Group; Twitter; Moth Quiz! Arrivals .


Gilbert White's Ghost Olive Crescent coming to a moth trap near you

Olive Crescent Trisateles emortualis ([Denis & Schiffermüller], 1775) Wingspan 29-35 mm.. Moth Books. Common Micro-moths of Berkshire Nick Asher; Concise Guide to the Moths of Great Britain. Martin Townsend and Paul Waring (Illustrated by Richard Lewington)