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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Moths of the British Isles, First Series, by
-Richard South
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: The Moths of the British Isles, First Series
- Comprising the Families Sphingidae to Noctuidae
-
-Author: Richard South
-
-Release Date: January 5, 2013 [EBook #41782]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MOTHS OF BRITISH ISLES, 1ST SERIES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chris Curnow, Keith Edkins and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 1.
- 1. SPURGE HAWK: _caterpillar_.
- 2, 3. SILVER-STRIPED HAWK: _caterpillar_.
- 4. OLEANDER HAWK: _caterpillar_.
-
-THE MOTHS
-
-OF THE
-
-BRITISH ISLES
-
-BY
-
-RICHARD SOUTH, F.E.S.
-
-AUTHOR OF "THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE BRITISH ISLES" EDITOR OF "THE
-ENTOMOLOGIST," ETC.
-
-FIRST SERIES
-
-COMPRISING
-
-_THE FAMILIES SPHINGIDAE TO NOCTUIDAE_
-
-WITH ACCURATELY COLOURED FIGURES OF EVERY SPECIES AND MANY VARIETIES ALSO
-DRAWINGS OF EGGS, CATERPILLARS, CHRYSALIDS AND FOOD-PLANTS
-
-LONDON
-
-FREDERICK WARNE & CO.
-
-AND NEW YORK
-
-1907
-
-(_All rights reserved_)
-
-PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN
-
- * * * * *
-
-PREFACE.
-
-Compared with our butterflies, the number of moths found in the British
-Isles is very large. Like the butterflies, moths too are dependent upon
-plant life, and almost every kind of herb, bush, or tree, will be found to
-nourish the caterpillars of one or more species of moth.
-
-Not only the field botanist, but every rambler in the country must
-constantly come across moths or caterpillars that will probably interest
-him, and of which he would be glad to learn something about their habits,
-life-history, and the position they occupy in the arrangement and
-classification of Natural History objects.
-
-In the preparation of this little book on our moths, the author has
-proceeded closely on the lines adopted when dealing with the butterflies in
-his previous volume. That is, the chief aim has been to place before the
-nature lovers as much information concerning these creatures as could be
-condensed into moderate limits.
-
-Lengthy descriptions were out of the question, but what might be considered
-an omission in this way, is amply compensated for by the life-like
-portraits of typical examples of the moths themselves, and in many cases of
-their more important varieties. Technicalities have been avoided as far as
-possible, the main object being to provide a guide to the identification of
-our moths, together with a simple account of the whole or a part of their
-earlier stages.
-
-The author is fully aware that this method of treatment only enables him to
-touch the fringe of the subject, as it were, but he has been content to
-deal with it in this way, as it appeared to be the kind of information that
-would most nearly meet the requirements of the majority.
-
-The author desires here to express his thanks to Mr. Robert Adkin, F.E.S.,
-for the loan of specimens of _L. coenosa_, _E. ilicifolia_, _D. harpagula_,
-_N. albula_, _N. centonalis_, _D. barrettii_, _D. caesia_, _P.
-xanthomista_, _T. extrema_, _L. favicolor_, _L. vitellina_, and _H.
-palustris_. To Mr. Alfred Sich, F.E.S., for the use of drawings of the
-caterpillars of _D. tiliae_, _S. fagi_, _L. bicoloria_, _P. ridens_, _A.
-auricoma_, _A. rumicis_, _A. aceris_, _N. brunnea_, _M. oleracea_, _A.
-tragopogonis_, _T. gothica_, and _T. incerta_. To Mr. H. L. Sich for the
-loan of drawings of the caterpillars of _D. euphorbiae_, _D. galii_, _D.
-chaonia_, and _P. dictoea_. For the material figured on Plate 148, except
-the larva of _L. putrescens_, kindly sent by Mr. Walker, of Torquay, he is
-indebted to Mr. H. M. Edelsten, F.E.S.
-
-Except where otherwise mentioned, the illustrations of moths and
-caterpillars at rest are from photographs by "A Forester."
-
-To Mr. Horace Knight he is very greatly obliged for the care bestowed upon
-the drawings of ova, larvae, and pupae, the bulk of which were made from
-living examples; also the coloured drawings for Plates 1, 45, 63, 68, 73,
-75, 80, 84, 90, 108, 119, 123, 140, 146, 149, and 153. The only figures
-copied from any previous publication are those of the caterpillars of _S.
-fuliginosa_, _D. sanio_, _D. pulchella_, _A. corticea_, _A. strigula_, _N.
-plecta_, and _N. augur_ (Wilson's "Larvae Brit. Lep."); and among the
-moths, the varieties of _A. caia_; _D. mendica_ (4 Yorks.), Trans. Ent.
-Soc. Lond., 1889; _S. walkeri_, Curtis, and _N. subrosea_, Stephens.
-
- RICHARD SOUTH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-PREFACE TO THE PRESENT EDITION.
-
-A new edition of this volume having become necessary, it was deemed a
-fitting opportunity to bring the subject matter somewhat in line with our
-present knowledge of the Nomenclature, Habits, and Distribution of the
-Species considered therein. With this end in view, the new facts have been
-incorporated in the text so far as this was possible. Matter that could not
-be accommodated in this way has been presented in the form of an Appendix.
-
-The changes in the names of genera are not numerous, and in every case
-where such change has been made, the name used in the first edition has
-been placed in brackets--_i.e._ _Pieris daplidice_ of the 1st edition
-becomes in the present one _Pontia (Pieris) daplidice_.
-
-By this treatment it has been found convenient to utilise the old Index
-and, at the same time, to provide a Specific Index for those who prefer to
-consult the volume by its aid.
-
- * * * * *
-
-{1}
-
-THE MOTHS OF THE BRITISH ISLES.
-
-PART I.
-
-INTRODUCTORY.
-
-As mentioned in "Butterflies of the British Isles," there is, speaking
-generally, no clear line of division between moths and butterflies, and, as
-Dr. Sharp, in "Insects," puts the case, "the only definition that can be
-given of Heterocera [moths] is the practical one that all Lepidoptera that
-are not butterflies are Heterocera." Now, it happens that all the
-butterflies occurring in these islands have the tips of the horns
-(_antennae_) clubbed; and, although there is much variety in the structure
-of the horns of our moths, none of them have the tips knobbed.
-
-Like the butterflies, moths pass through the stages of egg, caterpillar,
-and chrysalis before they attain the perfect state (_imago_), and the
-duration of the several stages is just as variable. The majority assume the
-moth condition but once in the year, but some species have two, or even
-three, generations in the twelve months, whilst others occupy twenty-four
-months in completing the life cycle. In one or two species the chrysalis
-stage may last four, five, or even six years.
-
-Diversity of form and structure is considerable in the early stages as well
-as in the perfect insects, and this is shown in the {2} selection of
-life-history details figured on the black and white plates in this volume.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 1.
-
-CONVOLVULUS HAWK-MOTH AND FLOWER OF NICOTIANA.
-
-(Photos by W. J. Lucas.)]
-
-Except that it is generally less prominent, the head, with the various
-parts thereof, is pretty much the same as in the butterflies. In a few
-families, however, the "tongue" (proboscis) is only rudimentary or even
-entirely absent; while in others it is very long. The Convolvulus Hawk-moth
-has the proboscis of such length that it is able to reach the deep-seated
-nectary of such tubular flowers as those of _Nicotiana affinis_. In the
-illustration the "tongue" of the moth and the sweet-scented tobacco blossom
-are shown on exactly the same scale.
-
-Fig. 2 represents some forms of antennae found in moths. A, {3} thickened
-and spreading out towards the tip (_dilate_); B, simple, thread-like
-(_filiform_) structure, without teeth, hairs, or bristles; C, fringed with
-fine hairs (_ciliate_); D, fringed with fine hairs, and with longer
-bristles at the joints (_setose ciliate_); E, the fringe in tufts
-(_fasciculate_); F, toothed, with fine hairs on the teeth (_dentate
-ciliate_); G, toothed with hairs in tufts from the teeth (_dentate
-fasciculate_); H, I, with double rows of hair scales (_bipectinate_); in I
-the projections are continued to the tip, and are themselves fringed with
-fine hairs, giving the antennae a very feather-like appearance--the term
-"plumose" is sometimes used to describe this form of antennae; in H the
-pectinations do not reach the apical fourth, which is simple. J, the
-_lamellate_, that is, the undersides of the rings or joints are made up of
-minute plates.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 2.
-
-ANTENNAE OF MOTHS.]
-
-[Illustration: FIG 3.
-
-CONNECTING BRISTLE AND CATCH.]
-
-The wings of a moth are practically identical with those of a butterfly
-(see diagram "Butterflies of the British Isles," p. 12). Normally the fore
-wings have twelve ribs or veins, and the hind {4} wings eight, but in some
-genera a rib, or perhaps two, may be absent from the fore or the hind
-wings; or an extra rib, sometimes two, may be found on the hind wings.
-These modifications, and others, of the general plan of neuration have been
-employed as a basis upon which to found genera, or to group them together
-in classification.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 4.
-
-THE JUGUM, OR YOKE.]
-
-Fig. 3 shows the arrangement by which the upper and lower wings of a moth
-are united in flight. The bristle (_frenulum_) arising from the base of the
-hind wing is held in place by the catch (_retinaculum_) on the costal
-nervure of the fore wing. It will be noticed that the bristle of the male
-is longer and firmer than that of the female. The latter, moreover, is
-usually made up of two or more strands; the catch, too, in the female is on
-the median instead of the costal nervure. These structures are found on the
-under side of the wings of most moths, but they are absent in all
-butterflies. The Emperor, Kentish Glory, and Eggars may be mentioned as
-examples of moths lacking the connecting bristle, but all these have
-feather-like antennae, which terminate in a point. The Burnets have the
-antennae gradually thickened towards the tip (A. Fig. 2), and in this
-respect are somewhat butterfly-like, but these moths have a frenulum.
-
-The hind wings of the Swifts, and a few others grouped with them, have
-twelve veins, and these moths have a _jugum_, or yoke (see Fig. 4). This is
-a flap-like projection from the inner margin, near the base, of the fore
-wing; it may serve to connect the wings when the insect flies, but it does
-not seem to be capable of giving much help in that way. {5}
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 5.
-
-WINGS AND BODY OF A MOTH.
-
-_h._ Head; _th._ Thorax; _col._ Collar; _lap._ Lappet; _ab._ Abdomen.
-_b.l._ basal line; _b.s._ basal streak; _i.l._ inner line;
-_c.s._ claviform stigma; _o.s._ orbicular stigma; _c._ central shade;
-_r.s._ reniform stigma; _o.l._ outer line; _a.p._ apical patch;
-_s.m._ submarginal line.]
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 6.
-
-PALE TUSSOCK-MOTH AT REST.]
-
-In describing a moth various markings, etc., have to be referred to, and as
-it may assist the reader more easily to locate the usual position of such
-characters the accompanying diagram has been prepared. The lines crossing
-the fore wings from the front edge, or margin (_costa_), to the inner edge,
-or margin (_dorsum_), are generally styled transverse lines; the short one
-is the basal; the first long one is the inner, or antemedial; the second is
-the outer, or postmedial; and the third is the submarginal, or subterminal.
-The whole wing, less the margins, is sometimes called the disc; but it is
-more convenient to divide the fore wing into three parts, naming that
-between the base of the wing and the first line the basal area; the space
-between the first and second lines the central or median area, and the part
-beyond the second line the outer area. The more or less round or oval rings
-or dashes on {6} the central area are the stigmata, and these characters
-occur more especially in the Noctuidae. The hind wings usually have a fine
-short line, crescent, or spot, at the end of the cell, as in the
-butterflies, and there is generally a line or band beyond.
-
-Immediately behind the head and covering the front part of the thorax is a
-tippet-like arrangement of scales; this is the collar. On each side of the
-thorax there is a shoulder lappet (_patagium_) which has its base on the
-front part of the thorax also. Both tippet and lappet are often peculiarly
-ornamented, and the former is sometimes strikingly coloured. The thorax is
-sometimes crested, and more frequently the body is furnished with tufts of
-erect hair scales.
-
-The number of moths occurring in the British Islands is well over two
-thousand. The majority of these hardly ever find favour with the collector.
-This is probably owing in a large measure to the fact that they belong to a
-division of the moth tribe which has been dubbed Micro-lepidoptera. It
-happens, however, that quite a number of the species included in that
-division are actually larger than many kinds that were placed in the other
-contingent styled Macro-lepidoptera. According to the most recent
-authorities the division of moths into two such main groups as those
-adverted to is entirely fictitious and misleading. Possibly, when this new
-order of things is more generally understood the so-called "Micros" will
-receive their proper share of attention.
-
-In the older systems of classification the Clear wings (Sesiidae) were
-associated with the Hawk-moths (Sphingidae), but the former family is now
-considered to be more closely connected with the Tineidae. The Goat-moth
-(_Cossus ligniperda_) has been removed from among the Bombyces, its name
-changed to _Trypanus cossus_, and placed in the family Trypanidae, which is
-relegated to the neighbourhood of the Tortricidae. The Burnets
-(Zygaenidae), together with _Heterogenea limacodes_ and _H. asella_
-(Cochliopodidae), also _Macrogaster castaneae_ and _Zeuzera pyrina_
-(Cossidae {7} part) are removed by Meyrick to the Psychina, a group placed
-between that author's Pyralidina and Tortricina. The Swifts (Hepialidae)
-are grouped with Micropterygidae, which are considered to be primitive
-forms of Lepidoptera originating in the Caddis-flies or Trichoptera--a
-division of the Order Neuroptera.
