B&F: 2089
ABH: 73.317
Status: Resident.
Distribution
and Abundance: Very common.
Primary Habitat:
General occurrence.
Flight Period: Almost
entirely single brooded from May to July with an
occasional small second brood in the autumn.
Observations: The moth
can be very common in garden light traps and in open
country, contrasting with the much smaller catches in
woodland. The highest annual catch that I have been able
to trace is of 4026 individuals taken in a Wellingborough
garden in 1953. More recently garden light trap catches
in excess of 1,000 are achieved annually in Northampton,
whereas the highest catch at the Fineshade woodland
Rothamsted trap was 198 in 1996. It is apparent in
comparing recent and old records that currently moths are
being seen earlier in the year than formerly. The
earliest date that I have been able to trace is 1 May
1997, but on average the moths seem to appear about a
week and a half earlier than forty or fifty years ago.
The moth is subject to occasional variation and the
second picture shows a confluent form of the moth taken
at light in Kettering in 2011.
L.O.N.:
1907. Everywhere. Abundant.
First Record: 1882,
Hull & Tomalin.
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