-
-Except that the Cymbidae and Arctiidae are placed just before the Noctuidae
-instead of after the Geometridae, the arrangement of families, genera, and
-species adopted in the present work is very much the same as that in the
-1901 edition of Staudinger's Catalogue. Many British entomologists are now
-interested in the lepidopterous insects of the Palaearctic, or at least the
-European, fauna, of which our islands furnish but a relatively small number
-of species. Others, who at the present time are perhaps but beginners, may
-very possibly desire, later on, to extend their collections and their
-knowledge by making entomological expeditions to various parts of the
-continent. It seemed therefore desirable that in an introductory book on
-British moths its method of arrangement should at least be founded on some
-generally accepted system. {8}
-
-FIELD WORK.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 7.
-
-DRINKER-MOTH AT REST.]
-
-Several methods of moth collecting are in vogue, but space will only permit
-of a few of those most frequently practised being here referred to, and
-those suitable for day work will first be considered. Although small woods
-should not be neglected, large tracts of woodland afford the moth hunter
-the best chance of success in searching for those species that usually sit
-during the daytime on the trunks of trees. Many of the moths that rest in
-this way so admirably blend with their surroundings that they may easily be
-overlooked; others by their resemblance to feathers, birds' excrement,
-etc., are also apt to escape detection. Tree trunks, too, abound in
-moth-like scars, blotches, and knobs, so that the beginner will frequently
-fail to readily distinguish a moth from such objects, or from the others
-mentioned. A little practice will soon enable him to tell {9} which is
-which without having to very closely investigate, or perhaps even touch the
-suspected object.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 8.
-
-SCARCE MERVEILLE DU JOUR AT REST.]
-
-As a general rule it is no doubt best to confine ourselves to one thing at
-a time, if the results are to be satisfactory and the work well done. In
-the present case, if he feels that way, the collector can relieve the
-monotony of trunk searching by operating in another direction at the same
-time. Some moths prefer to repose on the branches, or on the leaves of
-trees, others among the herbage under trees; these may be disturbed from
-their lurking places and caused to fall or take wing by jarring the boughs
-or brushing the undergrowth with a stick.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 9.
-
-BROAD-BORDERED YELLOW UNDERWING AT SUGAR.]
-
-Palings, especially old ones and those enclosing wooded parks, etc., are
-often frequented by numbers of moths. These should be examined as early as
-possible in the morning, although {10} a later looking over may not be
-unprofitable. When, however, the wind is dead on them, or where they stand
-exposed to full sunshine, few insects will be found upon them. Various
-species are to be obtained from open post and rail fences, and even iron
-hurdles sometimes yield a good moth or two. Walls are not to be despised,
-and of course rocks on the moorlands, and the cliffs by the sea afford
-suitable resting-places for many kinds of moth. As a matter of fact the
-eyes of the entomologist should always be peering about, as a valuable
-prize may turn up in the most unexpected places. Hedgerows and bushes in
-lanes, or bordering fields and woods, afford harbour to many species of
-moths, and some kinds, not necessarily the commonest, may now and then be
-beaten from them freely. Herbage on hill or down sides, and on the moor and
-moorlands is also a favourite hiding-place, as too is the marram grass,
-etc., on the coast sandhills.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 10.
-
-PURPLE CLAY MOTH AT REST.]
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 11. THE COXCOMB AT REST.]
-
-As the day draws to a close and the night advances, the moths awaken, and
-first one kind and then another rises on the wing. These, as they fly in
-the lanes, about the borders or along the rides of woods, and over the
-vegetation in meadow, {11} fen, or moor, should furnish ample employment
-and keep the collector actively engaged until the time arrives for a first
-round of the trees upon which he has spread a dainty repast for the
-night-flying Noctuidae, and those members of the Arctiidae and Geometridae,
-etc., that frequently look in where sweets are to be obtained.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 12.
-
-A RIDE IN THE NEW FOREST.]
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 13.
-
-MOTHS AT A SUGAR PATCH.]
-
-This sugaring business is perhaps the most exciting phase of collecting.
-Having prepared a fine compound of coarse brown or "foots" sugar, treacle,
-and beer, by boiling down these ingredients to a suitable liquid condition,
-this is taken to the scene of action in a sugaring tin, a receptacle fitted
-with a brush which is fixed in the screw-on top; or the attracting medium
-may be carried in any kind of convenient bottle providing a paintbrush
-(sash tool) and a jampot or some such article accompany it. Arrived on the
-ground, preferably a wood, a ride is selected along each side of which are
-convenient trees. A glade such as that in the New Forest, photographed by
-Mr. W. J. Lucas, and reproduced in Fig. 12, is an ideal pitch. Just before
-using, a very small quantity of rum may be added to the mixture, but if
-"foots" can be obtained the rum is not required. In the autumn I have found
-a drop or two of the essence of {12} jargonelle pear, or of ribstone
-pippin, an effective addition. Now comes the initial stage in the night's
-venture, the "sugar" is put on each tree in a streak extending downwards
-about a foot from the level of one's chin; if thin enough to spread easily
-the mixture is almost certain to run further down the trunk. Whilst
-employed in this somewhat messy preliminary we meditate on the possible
-result, and hope that if visitors are not numerous they may at least be
-select. Lighting the lantern, the first round of inspection of the sugar
-patches is made, but this may not be altogether encouraging; on only one
-tree are there any moths and these but three in number, and not uncommon
-kinds (see Fig. 13). The second and even the third rounds do not {13} give
-the satisfactory results we had anticipated, and we feel inclined to retire
-discomfited; but as a sort of forlorn hope we try once again, and this time
-we secure one or two really good things. Another night moths arrive quite
-early and in large numbers, chiefly commoners, but with a sprinkling of the
-better sorts among them. Just what meteorological or other conditions are
-most conducive to a successful sugaring expedition I have never been able
-to ascertain. Often blanks have been drawn when the weather has seemingly
-been the most favourable, and quite as frequently good bags have been made
-when exactly the reverse was thought to be more likely. If the natural
-attractions {14} in the way of flowers and "honey dew" abound, the insects
-may possibly ignore the most tempting bait we can contrive for them. There
-is much uncertainty in this favourite method of collecting, and whether
-sugar is put on tree trunks, foliage, palings, rocks, or stones, or smeared
-on rags, and these hung up on barbed wire fences; or daubed on heads of
-thistles or bunches of grass heads tied together, one must be prepared to
-accept the disappointments that are inevitable, however careful we may be
-in the selection of "suitable evenings." It may be added that newly sugared
-trees are generally less attractive than those that are frequently painted
-with the mixture.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 14.
-
-CATERPILLAR OF EYED HAWK-MOTH.]
-
-Caterpillars that feed on the foliage of trees and shrubs may {15} be
-obtained by beating. The collector with one hand holds an open and inverted
-umbrella, or a Bignall tray made expressly for the purpose, under a branch,
-whilst with the other hand, armed with a stick, he strikes the branches
-from above in the direction of the receiver held below. In conducting such
-operations some collectors are far too energetic. It should be remembered
-that it is not hard thrashing, but a sudden jar that dislodges the
-caterpillars most readily.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 15.
-
-CATERPILLAR OF PRIVET HAWK-MOTH.]
-
-Although oft-times a somewhat slow process, and to some temperaments,
-perhaps, rather tedious work, searching for larvae is not unremunerative
-when the quality of the material obtained in this way is considered. Some
-kinds sit in the daytime, or feed, fully exposed, upon the upper sides of
-the leaves or on the twigs of trees, shrubs, and low herbage; these are not
-difficult to see. Other kinds conceal themselves under the leaves or on the
-twigs hidden by the foliage, and these have to be sought for, because many
-of them cling so tightly to whatever they may be upon that hardly anything
-short of a fatal blow with the beating-stick will cause them to relax their
-hold. Others, again, spin two or more leaves together, and in the {16}
-habitation thus formed they remain throughout the day. The latter are more
-easy to see than the more readily evicted contingent. All we have to do is
-to stand under the branches and look upwards and outwards, when the united
-leaves and the form of the caterpillar between them will be detected. Some,
-of course, will be high up and out of reach in the ordinary way, but there
-will be others more accessible. Then, at night, especially in the early
-spring, we may search, aided by the beam of an acetyline lamp, the plants
-and undergrowth in wood rides and clearings, borders of woods, and lanes,
-for caterpillars that are arousing from hibernation. Throughout all
-searching operations for larvae the chance finding of eggs under leaves or
-on twigs or buds is always probable. Cocoons in addition, among the leaves
-of trees and on stems of low plants and the trunks of trees, may also be
-revealed.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 16.
-
-CATERPILLAR OF PALE TUSSOCK-MOTH.]
-
-Furnished with a trowel--the ordinary garden kind will do, but the flatter
-pattern, sold by dealers, is better--the collector may take a turn at
-digging at the roots of trees for chrysalids. No doubt there are many kinds
-to be obtained in this way, but I cannot say much for the practice, as my
-own efforts have not been very highly rewarded. Not a single species was
-ever obtained by digging that I could not have secured more easily in some
-other way.
-
-Methods of setting, and after-manipulation have been fully discussed in
-"Butterflies of the British Isles."
-
- * * * * *
-
-{17}
-
-PART II.
-
-DESCRIPTIONS OF SPECIES.
-
-HAWK-MOTHS.
-
-About sixty species belonging to this family, scientifically known as the
-Sphingidae, are recorded from the Palaearctic region, and of these
-twenty-seven are found in Europe. About ten only can be considered as true
-natives of the British Isles; seven others, though found here, are
-distinctly aliens, and their visits, at least as regards some of them, to
-our islands, exceedingly irregular.
-
-Most of the moths are of large size, many of the caterpillars are of noble
-proportions, and in both stages they are not difficult to find, if looked
-for in suitable places and in their proper season. The caterpillars of
-several kinds, owing to the exposed way in which they feed or rest, are
-especially noticeable on bush and hedgerow; the chrysalids, although
-subterranean, are often freely obtained by turning up the soil around
-trunks of trees, or under plants, upon which the caterpillars feed.
-
-THE LIME HAWK-MOTH (_Dilina_ (_Mimas_) _tiliae_).
-
-The four specimens shown on Plate 3 represent the more or less ordinary
-form of this moth. The pale pinkish grey, or reddish brown, fore wings are
-sometimes tinged with greenish in the paler forms; the irregular shaped
-band crossing the {18} central area of the wings is olive green, usually
-dark, and generally edged with whitish. This band is sometimes entire
-(typical), but more frequently it is broken about the middle. The outer
-third of these wings is more or less greenish or mottled with green, and a
-mark near the tip is whitish.
-
-Variation is chiefly connected with the modifications that occur in the
-upper or lower, sometimes both, portions of the central band; the lower
-seems to be the first to disappear, then the upper passes through various
-stages of reduction until it becomes simply a spot or dot about the centre
-of the wing. Specimens are occasionally found or reared, in which every
-trace of the band has departed from one or both fore wings. The greenish
-outer border of the wings is inwardly margined with darker, well defined
-and band-like in some examples, but less clearly marked, or even absent, in
-others. Near the base of the fore wings are often two dusky greenish cross
-lines. The hind wings, generally pretty much of the same ground colour as
-the fore wings, have a dusky band-like shade of variable width on the outer
-third; sometimes these wings are entirely dusky, approaching blackish. Very
-rarely specimens are bred in which there is no trace of green colour. Such
-an example was reared by Mr. Frohawk in April, 1882, from a caterpillar he
-found in Surrey. In this aberration all the markings (normally green) are
-light burnt-sienna red, the usual whitish blotch at the tip of the fore
-wings is pink; ground colour also pink, slightly tinged with grey in
-places. So variable is this moth in colour and markings, that in some
-collections at least one cabinet drawer is given to it so that the range of
-aberration may be adequately shown. Already about eighteen colour
-modifications have been named, and at least eight band variations have also
-received names.
-
-The egg is similar in general appearance to that of the next species (see
-Plate 4). Dr. Chapman states that it is more densely covered with an
-indiarubber-like gum, and this may cause it to seem darker than the eggs of
-the Eyed and the Poplar Hawk-moths. The eggs are laid singly or in pairs on
-the underside of elm or lime leaves.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 2.
- LIME HAWK-MOTH.
- _Caterpillar and chrysalis._
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 3.
- LIME HAWK-MOTH.
-
-{19} The figure of a nearly full-grown caterpillar (Plate 2) is from a
-drawing in colour by Mr. A. Sich. Shortly, the caterpillar may be described
-as green, roughened with yellow points, and with seven yellow oblique
-stripes on the sides, each edged above with purplish and reddish; the
-spiracles are ringed with reddish, and the curved horn is blue, inclining
-to yellowish beneath and at the tip; the roughened shield on the last ring
-of the body is reddish, marked with yellow. Head triangular, smoother than
-the body. Quite in its infancy, the caterpillar is a long, thin creature;
-the horn, which is divided at the tip, is covered with short, stiff hairs,
-and appears blackish; later on the horn becomes reddish, and the side
-stripes appear on the body. Although alder, birch, and several other shrubs
-and trees have been mentioned, there is no doubt that the foliage of elm
-and lime is the chief food of the caterpillar in a state of nature. Found
-in July and August.
-
-The chrysalis is dark reddish, and somewhat rough. As a rule, it is
-enclosed in a very fragile cell which the caterpillar makes for itself
-after burrowing a few inches underground and near the trunk of an elm or a
-lime tree. There are, however, records of the chrysalis having been found
-in crevices of bark high up on elm trees.
-
-In May and June the moth emerges, usually in the afternoon, and may
-sometimes be found on the trunks of trees, or on palings near limes and
-elms. When at rest the fore wings are so arranged over the hind ones that
-they, in conjunction with the upturned body, give the insect more the
-appearance of a bunch of immature leaves than of a moth.
-
-The species is widely distributed throughout the southern counties of
-England, and in some of them, more especially around London, it is common.
-In the Midlands it seems to be {20} scarce, and apparently does not occur
-further north than Yorkshire, from which county there is only a single
-record. It is common in Europe, except in the more northern and southern
-parts, and its range extends eastwards into Siberia.
-
-THE POPLAR HAWK-MOTH (_Smerinthus_ (_Amorpha_) _populi_).
-
-On Plate 5 are three slightly different examples of this moth. In colour it
-is most frequently ashy grey, with a brownish central band, and other
-markings; there is a white spot on the fore wings and a conspicuous red
-patch at the base of the hind wings. The female is generally paler than the
-male, and often has a pinkish tinge. Specimens of a pale buff colour are
-sometimes obtained, and these are most often of the female sex, although
-male examples of this form are not unknown. Among unusual aberrations is
-one described as having the wings, legs, thorax, and abdomen of a colour
-between brick-red and chocolate, suffused with a whitish bloom as on ripe
-plums. Another had the hind wings unadorned with red. Specimens from
-Aberdeenshire and Sutherlandshire are smaller than English examples, and
-the males are almost always more brightly and distinctly marked.
-
-A very large number of Gynandrous, or "hermaphrodite" specimens have been
-recorded, several of them from Britain; in most of these the
-gynandromorphism is bilateral, that is the insect is wholly male on one
-side, and entirely female on the other. In some the right side is male, in
-others the left side; the opposite side in each case being female. Much
-information on this subject and on Hybridism of the Sphingidae will be
-found in Tutt's "British Lepidoptera," vol. iii.
-
-The pale shining green eggs are laid, generally singly, but sometimes in
-twos, threes, or more, on either surface of a leaf of poplar or sallow. Now
-and then batches of eggs may be found, and these have probably been laid by
-females that were crippled on emergence, or had been afterwards injured in
-some way and so were unable to fly.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 4.
- POPLAR HAWK-MOTH.
- _Eggs, natural size and enlarged; caterpillar and chrysalis._
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 5.
- POPLAR HAWK-MOTH.
-
-{21}
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 17.
-
-EGGS OF POPLAR HAWK-MOTH.]
-
-When full grown the caterpillar is green, roughened with yellow points,
-oblique stripes on the sides yellow, spiracles reddish, horn of the general
-colour, sometimes tipped with reddish. Head triangular in shape, but not
-pointed on the top. A reddish spotted form of the caterpillar is not very
-uncommon. In its very early life the head is rather triangular than
-rounded, as is the head of the young caterpillar of the previous species,
-and also that of the Eyed Hawk. Feeds on poplar, aspen, sallow, and willow,
-and may be found from July to September and sometimes October. Chrysalis
-blackish, rougher than that of the Lime Hawk. It lies in the ground so
-close to the surface that it is often exposed when the garden borders under
-or near poplars are raked over. The moth appears in May and June as a rule,
-but in backward seasons it may not emerge until July or even August.
-Caterpillars from eggs laid in early May are likely to feed up and attain
-the perfect state in late July, and eggs resulting from these will pass
-through the caterpillar state to that of chrysalis by about {22} September.
-Three broods have been obtained in one year, but this is exceptional and
-under a forcing method of treatment. The early stages are figured on Plate
-4. This is certainly the commonest of our Hawk-moths, and it seems to occur
-throughout our islands, except that in Scotland it is not recorded further
-north than Sutherland and Ross. Wherever there are poplars, sallows, or
-willows, there too most probably will be this caterpillar in its season;
-the moth also will be almost certainly seen by any one who may care to keep
-an eye on the stems of poplars or adjacent fences at the right time.
-Sometimes the insect will introduce itself to the household, after
-lighting-up time, much to the alarm of those who, not aware of the harmless
-character of their visitor, look upon it with considerable suspicion.
-
-Distribution abroad--Europe (except the polar regions and Greece), Armenia
-and the Altai.
-
-THE EYED HAWK-MOTH (_Smerinthus ocellatus_).
-
-Except that there is sometimes an absence of rosy tinge on the fore wings,
-and that the brownish markings may be lighter or darker, this species does
-not depart very greatly from the typical form shown on Plate 7.
-
-Cross pairings between the Eyed-hawk and the Poplar-hawk are not altogether
-difficult to obtain, but the female _populi_ pairs more readily with male
-_ocellatus_ than the female of the last named species will with the male of
-_populi_. Very few such cross pairings have been noted in a wild state, but
-several cases of the kind are known to have occurred in captivity. The
-results are hybrid moths, and these have some of the characters of each
-parent, and have received distinctive names. Thus the offspring of
-_ocellatus_ [male] x _populi_ [female] are the _hybridus_, Steph., whilst
-that of _populi_ [male] x _ocellatus_ [female] are referable to _inversa_,
-Tutt.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 6.
- EYED HAWK-MOTH.
- _Eggs, natural size and enlarged; caterpillars and chrysalis._
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 7.
- EYED HAWK-MOTH.
-
-{23}
-
-The eggs, which are generally laid singly or in pairs on either side of a
-leaf, sometimes on a stalk, are yellowish-green in colour. The shell is
-said to be netted, but under a fairly strong lens this does not show. About
-four hundred is probably the average number for a female to lay in a state
-of nature, but they seem not to deposit so many when reared from the egg in
-confinement. As the moth, except under stress of circumstances, places her
-eggs on the foliage of trees and bushes in selected positions, the business
-of egg laying takes about six nights to perform. Even when she is unable to
-fly she will crawl from twig to twig and glue an egg here and there on the
-leaves, but rarely more than two on a leaf. On a small sallow bush in my
-garden, I once counted eighty-four eggs on the lower leaves and the main
-stem. Green, inclining to yellowish or greyish, is the colour of the
-full-grown caterpillar. It is roughened with white points, and has seven
-whitish oblique stripes on the sides. These stripes are edged in front with
-darkish green and occasionally tinged with violet. The horn is bluish,
-merging into green towards the dark tip, and roughened with white points.
-Head triangular in shape, the top pointed; face tinged with bluish.
-Sometimes bright red spots appear on the sides in some examples of the
-caterpillar. In the quite young stage the head is usually rounded; the
-horn, which appears reddish, is about one third the length of the
-caterpillar.
-
-Sallow, willow, and apple are the more general food plants, but poplar and
-privet have been reported. I have sometimes found the larva on _Salix
-repens_, and also on crab-apple (_Pyrus malus_). It may be found in July
-and August. In some years, when the moths emerge in May, caterpillars are
-found as early as June, and this is followed by the occurrence of the
-caterpillar again, as a second brood, in August and September. When quite
-mature the caterpillar enters an inch or two into the soil, and there forms
-a weak sort of cell in which it shortly afterwards turns to a brown, or
-blackish-brown, smooth and {24} rather glossy chrysalis. The early stages
-are figured on Plate 6.
-
-The moth usually emerges in June, earlier or later, according to season.
-Under very favourable circumstances some of the moths will leave the
-chrysalis in May and give rise to a second generation in July. An
-unfavourable year, on the other hand, retards emergence, and the moths do
-not come up until late June or mid-July; such has been the case this year
-(1907).
-
-Generally distributed and by no means uncommon throughout the southern half
-of England, but somewhat local northwards. It has been recorded from the
-most southern counties of Scotland, and Kane states that in Ireland it is
-widely distributed but usually scarce.
-
-The method of folding down its wings in repose is very similar to that of
-the previous two species.
-
-THE DEATH'S-HEAD HAWK MOTH (_Acherontia (Manduca) atropos_).
-
-The fine moth represented on Plate 8 is the largest species found in the
-British Isles, although in measurement from tip to tip when the wings are
-expanded it does not exceed that of the next species, both varying in this
-respect from 4-1/2 to 5 inches. It is, however, a stouter bodied insect,
-and its wings are broader. The colour and markings are so well shown in the
-illustration that a description is unnecessary. Beyond a greater or lesser
-intensity of the paler markings on the fore wings and the thorax, also some
-modifications in the black band of the hind wings, there is nothing very
-striking in the way of variation. Perhaps the most important aberrations
-are connected with the inner black band of the hind wings, which may be
-much widened and diffuse, or, on the other hand, entirely absent.
-
-When full grown, the caterpillar attains a length of nearly 5 inches, and
-is of considerable thickness throughout. Usually {25} the general colour is
-some shade of green, varying to yellowish, but in some examples it is
-brown, more or less tinged with violet; others again are of a blackish hue.
-The seven oblique side stripes are purplish or violet brown, edged with
-yellowish; they are absent from the three rings nearest the head; the
-rough, double curved horn is of the body colour. The greenish forms are
-sprinkled with violet dots, and the brownish forms with white ones. Most
-frequently found on the leaves of potato; it feeds also on the "tea-tree"
-(_Lycium barbarum_), woody nightshade (_Solanum dulcamara_), and snowberry
-(_Symphoricarpus_). Fig. 1, Plate 9, represents the brown form of the
-caterpillar.
-
-When ready to enter the chrysalis state, the caterpillar burrows from 2 to
-4 inches below the surface of the soil, and there forms a large chamber,
-the walls of which are not very substantial and are easily broken. After
-resting therein for a week, or two, it turns to a dark brownish, rather
-glossy, chrysalis. (Plate 11, Fig. 1). The earthen cocoon, frail as it is,
-seems to be a protection to the chrysalis, guarding it from too much
-moisture on the one hand, or dryness on the other. I always found that when
-chrysalids from caterpillars that I have obtained were left undisturbed the
-moths emerged well enough; but when they were turned up out of the ground
-by the potato diggers, and, of course, without covering, they were almost
-certain to perish if the attempt were made to keep them through the winter.
-In the latter case, the only chance was to endeavour to induce the moth to
-emerge as soon as possible by bringing them under the combined influence of
-warmth and moisture.
-
-This species was known to Mouffett, who figured it in 1634, but it does not
-appear to have received an English name until 1773, when Wilkes figured it
-as the "Jasmine Hawk Moth." Moses Harris, in 1775, called it the "Bee Tyger
-Hawk Moth," but three years later he changed the name to the Death's Head,
-the name by which it is still known, although in some {26} parts of
-England, as well as in Ireland, it is referred to as the "bee robber." In
-connection with the latter name, it may be mentioned that the moth's
-"tongue," or proboscis, is short, and not adapted for obtaining sweets, of
-which it is very fond, from long-tubed flowers, consequently it filches
-honey from the bees, and, with this object, has been known to enter
-bee-hives, at least those of the old straw-skep pattern. The moth is also
-said to have a liking for the sap exuded by wounded trees. Although the
-species may, perhaps, be with us in certain favoured localities every year,
-it does not often occur, in any stage, in numbers sufficient to attract
-general attention. I have not searched the chronicles of _Atropos_ in
-Britain earlier than 1864, but from these it seems that the species was
-widely distributed and generally common in 1865, 1868, 1878, 1885, 1896,
-and 1900. More or less common in certain localities in 1867, 1869,
-1870-1872, 1877, 1880, 1882, 1884, 1893, 1895, 1899, 1911, and 1917. In the
-other years it was scarce, or apparently absent.
-
-The moth is always very much less in evidence than the caterpillar, or even
-the chrysalis. Sometimes the former is seen in May or June, or even
-earlier, and it has been supposed that these precocious specimens have
-hibernated after emergence from the chrysalis here during the previous
-autumn. The question of hibernation need not be entertained, but there may
-be doubt as to whether the specimens are British born or aliens. I am
-inclined to the latter view. The moths are often noted at sea long
-distances from land. A specimen was captured on board a vessel in the North
-Sea on April 28, 1903, and it was still alive, although it had been roughly
-dealt with, on May 8 of that year. In 1899 a moth was taken at Chester,
-about the middle of May, and one on June 20 at Chichester. Probably,
-although undetected, other specimens were also about the country, and maybe
-at even earlier dates than those recorded. However, during the year larvae
-and pupae were found, at the end of July, at Chilton, Suffolk, and at
-Bridgwater, Somerset, and in early August in Somerset, and at Dover. A moth
-was captured in August at Marlow, Bucks., one was taken at Christchurch on
-September 19, one at Reigate, September 25. Several specimens occurred in
-Devon and Cornwall in the autumn, and at Deal early in October. Larvae were
-found, too, from the second week in September to the end of that month in
-several parts of the country. Moths seem to have been reared in early
-September from the early August caterpillars; whilst the September
-caterpillars attained the perfect state towards the end of the month and in
-October. Two pupae, found at Penarth on September 12, produced moths in
-from four to six days afterwards; four other chrysalids, obtained in Hants
-about mid September, yielded moths between September 21 and the beginning
-of October.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 8.
- DEATH'S-HEAD HAWK MOTH.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 9.
- 1. DEATH'S-HEAD HAWK-MOTH.
- _Eggs, natural size and enlarged; and caterpillar._
- 2. CONVOLVULUS HAWK-MOTH CATERPILLAR (DARK FORM).
-
-{27} From the foregoing there can be no question that there are at least
-two generations of the moth in some years, and in our own country, but we
-have even clearer evidence of this in the records of 1900, when a moth was
-taken in the spring at Ayton, Berwickshire, another at Worsborough Bridge
-on June 18, and a third at Kilmarnock, on a bee-hive, July 11. Caterpillars
-were found during late July and August in South Scotland and various parts
-of England, and moths were reared from some of these. In September and
-October caterpillars were found more commonly, and two or three moths were
-captured, in various places, between August 19 and October 9; others,
-reared from September caterpillars, emerged from October 30 to November 24.
-
-By the rustic, and possibly the uninitiated generally, the moth is looked
-upon as something uncanny. This is probably due to the fact that the
-creature, when handled, emits a peculiar sound that has been described as a
-shrill squeak. According to Kirby, the statement made by Rossi that the
-sound is produced by air from the air-sacs being forced through the {28}
-proboscis, has been verified. Another dread-inspiring character of the
-insect is the marking on the thorax, which has been likened to a skull and
-crossbones. The squeak is said to have the effect of quieting the bees,
-they being under the impression that it proceeds from their queen.
-
-It has been taken at some time or another in almost every part of the
-British Isles, right up to and including the Shetlands. Except that it has
-not been observed in the more northern parts, the species is found
-throughout Europe, North and South Africa, the Canary Islands, and the
-Azores. It is also represented in Southern India, extending to the Malays,
-and in China, Corea, and Japan.
-
-CONVOLVULUS HAWK-MOTH, _Herse_ (_Sphinx_) _convolvuli_.
-
-The older writers on British moths called this the "Unicorn" or "Bindweed
-Hawk." The fore wings are whitish grey, mottled with darker tints, and, in
-the male, clouded with blackish about the middle of the wing; the central
-third is limited inwardly by a double blackish, wavy line, and outwardly by
-an irregular, toothed, whitish line; running from one to the other are two
-black streaks between the veins, and a similar streak nearer the costa is
-waved upwards to the tip of the wing. The hind wings are whitish grey, with
-a black stripe near the base, and two blackish bands between the stripe and
-the outer margin. The thorax agrees in colour with the fore wings; the
-tapered body has a broad grey stripe, enclosing a central black line along
-the back, broad red and black and narrow white bands on each side (Plate
-10).
-
-The egg has been described as bright green in colour, and smaller than that
-of the Privet Hawk. A female moth captured at Brighton on July 18, 1898,
-deposited twenty-five eggs on _Convolvulus arvensis_ up to July 20, and the
-next day a further eight were counted. The moth died on the 22nd.
-Caterpillars hatched out July 27-28. These were whitish green, with a rough
-blackish horn; after second moult they became green, with a darker green
-stripe along the back, but without oblique side stripes.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 10.
- CONVOLVULUS HAWK-MOTH.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 11.
- 1. CHRYSALIS OF DEATH'S-HEAD HAWK-MOTH.
- 2. " " CONVOLVULUS " "
- 3, 3a. CATERPILLAR AND CHRYSALIS OF PINE HAWK.
-
-{29} In its more usual form the caterpillar, when full grown, is bright
-apple-green, narrowly streaked with black; oblique stripes on the sides
-yellowish; horn reddish, tip black. Head green, with black stripes. In some
-examples the side stripes are edged above with bluish black; in others
-there are blackish, more or less square, spots on the back, and patches on
-the sides. Sometimes the general colour is blackish brown, with ochreous
-bands and streaks. (This form is figured on Plate 9). When it occurs in
-these islands it is generally found on the small bindweed (_Convolvulus
-arvensis_), but it will eat _C. sepium_ and _C. soldanella_, and also the
-cultivated kinds.
-
-Referring to the caterpillar in Britain, Moses Harris, in 1775, wrote, "I
-never heard of but two that were ever found--one by Mr. South [or Smith] of
-Hampshire, which, he said, was green, and appeared in other respects so
-like the privet that he was deceived. He fed it on the leaves of the lesser
-bindweed. It changed into the chrysalis in the earth, in July, and the moth
-was produced in September" (Dale).
-
-The caterpillar figured by Harris is of the brown form, so we see that even
-at this early date something was known of the life history of this moth and
-the variation of the caterpillar. Since that date and up to 1894 only very
-few larvae appear to have been found in our islands. Barrett states that it
-is doubtful if more than twenty had then been recorded. In 1895
-caterpillars were obtained in Cornwall (four) and in Kent (two). Then for
-five years little or nothing was reported about this stage, although the
-moth seems to have occurred in varying numbers each year. In 1901, August
-and September, over one hundred were reported, rather more than half of
-which were taken from a hedgerow, overgrown with _C. sepium_, in {30}
-Northumberland; twenty-six were obtained on the bindweed growing on
-Lancashire sandhills, thirteen or fourteen in Essex, and others in
-Bedfordshire, Kent, Hants, Dorset, and Devon.
-
-Mr. Bell-Marley obtained thirty eggs, September, 1897, and although these
-were kept in a cold room, thirteen caterpillars hatched, September 21. They
-were supplied with _Convolvulus arvensis_ and _C. soldanella_, and seemed
-to relish one as much as the other. Seven died during the first three
-moults. The bindweeds being nearly over, seedlings were raised by forcing,
-but before these were ready the larvae had been on short commons, and just
-immediately before the seedlings came to hand, had been twenty-four hours
-without food. On these tender seedlings and some endive the remaining
-larvae, six in number, attained full growth in December. Two subsequently
-died in the first half of that month, and the others went under the soil.
-Only one, however, managed to assume the chrysalis state.
-
-A small caterpillar, about one week old, described by Paymaster-in-Chief G.
-F. Mathew ("Notes on Lepidoptera from the Mediterranean," _Entom._, xxxi.
-115), was 1-3/4 inch long, pale glaucous green in colour, and thickly
-covered with raised white dots; oblique side stripes white, bordered above
-with dark green. On September 26, 1897, this caterpillar, which had been
-found on September 18, was nearly full grown, and the writer goes on to
-state that when gathering bindweed he obtained either eggs or tiny
-caterpillars at the same time, and he eventually found that he had eight of
-them altogether. They fed up rapidly, as a caterpillar, hatched about
-September 27, had gone down on October 18. Owing to accident, four produced
-deformed chrysalids, but each chrysalis resulting from the others was
-perfect and healthy on February 15, 1898. The large reddish-brown chrysalis
-is figured on Plate 11, and it will be noted that the "tongue" case forms a
-curious bent projection not unlike the handle of a pitcher. To give some
-idea of the irregular way in which this migratory species visits our
-islands, it will suffice to note the records only since 1894. Previous to
-that year it was common, more or less generally, in 1846, 1868, 1875, 1885,
-and 1887.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 12.
- 1. PRIVET HAWK-MOTH.
- 2. PINE HAWK-MOTH.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 13.
- PRIVET HAWK-MOTH.
- _Eggs, natural size and enlarged; caterpillars and chrysalis._
-
-{31} In 1895 an invasion seems to have effected a landing in the autumn, on
-the south-west coast, chiefly, perhaps, in the Portland district, where
-some fifty individuals were captured between August 12 and October 7;
-twenty-three were caught near Bournemouth in August and September; sixteen
-were taken at Christchurch, August 11 to October 2; and eight were recorded
-from Milford. Several were reported from Devon, but only two from Cornwall,
-although four larvae were found in October at Port Wrinkle in the latter
-county. At Cork, in Ireland, ten specimens were obtained in October.
-Eastward, the captures in September were Norfolk (seven), Essex (one),
-Lincoln (one). Odd specimens were taken here and there in Kent, Surrey, and
-Herts. Several were reported from Gloucestershire, and one from South
-Wales. The northward extension was evidenced by the capture of one example
-at Alnwick, in Northumberland, in September, and of two in Aberdeenshire,
-one as early as August 31, the other September 9.
-
-The moth was almost a defaulter in 1896, but in 1897 about forty specimens
-were taken, twenty-seven of which occurred in the Scilly Isles and eleven
-at Portland (August 14 to September 16). One example was reported from
-Yorkshire and another from Sutherlandshire, both in September.
-
-A female was taken at Brighton, July 18, 1898, and in the autumn of that
-year a good many specimens were obtained in various parts of England but
-chiefly in the south. Portland again heading the list with over fifty
-(August 4 to October 3) and a number were taken in the Isle of Wight during
-September. Captures in 1899 seem to have been only pretty good. Portland
-twenty, August 25 to September 20, perhaps less than a dozen in other parts
-of England and one in Scotland, all in September {32} or October. In 1900
-one specimen was taken at an Eastbourne electric light, and one at
-Portpatrick in Scotland, both end of August. There appears to have been an
-arrival of moths in this country in early June, 1901. Captures were
-reported from Portland (June 2), Bedford, and S. W. London. Larvae and
-pupae were found in many parts of England, as already mentioned. Then in
-August, from about the 14th to September, moths were captured throughout
-the greater part of England; in some places caterpillars were also obtained
-in August, chrysalids in September. After a lull towards the end of the
-latter month, moths suddenly appeared again during the first week in
-October. Several observers remarked that whereas the August to September
-moths were mostly females, large in size, and not in the best condition,
-the later moths were chiefly of the male sex, small in size, and fine in
-condition. It would seem therefore that these late specimens were the
-descendants of the early August moths and represented a second generation
-on British soil and the grandchildren of the June immigrants. Or, possibly,
-the August-September moths were fresh immigrants, and the October specimens
-their offspring.
-
-The species was observed in several English counties during August and
-September, 1911; and again in 1915. In 1917 it seems to have been more
-widely spread over our islands, as specimens were reported from Ireland and
-even Shetland.
-
-Plants with tubular flowers, such as those of petunias, and the
-sweet-scented white tobacco (_Nicotiana affinis_) are its especial
-favourites, but it also visits the blossoms of pentstemon, geranium
-(chiefly the scarlet variety), etc. It does not settle on the flowers but
-inserts its long "tongue" into the tubes as it hovers on the wing in front
-of them. Just at twilight it commences operations, but it may be seen
-pursuing its investigations well on into the night (see Fig. 1, p. 2).
-
-Distributed over Europe, Asia, and Africa. {33}
-
-THE PRIVET HAWK (_Sphinx ligustri_).
-
-A specimen of the female sex is figured on Plate 12. The white clouding or
-mottling on the pale brown colour of the fore wings varies in intensity and
-is sometimes tinged with pink, especially at the base of the wings; often
-it is only noticeable at the tips of the wings and on the outer area; the
-blackish suffusion from the inner margin through the central area and the
-black streaks between the veins are rather more constant. On the hind wings
-the pinkish tinge between the black bands may be faint or entirely absent;
-the central black band varies in width, and is sometimes so much expanded
-that it absorbs the basal half of the first band.
-
-When full grown the caterpillar measures about three inches in length and
-has a very substantial appearance. It is of a pretty green colour, with
-seven oblique white stripes, each of which has a purplish front edging; the
-spiracles are yellowish. The head is rather more grass green and marked
-with black in front. The curved horn is blackish on the upper side and
-yellowish below. The colour of the caterpillar in its younger stage is
-yellowish, due to the presence of yellow dots, it also has some tiny hairs;
-the horn, which is bristly and slightly forked at the tip, is a conspicuous
-feature at this age on account of its length and dark colour as compared
-with that of the creature itself. Just before changing into the chrysalis,
-a brownish tinge is assumed, and very rarely caterpillars of a pinkish or
-purplish tint have been found.
-
-It feeds on privet (_Ligustrum vulgare_) in July and August; often to be
-seen resting on the upper part of the longer sprays of the food plant.
-Sometimes a dozen or more may be found on one short strip of privet hedge.
-They are much subject to the attack of ichneumons. Other food plants are
-lilac, ash, lauristinus, and some other shrubs. Mr. Step informs me that on
-{34} August 18, 1907, he found three larvae feeding on teasel at Ashtead.
-
-The caterpillar will burrow some depth underground before constructing its
-pupal chamber. The chrysalis, which is reddish, or blackish-brown in
-colour, is figured with the other stages on Plate 13.
-
-The moth usually emerges the following June or July, but there are at least
-two records of its remaining in the chrysalis during two winters.
-
-The southern portion of England appears to be the principal British home of
-this moth. It is more or less scarce in the midlands and northwards. In
-Scotland it has only been recorded from southern counties, and in his
-"Catalogue of the Lepidoptera of Ireland," Kane states that he has no
-certain record of its occurrence in that country. Widely distributed
-through central and southern Europe, extending northwards to south Sweden
-and Finland, and eastwards to Amurland, China, and Japan.
-
-THE PINE HAWK (_Hyloicus pinastri_).
-
-Stephens, writing of this species in 1828, remarked that about thirty years
-before that date, a specimen "was taken in June at Colney Hatch Wood, and a
-second in the neighbourhood of Esher." He also gives Rivelston Wood, near
-Edinburgh, as a locality, on the authority of Dr. Leach. A specimen was
-stated to have been seen in Cumberland in 1827 or 1828, and up to the year
-1877 four other examples were reported, each from a different part of
-England. In the year last mentioned a specimen was recorded from
-Woodbridge, Suffolk, as taken in a rectory garden the previous midsummer
-(since ascertained that the moth was first seen there in 1875); an example
-was also found at rest on a tree trunk at Tuddenham, near Ipswich, in July,
-1877, and one was reared on August 5, 1876, from a {35} chrysalis found
-near Horham Rectory, Wickham Market, Suffolk. In 1878-9, caterpillars were
-met with at Leiston, Suffolk; the moth was found in the pine woods around
-Aldeburgh, 1881, and as many as forty specimens were taken in July and
-August, 1882, and rather more than twenty in August, 1919. In 1895, Lord
-Rendlesham, when driving through the fir woods in the neighbourhood of
-Woodbridge, noted two specimens in almost the same spot where he had taken
-some moths in 1892-93. Mr. F. Mellusson, writing from this district (August
-2, 1895), stated that fifteen specimens had been taken, and that others
-could have been captured; also that about one hundred larvae were then
-feeding in confinement. He also mentioned that 1895 was the fourth year out
-of five that the insect had occurred there. A male moth was found at rest
-on an oak trunk near Southwold, Suffolk, on July 29, 1900. On August 13,
-1906, the Rev. A. P. Waller saw a worn specimen on a pine trunk in the
-rectory garden at Woodbridge. He also noted a pupa on September 30, 1917.
-(Plate 12, Fig. 2.)
-
-The mature caterpillar, which feeds on pine needles, is green, with a
-yellowish-edged reddish line along the middle of the back and a creamy line
-on each side of this; the interrupted line below the reddish spiracles is
-yellowish or ochreous. Head yellowish brown; horn blackish brown; both are
-glossy. It enters the earth and there turns to a reddish brown chrysalis;
-this is rather glossy, somewhat darker above than below, and appearing
-blackish between the rings; the rough "tongue" sheath is short and attached
-throughout to the case; the tail spike is roughened, and has a blunt point
-on each side of it (Plate 11, Figs. 3, 3a).
-
-It has been recorded that caterpillars hatched from the egg early in
-August, pupated in October, and the moths emerged the following May-July.
-
-The perfect insect sits upon tree trunks, chiefly pine, often well within
-reach, although sometimes its position is fourteen or {36} fifteen feet up
-the trunk. At night it visits flowers, and seems to be most partial to
-those of the honeysuckle.
-
-Suffolk seems to be the British home of this species, but odd specimens
-have been reported since 1860 from Romsey, Hampshire; Hinton St. George,
-Somersetshire; Herefordshire; Isle of Mull (two caterpillars); and
-Bournemouth.
-
-The range of this species is through Northern and Central Europe southwards
-to Northern Spain and Italy, and eastward to the Caucasus. In Japan it is
-represented by var. _caligineus_, Butler, which differs but little from
-typical _pinastri_.
-
-THE SPURGE HAWK (_Deilephila_ (_Hyles_) _euphorbiae_).
-
-The fore wings are pale grey, more or less tinged with pinkish and marked
-with olive at the base, towards the middle of front margin, and a tapered
-band running from the inner margin to the tip of the wing; the lower part
-of the basal patch is blackish. Hind wings pinkish with black basal patch
-and a band before the outer margin; a white patch at anal angle (Plate 15,
-Fig. 1).
-
-The caterpillar feeds, August and September, on spurge (_Euphorbia
-paralias_, and _E. cyparissias_). When full grown the head is crimson red,
-marked on the crown with black; the body is black, but so thickly sprinkled
-with yellow dots that much of the black colour is obscured; the larger
-spots are often crimson, but sometimes they are yellow, or even cream
-coloured; the stripes along the back and below the yellow spiracles are
-crimson, as also are the legs and feet; the spiny horn is crimson with a
-black tip. In a younger stage the head and the horn are orange, the latter
-black tipped; the body is yellow with patches of black around the paler
-yellow spots on the back. Chrysalis pale brownish, minutely dotted with
-black; the head and thorax are marked with blackish, and the rings of the
-body have narrow, interrupted, blackish bands; the wing and antennae cases
-are covered with fine short blackish streaks; tail spike blackish, somewhat
-flattened, and the acute point black (Plate 1, Fig. 1; 14, Figs. 2, 2a).
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 14.
- 1, 1a. BEDSTRAW HAWK-MOTH.
- 2, 2a. SPURGE HAWK-MOTH.
- _Caterpillars and chrysalids._
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 15.
- 1. SPURGE HAWK-MOTH.
- 2. BEDSTRAW HAWK-MOTH.
- 3. STRIPED HAWK-MOTH.
-
-{37} The moth usually emerges in June or July of the year following
-pupation, but it may come out the same year; on the other hand, it has been
-known to remain in the chrysalis for two winters. Dr. Chapman has noted the
-emergence of the moth eighteen days after the pupa was formed.
-
-Little, if anything, appears to have been known of this species as an
-inhabitant of Britain until 1806, when Mr. Raddon, who was staying at
-Instow, in N. Devon, had a caterpillar brought to him by a fisherman. From
-that time, and up to 1814, a large number of the caterpillars were obtained
-from _Euphorbia paralias_ growing on Braunton Burrows, a long stretch of
-sandhills on the north Devonshire coast, accessible from Barnstaple or
-Ilfracombe, which, when I visited the locality some twenty-five years ago,
-was greatly favoured by rabbits. One would suppose that the Spurge Hawk
-caterpillars must have been pretty abundant at the time Raddon made his
-observations, as he states in a note on the subject published in the
-Entomological Magazine for 1835, that on leaving the ground one evening at
-dusk he hastily cut an armful of spurge, which he took home and put in
-water. Next morning he "found the food covered with not less than a hundred
-minute larvae about a day or two old." This must have happened prior to
-1814, because the species seems to have entirely disappeared about that
-year. The Rev. E. N. Bloomfield, in his catalogue of the Lepidoptera of
-Suffolk, mentions a moth bred from a larva found near Landguard Fort about
-1865. He adds that the food plant was then abundant there. At a meeting of
-the Entomological Society of London held in October, 1876, a letter was
-read from Mr. Higgins concerning the reported finding of the caterpillars
-of this species in a locality near Harwich in 1873. It was stated that the
-spurge (_Euphorbia paralias_), had not only been {38} seen in the
-particular spot, but in other parts of the same district also.
-
-In the _Entomologist_ for 1893 there is a very circumstantial account of
-the finding of eighteen or nineteen Spurge Hawk caterpillars on the Cornish
-coast in the autumn of 1889. From these, eight moths resulted in May-July,
-1890, and one in June, 1891.
-
-Although the occurrence of the moth in Britain has been more frequently
-recorded, probably in error for the Bedstraw Hawk, there are at least two
-that are undoubtedly authentic. One of these refers to a specimen taken in
-a private garden near Southampton (_Entom._, 1872), and the other was
-captured by the late Mr. C. G. Barrett as it flew at early dusk in a garden
-at King's Lynn, Norfolk, in September, 1887. Some idea of the scarcity of
-_bona fide_ English specimens may be gained from the fact that about
-thirteen years ago, two of Raddon's bred specimens were sold by auction at
-Stevens, when six guineas was given for one, and ten shillings more for the
-other.
-
-Its distribution abroad extends through Central and Southern Europe into
-Asia Minor, and it is represented by local races in other parts of Asia.
-
-THE BEDSTRAW HAWK (_Deilephila_ (_Celerio_) _galii_).
-
-On Plate 15, Fig. 2, will be found a portrait of this moth, which the
-ancient fathers of British entomology dubbed the "Spotted Elephant"--at
-least, Harris, in 1778, figured its caterpillar under this name. Later it
-was called the "Galium Hawk-moth." The olive-brown fore wings have a
-tapered, creamy-white stripe running obliquely from the inner margin near
-the base to the tip of the wing; the lower edge of this stripe is almost
-straight, but the upper edge is irregular; the outer margin of the wings is
-greyish. Hind wings creamy {39} white, the basal area and a band before the
-outer margin black; the space enclosed is blotched, and sometimes tinged
-with pinkish red; but the extreme inner portion is almost pure white. Head
-and thorax are olive-brown, edged with white; the abdomen is olive-brown,
-with a whitish line along the middle of the back, and ornamented with black
-and white on the sides.
-
-The full-grown caterpillar varies in colour from greenish olive to pale
-olive-brown, reddish brown, or sometimes blackish; the spots on the back
-are yellowish, edged with black, but occasionally these are absent. It
-feeds in August and September, on the bedstraws (_Galium verum_, _G.
-mollugo_, etc.), preferring the yellow-flowered kind that flourishes on
-sandhills by the sea (_G. verum_, var. _maritimum_). It can be reared very
-well on willow herb (_Epilobium_) and on fuchsia.
-
-When ready for the change it burrows underground, and, where the soil is
-sandy and light, it works down pretty deeply before making the frail cell,
-in which it turns to a reddish-brown chrysalis with blackish markings,
-somewhat similar to those of the next species; the anal spike is blackish,
-rather flattened, terminating in a sharp point (Plate 14, Figs. 1, 1a).
-Haworth in 1812 mentioned caterpillars from Devonshire, and although single
-specimens of the moth seem to have been taken here and there in various
-years between that date and 1854, in only one year during that period was
-it reported from several parts of the country. This was in 1834, when four
-moths were captured in August, and eight or nine others seen at Yarmouth;
-caterpillars were also found on the bedstraw growing on the Denes. Odd
-examples of the moth were observed that year in Lincolnshire,
-Somersetshire, and in the Isle of Wight. In 1855-56, caterpillars were
-obtained in August on the sandhills at Deal, and, in September, at
-Devonport in the first-named year. A moth was taken in May, 1857, and,
-later in that year, specimens were captured at Deal, {40} Brighton, and
-Taunton. Three moths were recorded in 1858; and in 1859 caterpillars were
-plentiful on the south-east coast, common on the Cheshire coast, also
-reported from Devon, Cambs., London, and Darlington; over a score were
-found within a short distance of Perth. A good many moths were also taken.
-The species was especially abundant in 1870, in which year caterpillars
-were collected in hundreds. It seems to have been widely distributed
-throughout England, and was again found in Perthshire. Perhaps not more
-than three specimens were taken between 1872 and 1888, but in the rainy and
-cold summer of the latter year, the moths seem to have invaded the country
-in great force, and were reported from many parts of England, and also from
-Aberdeen in Scotland, and from Howth in Ireland. Caterpillars, too, were
-plentiful on the coast sandhills of Kent, Cheshire, and Lancashire, and
-also in the Eastern Counties.
-
-In March, 1889, Mr. Elisha had moths emerge from chrysalids of the previous
-year. These had been placed in a temperature ranging from 60 to 70 degrees,
-and the moths came out in from fourteen to sixteen days after commencing
-the forcing process. Some half a dozen chrysalids that I had in 1888, from
-Lancashire caterpillars, were allowed to remain in the earth, which was
-contained in a large-sized flower-pot; the moths emerged in May and June,
-1889, all but one being perfect specimens.
-
-In 1894 Mr. Harwood obtained five caterpillars on the Essex coast, and in
-1897 the Rev. A. Miles Moss found a few, and observed traces of others, on
-the Lancashire coast, but, apart from these records, very few moths or
-caterpillars of this species appear to have been noted in the country since
-1888, and we still await the advent of another _Galii_ year. So far the
-periods of scarcity between the seasons of plenty have been twenty-five,
-eleven, and nineteen years.
-
-The range of this insect extends through Europe and Asia to {41} Siberia
-and Amurland. It is represented in North America by the Galium Sphinx
-(_Celerio intermedia_, Kirby = _chamaenerii_, Harris), which so greatly
-resembles it that only an expert could readily distinguish one from the
-other.
-
-THE STRIPED HAWK (_Phryxus_ (_Deilephila_) _livornica_).
-
-Owing to some confusion between this moth (Plate 15, Fig. 3) and the North
-American Striped Morning Sphinx (_D. lineata_), which also seems to have
-had a place in the cabinets of the earlier British entomologists, the
-localities given by authors previous to 1828 are doubtful. Haworth,
-however, in 1803, mentions Cornwall, and Stephens, in his remarks on this
-species, refers to a specimen from Norfolk; one taken off the mast of the
-Ramsgate steam vessel at Billingsgate, in June, 1824; and three specimens,
-one of which he figured, captured near Kingsbridge, Devonshire.
-
-In 1846 thirteen of these moths were recorded from various parts of England
-and Ireland, and probably many others were in these islands that year.
-Between May 12 and 26, 1860, twenty specimens were taken in the south of
-England, and more than half of them in Devonshire. In 1862 a specimen
-occurred at Worthing on April 16, and one at Herne Hill on April 29; others
-were taken between May 2 and May 18 on the south and south-west coasts, and
-at Colchester. Over a score of specimens were recorded in 1868, chiefly in
-August, and from localities ranging from Cornwall to Yorkshire. The year
-1870 was a good one for the species, and moths were reported from England,
-Wales, Ireland, and Scotland. Fully fifty specimens were obtained, mostly
-in May, and caterpillars were also found. In 1904 the moth occurred in May,
-at several places in the south and south-west of England, also in
-Gloucestershire, Wales, and at Carlisle; in September of this year a
-specimen was taken on the pier at Dover, and another on a small {42}
-headland at Barry, in Glamorgan. Some of the early captured females
-deposited eggs; caterpillars resulting therefrom were fed on vine, and at
-least one moth was reared in September.
-
-A good many specimens visited the south of England, more particularly South
-Devon, in June, 1906, but the species was reported as occurring in large
-numbers on rhododendron blossom near Cork in Ireland from June 9 to 13 or
-14. In August and September the moth was reported from Kent, Sussex, Hants,
-Dorset, Devon, Somerset, and South Wales; such specimens probably being the
-offspring of the early immigrants. During the past forty years the barren
-seasons for the Striped Hawk appear to have been only ten. The dates of its
-occurrence have been somewhat erratic. One was captured in 1887 in the
-month of February, one on March 27 in 1903, but the moth has been observed
-in each month from May to September inclusive, although May, June, and
-August would seem to have been the more favoured. The caterpillar has not
-been seen often in England. Mr. Farn recorded six or seven from Ryde in
-July, 1870; they were feeding on vine and centaury in a garden. One spun up
-in the leaves at the bottom of the box on July 27, but the web was so
-fragile that the caterpillar fell out, and changed to the chrysalis state
-on the 30th. The moth emerged on August 26. In the same year several
-caterpillars occurred in Devon and Cornwall, and one of these was found on
-July 11 in a mangold-wurtzel field in the Exeter district. It was
-afterwards reared on fuchsia, and produced a moth on August 18. Nine others
-were reported from a nursery garden at Plymouth; they were fed up on
-dock--the plant upon which they had been found--and the moth was reared
-later in the year. In 1902 Mr. Jager received a caterpillar from Starcross
-about July 20, and this attained the moth state on September 27. A
-caterpillar, believed to be of this species, was found in a sunny garden at
-Lewes in Sussex, July 20, 1906. {43}
-
-According to Hellins the eggs are light green in colour, and the
-caterpillars hatch out in about three weeks. When it first emerges from the
-egg-shell the caterpillar is dirty white without spots, and the head and
-horn are black. The adult is dark green or black dotted with yellow; three
-yellow lines on the back and two rows of black-ringed yellow spots, with
-some black spots above them; each yellow spot is tinged with pink on the
-upper portion. Head black, marked with yellow; horn reddish, with the tip
-black. Sometimes the rings of the body are banded.
-
-It feeds in June and July on vine, fuchsia, dock, and probably other
-plants. It may be noted that the foliage of house vines are stated to be
-unsuitable food. The blossoms of numerous plants are visited by the moths
-in the evening, among which are delphinium, petunia, honeysuckle, tobacco,
-rhododendron, valerian, and silene.
-
-In the daytime it has been found resting on walls, windows, and also the
-curtains; on grass turf, railway metals, fences, and on plants and shrubs.
-
-The distribution of this species is somewhat similar to that of the
-Silver-striped Hawk-moth, but it extends into Western China and is
-represented in North America.
-
-THE SILVER-STRIPED HAWK (_Hippotion (Chaerocampa) celerio_).
-
-Referring to this species in 1828 Stephens wrote: "The first recorded
-specimen of the perfect insect was taken flying in Bunhill-fields
-burying-ground so long ago as 1779: and the specimen now exists in a high
-state of preservation in Mr. Haworth's collection, having been purchased by
-him at the dispersion of that of Mr. Francillon. Subsequently to the above
-capture the larvae have been found several times in Cambridgeshire.... Two
-or three were also taken about fifteen {44} or sixteen years since in a
-garden at Norwich, and were kept until they changed to pupae; but
-unfortunately, in that state their metamorphosis ended. One of these pupae
-I have in my collection. Of late, however, the perfect insect has occurred
-more than once, and in totally different parts of the country. Three
-specimens, as I am informed by the Rev. F. W. Hope, were taken near Oxford
-several years ago. In August, 1826, an injured one was found resting on a
-wall near Birmingham; and last summer a second was secured not far distant
-from the same locality; the latter I have in my possession. Again, Mr.
-Marshall informed me in March last, that, on his way to Manchester, he met
-with an individual who possessed upwards of a dozen living pupae, which
-were procured from larvae found in that neighbourhood during last season."
-
-Humphrey and Westwood mention a specimen taken in Brighton in 1834, and in
-1846 eight moths were obtained. Something like one hundred and twenty-five
-specimens of this species have been recorded between the year last quoted
-and the present time. Of these only one occurred in Ireland. This was a
-specimen taken at light on September 17, 1881, at Mullaghmore, County
-Sligo. Several were captured in Scotland, and one in Wales; but the bulk
-were obtained at various places in England, not in the south only but in
-the north also. The majority were met with in the autumn, but a specimen
-was reported as taken in May, 1848, at Harlestone, another in March, 1862,
-at Tooting, and a third in the Isle of Anglesea, July, 1865. In the
-last-named year nine specimens were captured in the autumn. Doubleday
-recorded a caterpillar found in a garden at Epping (October, 1867), and
-other caterpillars have been reported from Newmarket and Sussex.
-
-At least one example of the moth has been recorded almost annually since
-1846, but captures seem to have been more numerous in 1861, 1866, 1870,
-1879, 1881, and especially so in 1885. The caterpillar (figured on Plate 1)
-varies in ground colour, which may be pale brown, dark brown, or green.
-There is a black line along the middle of the back, and a pinkish brown
-stripe on each side; the latter runs from the ring next the head to the
-horn, but is interrupted on ring four, and the back from this ring to the
-horn is covered with linear dots arranged in more or less regular rows; the
-underside is thickly sprinkled with black-ringed white dots; on each side
-of ring four there is a conspicuous oval mark made up of a blackish outer
-ring, an inner ring of yellowish, and one of reddish; the centre is
-blackish, with some yellowish dots upon it. Head small, pale brown; horn
-blackish and rather rough.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 16.
- 1. OLEANDER HAWK-MOTH.
- 2. SILVER-STRIPED HAWK-MOTH.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 17.
- ELEPHANT HAWK-MOTH.
- _Egg, natural size and enlarged; caterpillar and chrysalis._
-
-{45} It feeds on vine (_Vitis vinifera_) and yellow bedstraw (_Galium
-verum_); also on fuchsia and virginia-creeper (_Ampelopsis_). August and
-September are given as months for this caterpillar, but the Newmarket and
-Epping examples referred to were taken in October.
-
-The moth seems to visit us chiefly in September and October. It does not
-appear to have been so often taken at flowers as at light, or when resting
-by day, on a wall or window of a dwelling house or shop, to which it had
-been attracted at night by the illumination within. The species has a wide
-range through Africa and Southern Asia to Java, Borneo, and Australia. In
-Europe it is perhaps only native in southern parts; thence it sometimes
-wanders through Central Europe to Germany and Holland. The specimens
-visiting our islands may come from the latter country, or possibly in years
-of comparative plenty the moths come to us _via_ the west coast of Europe.
-
-THE OLEANDER HAWK-MOTH (_Daphnis_ (_Chaerocampa_) _nerii_).
-
-The forewings of this handsome moth (Plate 16) are pinkish grey, marbled
-with various shades of green and olive brown; some of the marbling edged
-with white. Hind wings greyish {46} brown shaded with greenish, with a
-whitish, waved cross line. The colours of the head, thorax, and body are
-similar to those of the wings.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 18.
-
-CHRYSALIS OF OLEANDER-MOTH.
-
-(Photo by W. J. Lucas.)]
-
-The caterpillar feeds on the Oleander (_Nerium oleander_), and also on the
-lesser periwinkle (_Vinca minor_). When full grown it is olive green on the
-back from the hinder part of the third ring to the small, rough, and
-drooping, horn; the under surface and the whole of the first three rings
-ochreous; there is a divided brown spot on the ring nearest the head (first
-thoracic segment), and two larger blue-black spots on the third ring. These
-spots each enclose two whitish clouds; on the front edge of rings five to
-nine (second to sixth abdominal segments) are whitish dots, but these are
-fewer on rings eight and nine than on the others; a narrow whitish stripe,
-edged above and below with whitish dots, runs along the sides from ring
-five to the horn; spiracles are black with pale margins (Plate 1).
-
-Chrysalis brown with blackish central line, which becomes broken and
-obscure on the body rings, broken again on the head, but continued thence
-along the under surface to the tips of the wing cases. The spiracles are
-blackish; the body is dotted, and the last rings are clouded with blackish.
-
-I have only seen a preserved example of this caterpillar and a dead
-chrysalis; descriptions of each are from these.
-
-The first published notification of the occurrence of this moth {47} in
-England is that of Stephens in 1835. He wrote: "A noble specimen of this
-remarkably beautiful insect (five inches three lines in expanse), was taken
-in the beginning of September, 1833, by a lady in her drawing-room at
-Dover. Whether the pupa had been imported in some of the numerous packages
-of foreign fruits, etc., or the insect itself had been brought over in one
-of the passage-vessels, is a question not easily solved. The larva feeds
-upon an exotic plant; but has been found in a garden near Charmouth, as
-appears by a subsequent communication to the _Ent. Magazine_ by Captain
-Blomer."
-
-The next record of the moth appears in the _Zoologist_ for 1852. "On the
-11th of September a specimen of _Chaerocampa nerii_ was taken in Montpelier
-Road, Brighton, by a young gentleman at school, while it was hovering over
-a passion flower." Two caterpillars were found in a garden at Eastbourne,
-feeding upon the leaves of potato, in October, 1859. In confinement they
-ate periwinkle, but they were not reared. The following records are, except
-where otherwise stated, of single specimens of the moth: Hastings, August
-2, 1862; Sheffield, September 14, 1867; St. Leonards, October, 1868 (? 2
-examples); Ascot, June, 1873; Lewes, September 3, 1874; Hemel Hempstead,
-October 15, 1876; Tottenham, Middlesex, Eastbourne, Sussex, and Blandford,
-Dorset, September, 1884; Hartlepool and Prestwich, July, 1885; Brighton,
-September 7, 1886; Poplar, September 20, 1888; Dartmouth, September 26,
-1890; Stowling, Kent, July, 1896; Yalding, Kent, September 18, Teignmouth,
-October 23, 1900; Banhead, Scotland, end September, 1901; Liverpool, in a
-steamship, and Atherstone, Warwickshire, October, 1903; Eastbourne, July
-14, 1904; Lancaster, September 18, 1906. A specimen of _Daphnis hypothous_,
-Cramer, a native of India, Borneo, Java, and Ceylon, was captured at
-Crieff, Perthshire, in July, 1873, and was recorded as _D. nerii_, and the
-error was not rectified until 1891.
-
-It will be seen from the above that the moth is exceedingly {48} rare in
-these islands. The species is an inhabitant of Africa, and its normal range
-extends along both sides of the Mediterranean through Asia Minor and Syria
-to India. In Europe, north of the Alps, the moth is seldom observed, and it
-is probably almost as scarce on most of the Continent as it is with us.
-
-THE SMALL ELEPHANT (_Metopsilus_ (_Chaerocampa_) _porcellus_).
-
-The fore wings of this hawk-moth are ochreous with a faint olive tinge; the
-front margin is edged and blotched with pinkish, and there is a broad but
-irregular band of the same colour on the outer margin. Hind wings blackish
-on upper margin, pinkish on outer margin, and ochreous tinged with olive
-between; fringes chequered whitish, sometimes tinged with pink. Head,
-thorax, and body pinkish, more or less variegated with olive; the thorax
-has a patch of white hairs above the base of the wings (Plate 19, Figs. 3,
-4).
-
-In most specimens there are at least traces of two cross-lines in the fore
-wings, the space between these is sometimes brownish olive; the outer
-border of the hind wings varies in tint, and may be purplish. Occasionally
-the ground colour of the fore wings is greenish olive.
-
-A hybrid, resulting from a pairing between _Chaerocampa elpenor_ and
-_Metopsilus porcellus_ has been named _elpenorcellus_ (Staud).
-
-The egg is a rich full green and rather glossy; it is laid in June on
-yellow bedstraw and other kinds of _Galium_.
-
-A full-grown caterpillar will measure quite two inches in length, and in
-general appearance is not unlike that of the next species. It is, however,
-greyish brown in colour, merging into yellowish brown on the front rings.
-The head is greyer than the body; the usual Sphingid horn is absent, and in
-its place there is a double wart. When quite young the caterpillar is pale
-greyish green with blackish bristles, and the head and under surface are
-yellowish.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 18.
- SMALL ELEPHANT HAWK-MOTH.
- _Eggs, natural size and enlarged; caterpillar and chrysalis._
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 19.
- 1, 2. ELEPHANT HAWK-MOTH.
- 3, 4. SMALL ELEPHANT HAWK-MOTH.
-
-{49} It feeds, at night, in August and September, on bedstraw growing in
-dry places. It will eat almost any sort of _Galium_; also willow herb
-(_Epilobium_), and purple loosestrife (_Lythrum salicaria_).
-
-The chrysalis is pale ochreous brown sprinkled with darker brown; the wing
-cases and the ring divisions are also darker. The body rings are furnished
-with reddish hooks. It is enclosed in a cocoon similar to that of the
-Elephant, and usually is on the ground. The early stages are figured in
-Plate 18.
-
-The moth, which chiefly affects drier localities than the next species, is
-on the wing in May and June in the south of England, and June and July in
-the north. It has a weakness for the flowers of honeysuckle, and
-spur-valerian (_Centranthus_), but will take toll in the way of sweets
-wherever found, even from the sugar patches of the nocturnal collector.
-Except that it does not appear frequently in the Midlands, the species
-seems to be widely distributed throughout the country. In Scotland its
-range extends to Perthshire and Aberdeen; and in Ireland it is found all
-over the island, and is fairly plentiful in some localities, but especially
-attached to the coast.
-
-Abroad, its distribution covers nearly the whole of Europe, and eastward to
-north-eastern Asia Minor, Bithynia, and the Altai.
-
-THE ELEPHANT (_Chaerocampa_ (_Eumorpha_) _elpenor_).
-
-The fore wings are olive brown with two pinkish lines, both shaded with
-dark olive brown; the first is rather broader than the second, and
-terminates just above the centre of the wing and near a white dot; the
-second line runs from the white inner margin to the tip of the wing, and
-the area beyond it is flushed with pinkish; there is a black mark at the
-base of the wings and the fringes are pinkish. The hind wings are black on
-the {50} basal half and pinkish on the outer half; fringes white. The head,
-thorax, and body are olive brown marked with pinkish, the thorax being
-additionally ornamented with white on the sides. The moth is shown on Plate
-19, and the early stages on Plate 17.
-
-The eggs are whitish-green in colour and rather glossy. Those I had were
-laid in June on a leaf of willow herb (_Epilobium_).
-
-When newly hatched the caterpillar is yellowish white, and paler between
-the rings; the head is tinged with greenish, and the horn is black. The
-full-grown caterpillar measures nearly three inches in length, and is
-rather plump. It is blackish or brownish grey, thickly sprinkled with black
-dots on the back and more sparingly on the sides; the spiracles are
-ochreous ringed with blackish, and below them is an ochreous line, which is
-most distinct on the front rings; on each side of the third to fifth rings
-there is a round black spot, the second and third pairs enclosing black
-centred whitish lunules which are sometimes tinged with pink or yellow; the
-horn is much of the same colour as the body. There is a green form of this
-caterpillar.
-
-It feeds, chiefly, at night, in July and August, on _Epilobium hirsutum_
-and on bedstraw especially the kind (_G. palustre_), growing by the side of
-brooks and streams. The chrysalis is palish brown freckled with darker
-brown, the divisions between the rings and the spiked tail appearing
-blackish; enclosed in a cocoon formed of earth and sundry fragments of
-stalks, leaves, etc., spun together with silk and generally on the ground,
-but sometimes just under the surface.
-
-The moth is on the wing in June, and very occasionally there is a late
-summer emergence. It does not fly until dusk, and may then be seen hovering
-over the blossoms of honeysuckle, etc. It is also known to be attracted now
-and then to "sugared" trees. The best plan, however, for obtaining a few
-fine specimens {51} is to rear them from eggs or caterpillars. The latter
-are said to come up to sun themselves about four o'clock in the afternoon,
-but they may be found at any time in their season, and in likely spots, by
-turning back the herbage and looking for them in their hiding-places. When
-in repose the head and front rings are drawn inwards, and this distends the
-eyed rings, thus bringing these into prominence and giving the creature a
-rather wicked look, from which the uninitiated would be likely to retreat.
-The caterpillar, however, is quite harmless, and may be handled with
-impunity.
-
-Although somewhat scarce in the more northern counties, this is a pretty
-common species throughout most of England and Wales. Its range extends into
-Scotland as far as Dumbarton, and, according to Barrett, along the east
-coast to Aberdeen. Kane states that in Ireland it is met with everywhere
-and is abundant in some localities. Distributed over Europe, except the
-more northern parts, and extending through Asia to Japan.
-
-THE HUMMING-BIRD HAWK-MOTH (_Macroglossa stellatarum_).
-
-The brown fore wings with black cross lines, and the brownish bordered
-orange hind wings, at once separate this from any other hawk-moth occurring
-in our islands. Its greenish eggs are laid on bedstraw, and in July and
-August the caterpillars may be found on the same kind of plant. They are
-greenish or brownish covered with white dots; a whitish line runs along
-each side of the back and a yellowish one lower down on the sides; the
-spiracles are blackish, and the horn bluish shading into yellow at the tip.
-The yellow-flowering bedstraw (_Galium verum_) seems to be the kind upon
-which the caterpillar is most often found, but it also occurs on the hedge
-bedstraw (_G. mollugo_). It has been known to eat wild madder (_Rubia
-peregrina_), and is {52} stated to thrive in confinement on goose-grass or
-cleavers (_G. aparine_). When full grown a loosely woven cocoon is formed
-on the ground beneath the food plant, or other herbage, and therein the
-caterpillar changes to an ochreous grey or brownish chrysalis. This is
-marked with darker brown on the wing covers and around the spiracles; the
-"tongue" case forms a small beak-like projection.
-
-Like the Bee Hawks, referred to presently, the moth is a day flyer, and
-delights in the sunshine, although it has been several times seen on the
-wing quite late in the evening, and has also been observed hovering in
-front of flowers and probing them with its long "tongue" even in the
-pouring rain. Blossoms of very many plants, both wild and cultivated, seem
-to receive its attention, but it is perhaps most partial to those of the
-jasmine where available. In the south of Europe the species is generally
-abundant throughout the year; but there would seem to be at least two
-distinct broods, one appearing in June, and the other in October. Possibly
-there may be an intermediate brood in August, as the period from egg to
-moth is known to be less than two months. In the British Isles, so far as
-one can gather from the records, caterpillars have only been found in July
-and August. Single specimens of the moth have been seen in the earliest
-months of the year, as for example, January 31, 1898 (Bath), January 3,
-1899 (S. Wales), February 2, 1900 (London); it has also been observed
-several times in December. These facts and others connected with this
-species in Britain certainly lend colour to the oft-repeated statement that
-the moth hibernates in this country. The insect is known to enter houses,
-and to examine holes and cracks in walls, dry banks, etc., in the autumn.
-Mr. J. P. Barrett, in a note, written in November or December, 1900, states
-that six or seven moths came into his house at Margate in October, and that
-one was still hidden in his bedroom. However, if it be granted that the
-moth does hibernate here, the instances are so rare and isolated that,
-unless such specimens are impregnated females, the chances of these
-reproducing their kind the following year are not great. We have,
-therefore, to fall back upon immigration as the probable source of the
-Humming-Bird Hawk-moth in Britain. Except the more northern portion, this
-species is distributed over the whole of the Palaearctic region, including
-India, China, Corea, and Japan.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 20.
- 1. NARROW-BORDERED BEE HAWK-MOTH: _caterpillar_.
- 2, 2a. BROAD-BORDERED BEE HAWK: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 21.
- 1. HUMMING-BIRD HAWK-MOTH.
- 2. BROAD-BORDERED BEE HAWK-MOTH, _male_; 3 _female_.
- 4. NARROW-BORDERED BEE HAWK-MOTH, _male_; 5 _female_.
-
-{53} THE BROAD-BORDERED BEE HAWK-MOTH (_Hemaris fuciformis_).
-
-We have but two kinds of Bee Hawk-moths in our islands, and the present
-species (Plate 21, Figs. 2, 3) is easily recognized by the broad reddish
-brown borders of the wings and especially those on the front pair, which
-also have a black bar at the end of the cell. When freshly emerged the
-wings are not clear and transparent, but covered with greenish-grey scales,
-which are so loosely attached that they are lost after the moth's first
-flight.
-
-The egg is bright green, and is laid on the underside of a leaf of
-honeysuckle. When very young the caterpillar is yellowish white, but when
-full grown (Plate 20, Fig. 2) it is whitish green on the back, green on the
-sides, and reddish brown beneath. Along the middle of the back there is a
-darker, much interrupted, green line and a yellow line on each side of it;
-the spiracles are reddish, the head is dark green, and the horn reddish
-brown merging into violet at the base, and brown at the tip. Sometimes
-there are blotches of reddish brown on the sides. When quite mature and
-ready to assume the chrysalis stage the caterpillar changes in colour to
-purplish brown. At all times it is difficult to detect, as its colour and
-markings agree so well with the stems, stalks, and leaves of the food
-plant. If a leaf of honeysuckle having round holes on each side of the
-midrib be noticed, examination of the underside of that leaf may reveal a
-young caterpillar of this species. {54}
-
-The common honeysuckle, or woodbine (_Lonicera periclymenum_) is the usual
-food, but in confinement the caterpillars will eat the foliage of the
-cultivated kinds of _Lonicera_, and, it is stated, even snowberry
-(_Symphoricarpus racemosus_). In rearing it will, however, be safer to
-supply them with the ordinary food wherever this is to be obtained. July
-and August are the months in which to look for them. The chrysalis is
-blackish brown, the skin is rather roughened, and the ring divisions are
-paler brown. It is protected by a silken cocoon, the interior of which is
-smooth, and the exterior coated with earth, etc.
-
-From mid-May to mid-June in average years, the moth is on the wing. The
-blossoms of the rhododendron are its favourite attraction, and the best
-time to see it at these flowers is on a nice sunny morning between ten
-o'clock and midday. The flowers of the bugle (_Ajuga reptans_) growing in
-meadows, wood-ridings, on railway banks or hedgerows, are hardly less
-attractive, but these are less easily worked than the higher shrubs. The
-collector has simply to stand before the latter and await the arrival of
-the active Bee Hawks. Among other flowers that this moth has been observed
-to visit are those of its own food plant; ragged robins (_Lychnis
-flos-cuculi_), ground ivy (_Nepeta glechoma_), and also blue-bell and
-primrose.
-
-The species is widely distributed and locally common throughout England,
-but its northern range does not extend apparently beyond Yorkshire.
-According to Kane it is absent from Ireland; and the reports of odd
-specimens from Scotland are probably erroneous. Its distribution abroad
-extends over Europe, except the most northern parts, a large portion of
-northern and central Asia, and southwards to North Africa.
-
-Moses Harris, it may be mentioned, figured this moth in 1775 as "The
-Clear-winged Humming-bird Sphinx." {55}
-
-THE NARROW-BORDERED BEE HAWK-MOTH (_Hemaris tityus_).
-
-This moth (Plate 21, Figs. 4, 5) has long been known as "_bombyliformis_"
-and was so mentioned by Haworth in 1802, but for some years past there has
-been a growing tendency to discard the name altogether, and as most recent
-authors follow Kirby's identification of this species as the _tityus_ of
-Linnaeus, that name is here adopted.
-
-The chief characters separating this moth from the preceding are the narrow
-blackish borders of the wings and the absence of the black mark at the end
-of the cell of fore wings. It has been suggested that the female deposits
-its green oval eggs on the undersides of the leaves of devil's-bit scabious
-(_Scabiosa succisa_) whilst on the wing, but as she will lay freely in a
-box it is most probable that she settles on the plants when engaged in egg
-laying.
-
-The caterpillar (Plate 20, Fig. 1) is green, roughened with white points,
-from which tiny hairs arise; the green colour varies in tint from whitish
-to bluish; the lines along each side of the back are yellowish, and often
-have purplish red spots, or patches, upon them; the spiracles are set in
-purplish red patches, and the roughened reddish-brown horn is finely
-pointed. The under side is traversed by a purplish-red stripe. There is
-some modification in the reddish markings, both as regards number and
-intensity; these are well developed in the specimen from the New Forest
-figured on Plate 20. The caterpillars may be found in June and July on the
-under sides of the lower leaves of the scabious, and as they eat holes in
-the leaves these marks should afford a clue to their whereabouts.
-
-A few days before changing to a dark brown chrysalis, which is enclosed in
-a coarse and very loosely constructed cocoon, the caterpillar assumes a
-reddish colour.
-
-This moth, which much resembles a large humble bee, is on {56} the wing
-from about the middle of May to the middle of June. It should be looked for
-in places where its food plant flourishes, such as rough fields adjoining
-woods, woodland glades, marshy heaths, fens, bogs, etc. It visits the
-blossoms of various low growing plants, among which the louseworts
-(_Pedicularis palustris_ and _P. sylvatica_) and the bugle (_Ajuga
-reptans_) are perhaps favourites. In some localities the blossoms of the
-rhododendron and of the bird's-foot trefoil (_Lotus corniculatus_) are very
-attractive. When seen hovering over the flowers it must be approached
-cautiously, as, although seemingly fully engrossed in the business in hand,
-it is quickly alarmed and its movements are rapid.
-
-It occurs throughout the greater part of England and Wales and northwards
-to Sutherlandshire in Scotland. In Ireland it is abundant in many
-localities.
-
-Distributed over Europe its range extends northwards to Lapland, southwards
-to north-west Africa, and eastward to Amurland.
-
-PROMINENTS (_Notodontidae_).
-
-In the majority of our moths belonging to this family there is a tooth-like
-tuft of scales projecting from about the middle of the inner margin of the
-fore wings; these, when the moth is resting, are brought together and
-raised above the level of the closed wings (see Fig. 11, page 11). The
-antennae of the male are bipectinated in most of the species, but those of
-_Odontosia_, _Lophopteryx_, and _Phalera_ are dentated and each tooth has a
-little tuft of short hair.
-
-The moths are not often seen in the day time, but a few species are
-sometimes met with at rest on tree trunks, palings, etc. All fly at night
-and are pretty rapid on the wing; possibly if it were not for the fact that
-a bright light has a powerful attraction for them, the perfect insects
-would be rarely captured. {57} Specimens, when caught, except females which
-it may be well to keep for eggs, should be killed and pinned at once, as
-many kinds become very restless when imprisoned in a box and soon damage
-themselves. Females usually deposit their eggs freely, and in most cases
-the caterpillars are not difficult to rear when once they begin to feed.
-Sometimes it is not easy to induce them to commence this very necessary
-business. The caterpillars, except those of _Phalera_ and _Pygaera_, are
-without hairs on the body; those of the true Prominents generally have one,
-or more, hump on the back; in some kinds the anal prolegs or hind claspers,
-are small. When resting the hinder part of the caterpillar is more or less
-raised, several of them elevate the front portion also, and frequently the
-posture assumed is a most curious one.
-
-The caterpillars of _Cerura_, _Dicranura_, and _Stauropus_ have the hind
-claspers transformed into tail-like appendages, which in the case of the
-Puss and Kittens take the form of a pair of slender tubes furnished with
-flagellae, or whips, which can be protruded or withdrawn as occasion may
-require. These organs are presumably for defensive purposes, but are not
-always effective in combating the attack of parasitical flies, as these
-evidently manage to deposit their egg on the caterpillars not infrequently.
-
-The pupa, or chrysalis, of some kinds is enclosed in a hard cocoon on tree
-trunks, and others in a soft cocoon generally underground; sometimes,
-however, the cocoon is spun up between leaves; occasionally, as for example
-that of the Buff-tip, the chrysalis is found in the ground without any
-protecting covering, although the cell in which it was formed may have been
-flimsily lined with silk.
-
-Nearly one hundred species are referred to this family in Staudinger's
-"Catalogue of Palaearctic Lepidoptera," and of these twenty-five occur, or
-have been taken, in the British Isles, nearly all of which are accepted as
-indigenous. Two of the {58} three species not generally regarded as true
-natives have been found in the caterpillar state, and the third was reared
-from an egg obtained with others of the same kind in Norfolk.
-
-THE ALDER KITTEN (_Cerura bicuspis_).
-
-This moth (Plate 22, Fig. 3) differs from either of the two next following
-in being whiter, and in having both margins of the central band of the fore
-wings angled or bent inwards above the middle; this is markedly so on the
-outer side. The band itself is black, inclining to purplish rather than
-grey. Barrett mentions a specimen without central band or cloud towards
-tip.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 19. COCOON OF THE ALDER KITTEN.]
-
-According to Buckler, the caterpillar is yellow-green; head dark
-reddish-brown; at the back of the head commences a broad, reddish-brown
-blotch, which runs to a point on the back of the third segment, where is a
-slight elevation; on the fourth it recommences and becomes broader on each
-segment to the eighth, where it extends below and encloses the spiracles,
-thence it narrows to the tenth, continuing on the eleventh and twelfth as a
-broad stripe, and {59} widening on the thirteenth, where it again narrows
-to the tentacles; in the broad portion of this dorsal marking are faint
-indications of two or three orange spots; on each side it is broadly edged
-with pale yellow, and on the sixth, seventh, and eighth segments its margin
-is deeply indented. It feeds on alder and birch in July and August.
-
-The cocoon is shown in its natural position on birch bark (Fig. 19). This
-was kindly lent to me for figuring by Mr. L. W. Newman, of Bexley, who also
-had another in which lichen as well as fragments of bark were worked into
-the surface, so that the cocoon was less in evidence than the one
-portrayed.
-
-The moth emerges in May and June.
-
-The first British specimen, a male, was found on alder near Preston, and
-was recorded by Doubleday in the _Zoologist_ for 1847. A second example was
-noted from the same locality in 1849. This district in Lancashire, and
-Tilgate Forest in Sussex, are the chief homes in the north and the south of
-England respectively; but one or more specimens have occurred in Cheshire,
-Herefordshire, Oxfordshire, Norfolk, Suffolk, and Devonshire, and more
-frequently in Staffordshire, Derbyshire, and Yorkshire. It does not seem to
-inhabit Scotland or Ireland, neither has it been recorded from Wales, so
-far as I can find, more than once.
-
-The species is found in Germany, Switzerland, Eastern France, Belgium,
-Southern Sweden, Central Russia, Livonia, Finland, Ussuri, and a local race
-occurs in Amurland.
-
-THE POPLAR KITTEN (_Cerura bifida_).
-
-Fore wings grey, with a broad, dark grey central band, and a cloud of the
-same colour towards the tips of the wings; the band is inwardly margined by
-an almost straight black line, and outwardly by a curved line; the third
-line is double, and curved towards the costa, forming the inner edge of the
-grey cloud, the lower part is wavy. The first black line is inwardly, and
-{60} the second outwardly edged with ochreous, and preceding the first is a
-series of black dots.
-
-The full-grown caterpillar, which is green, with a yellow-edged, purplish,
-irregular stripe on the back, is figured on Plate 23, together with a very
-young example, the purplish-black eggs as laid, and the red-brown
-chrysalis. The cocoon from which the chrysalis was extracted was spun up on
-a fairly stout twig of poplar, from which some of the bark had been torn;
-the cocoon was formed, as regards the upper part, on the bare twig, and
-this was covered with gnawed wood, instead of with bark fragments, as is
-the lower end. The moth is figured on Plate 22, and the early stages on
-Plate 23.
-
-The moth emerges in June, sometimes in July, and may occasionally be found
-at rest on the trunks of poplars, on which the caterpillar feeds from July
-to September; also on adjacent walls or palings. The cocoons are made up on
-the surface or in the chinks of the bark, and may be searched for, all
-through the winter and early spring. It is curious to note how readily
-these are detected after the moth has escaped, and how difficult they are
-to see before that event. Usually there is but one brood in the year, but
-in the hot summer of 1906 a male specimen emerged from a few chrysalids
-that I had reared from eggs laid at the end of June of that year. On the
-other hand, the moth has been known to remain in the chrysalis for two
-winters.
-
-The species is not uncommon in some parts of the London district, and seems
-to occur throughout England wherever poplars abound. It does not appear to
-have been found in Scotland, and is scarce in Ireland. Abroad it is found
-in Central Europe with a northern range to Finland, southwards to Italy and
-Greece, and eastwards to the Altai.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 22.
- 1. POPLAR KITTEN-MOTH, _male_; 2 _female_.
- 3. ALDER KITTEN-MOTH, _male_.
- 4. SALLOW KITTEN-MOTH, _male_; 5 _female_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 23.
- 1, 1a, 1b. POPLAR KITTEN: _eggs, caterpillar and chrysalis_.
- 2, 2a. SALLOW KITTEN: _eggs and caterpillars_.
-
-{61}
-
-THE SALLOW KITTEN (_Cerura furcula_).
-
-This moth differs from the last in its generally smaller size, but more
-especially in the shape of the black line forming the outer margin of the
-central band; this is always more or less angled or dentate towards the
-front margin of the wings, whereas, in the Poplar Kitten, this portion of
-the line forms a clean curve (Plate 22, Figs. 4, 5).
-
-The eggs are black, rather glossy, and are generally deposited in pairs,
-but rarely more than three, and often only singly, on the upper surface of
-a leaf of sallow or willow. The caterpillar feeds from July to September,
-sometimes as early as the end of June, or as late as October. It is green,
-with a yellow tinge; the markings on the back are similar to these
-characters in the caterpillar of the preceding species, but, as will be
-seen by looking at the figures on Plate 23, they are not quite the same in
-outline. The figure of the young caterpillar on this plate was made soon
-after it left the egg, and the shell from which it emerged is also
-depicted. Sallow and willow are the usual food plants, but in August, 1906,
-I found a half-grown caterpillar of this species on aspen, but it died a
-few days afterwards. The reddish-brown chrysalis is enclosed in the usual
-hard cocoon of its kind, which is affixed to a branch or the trunk of the
-tree upon which the caterpillar fed. A depression is usually selected, and
-when the cocoon is finished off with its covering of bark fragments it is
-difficult to see.
-
-The species is well distributed over England, Ireland, and Scotland;
-perhaps more frequently obtained on the mosses of Cheshire, Lancashire, and
-Yorkshire, than in other parts of England. It is found in Central and
-Northern Europe, and, according to Staudinger, in Amurland and North
-America. {62}
-
-THE PUSS MOTH (_Dicranura vinula_).
-
-Portraits of both sexes of this rather common moth are given on Plate 24.
-The head, thorax, and body are very fluffy. The whitish fore wings are
-crossed by several wave-like lines; the main veins (_nervures_) are
-ochreous, and the branches (_nervules_) are blackish; beyond the more or
-less clear basal area there is often a broad but irregular blackish band,
-and the wavy markings on the outer area vary in intensity (sometimes the
-short streaks between the veins terminate on the outer margin in black
-dots). Hind wings whitish in the male, and suffused with blackish in the
-female, to a greater or lesser extent. In some examples of the female the
-fore wings and the body are also tinged with blackish. The antennae are
-bipectinated in both sexes, but those of the female have the teeth much
-shorter than those of the male.
-
-The eggs are usually laid in pairs on the upper surface of a leaf of
-sallow, willow, or poplar. In colour these are purplish or reddish brown,
-shining, and finely grained; a minute depression at the top is yellowish,
-with a black speck at the bottom of the hollow.
-
-In its last stage the caterpillar is green, with a white or yellowish-edged
-purplish brown band on the back; the head is light brown margined with
-black and purplish behind, and the ring immediately following (first
-thoracic) is green margined with yellow and having two black spots on the
-upper part. When the creature assumes the position which Professor Poulton
-terms the terrifying attitude, the front part is elevated, the head is
-drawn back into the ring next to it, and the tails are raised and curved
-forward over the back (see Plate 25). Seen thus from the front the
-appearance of the caterpillar is certainly grotesque, and no doubt affords
-it some protection from its enemies. It feeds on poplars, sallows, and
-willows, usually in July and August, but sometimes as late as September.
-{63}
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 20.
-
-CATERPILLAR OF PUSS MOTH.]
-
-The reddish brown chrysalis is enclosed in a hard cocoon spun up and
-securely attached to the trunk or under a limb of the tree upon which the
-caterpillar was nourished, or upon some other adjacent thereto. I once
-found a cocoon on the lower rail of a garden fence. In constructing the
-cocoon fragments of bark and wood are worked on the exterior, but failing
-these the caterpillar will make use of any available material for the
-purpose. If enclosed in a tumbler covered with glass it will spin a
-transparent cocoon. Emergence from its strong pupal chamber would appear to
-be a difficult matter, but the caterpillar and the chrysalis both
-contribute something towards assisting the final efforts of the moth to
-escape. The caterpillar, in constructing the cocoon, is careful to make the
-exit end with a thinner layer than the other parts; then the chrysalis is
-provided with a cutting implement in the shape of a keel-like arrangement
-on the fore part, and with this it operates at the right time on the weak
-end until a breach is made; the moth breaks the head end of the chrysalis
-case and moistens {64} the ruptured material with a softening fluid so that
-the insect is able to force its way out of the cocoon; the chrysalis case
-remains in the cocoon.
-
-The moth is on the wing in May and June, and sometimes July. Three
-specimens that I reared this year (1907) from eggs found on a leaf of
-poplar last year, emerged on June 4th, 10th, and July 12th. They all
-pupated about the same time, and side by side on cork bark.
-
-I believe this species has not been recorded from the Orkneys or the
-Shetlands, but with these exceptions it seems to occur in more or less
-frequency throughout the United Kingdom. It is widely distributed in
-Europe, and its range extends to Siberia. In Lapland, Amurland, Japan, and
-North Africa it is represented by named forms.
-
-THE LOBSTER (_Stauropus fagi_).
-
-The English name of this insect does not apply to the greyish brown or
-sometimes blackish moth (Plate 26), but to its remarkable caterpillar, the
-figures of which, on Plate 27, are reproduced from drawings by Mr. Alfred
-Sich. In colour this curious-shaped creature is always some shade of brown,
-the head is marked in front with reddish, the ring divisions of the body
-are darker brown, and the hind rings are reddish brown.
-
-The late Mr. W. H. Tugwell, referring to the early history of these
-caterpillars, states that a female of the blackish form received from
-Reading in May was kept alive for seven days, during which time she laid a
-few eggs on oak leaves each night; "all told" she produced forty eggs. As
-she was then quite exhausted, a good many had probably been laid
-previously. The eggs when first laid are of a pale cream colour,
-hemispherical in shape and flattened beneath. About the seventh day a
-circular depression, and a dark spot, appear, and gradually the entire egg
-assumes a dull purplish colour. "On the tenth day the caterpillars hatch
-out. When they first leave the shell they appear extremely large, this is
-partly on account of the long legs and the caudal appendages which are ever
-nervously twisting about. The young caterpillars most carefully keep guard
-over their own egg-shell, which is to them an all-important item, as this
-provides them with their first meal--the first and only food they take for
-seven days, in fact, for a longer period, as it is not until after moulting
-their first skin that they eat any other food. This fact I proved over and
-over again, as, being an invalid, my time was quite free to watch them hour
-after hour and day after day. As soon as they have eaten their way out of
-the shell they stretch themselves, and then from time to time nibble
-portions of the white chitinous-looking egg-shell, and a tough morsel it
-seems to be for them; but they never leave it for more than an inch or so,
-and then rapidly come back. They keep nervously moving around and about
-this, and if perchance another caterpillar should approach within touch of
-it, a vigorous attack is made to drive off the intruder. All going well
-during the first hour or two, the whole of the shell, or sometimes not more
-than from half to two-thirds of it is consumed; and once the caterpillars
-really leave the egg-shell, that is, walk away from it, they do not touch
-it after. If by any chance a young caterpillar gets driven away from the
-egg-shell, death is certain to result, as I could never induce them to feed
-on portions of empty shells left by others; nor would they eat the leaves
-or the brown stipules of the beech, which it has been suggested they do
-eat. In no single instance did they eat other food in their first skin save
-and alone the one meal of their own egg-shells."
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 24.
- PUSS MOTH.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 25.
- PUSS MOTH.
- _Egg, natural size and enlarged; caterpillars, chrysalis and cocoon._
-
-{65} The caterpillars feed on beech, and also occasionally on birch, oak,
-hazel, and some fruit trees, and may be found from July to September.
-
-The chrysalis, which is enclosed in a tightly woven cocoon {66} spun up
-between leaves, usually dead ones, is blackish brown with a violet bloom
-upon it.
-
-The moths are on the wing in May and June in an early season, but not until
-June and July in a backward one. They may be sometimes found resting by day
-on the stems of small trees or even bushes. "In fact, anything," Mr.
-Holland says, "which stands upright in a beech wood will do, so that it is
-not too large." The blackish form of the moth is so like a knot on a stem
-that it is easily overlooked. There is sometimes a second emergence in
-August. Possibly those caterpillars found during the latter part of
-September in some favourable years are from eggs deposited by moths
-emerging in early August, and the offspring of May parents.
-
-The species is widely distributed, but not often common, over the Midland,
-Southern, and Eastern Counties of England. It seems to flourish chiefly in
-beech woods, and is perhaps more frequent in parts of Berkshire, Bucks, and
-Oxfordshire, than elsewhere, but it is not uncommon in some seasons in the
-New Forest. It has been reported from Swansea in Wales, and once from
-Selby, Yorkshire. In Ireland it is exceedingly rare, and is not known to
-occur in Scotland. The range abroad extends through Central Europe,
-northward to Sweden, southward to Spain and Portugal, and eastward to
-Armenia, Ussuri, and Japan.
-
-THE DUSKY MARBLED BROWN (_Gluphisia crenata_).
-
-Only three authenticated British examples are known of this dingy
-grey-brown moth (Plate 28, Fig. 3). The earliest intimation we have of the
-occurrence of this species in England is the following record by the late
-Mr. Henry Doubleday in the _Entomologist_, vol. i. p. 156: "_Chaonia
-crenata._ The first British specimen of this insect was taken in Ongar Park
-Wood, in June, 1839; a second in the same place, in June of the present
-year. Both specimens were females." The locality mentioned in the foregoing
-notice which was penned July 10th, 1841, is in the County of Essex. At a
-meeting of the Entomological Society of London held in April, 1854, the
-Rev. Joseph Greene exhibited a specimen that he had reared from a
-caterpillar obtained from a poplar near Halton, in Bucks, August, 1853.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 26.
- LOBSTER MOTH.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 27.
- LOBSTER MOTH.
- _Egg, enlarged, caterpillars, chrysalis and cocoon._
-
-{67} According to Buckler the caterpillar is pale green, with a thin
-whitish line down the middle of the back, a broader yellow line on each
-side, and some reddish spots on the front and hind rings of the body; the
-spiracles are black. It spins a somewhat oval-shaped cocoon between two
-poplar leaves, and therein turns to a glossy blackish brown chrysalis.
-
-Abroad the species is found in Central Europe, North Italy, North-western
-Russia, Southern Norway, and also in Amurland and Ussuri. There are said to
-be two broods on the continent, one emergence of moths taking place in
-April and the other in June or July.
-
-THE MARBLED BROWN (_Drymonia trimacula_).
-
-Somewhat similar to the next species, but the fore wings are generally
-whiter; the cross lines are not so straight, and there is no black crescent
-above the centre of the wings (Plate 28, Fig. 1).
-
-The caterpillar is green, with two yellow lines on the back, and a yellow
-one along the spiracles, the latter edged above with reddish. It feeds on
-oak, and may be found from July to September; stated to hide by day in the
-chinks of the bark. The reddish brown chrysalis is enclosed in a cocoon of
-earth held together with silk. It may be searched for at the roots of
-grass, etc., around the foot of oak trees growing in parks or in the more
-open parts of woods. The moth appears in May.
-
-Although nowhere really common, it seems to occur pretty generally over the
-southern portion of England, and as far north {68} as Derbyshire and
-Staffordshire. Farther north, and in Wales and Scotland, it has been rarely
-met with. Recorded by Birchall to be not uncommon at Killarney; but Kane
-states that he has never seen an Irish specimen.
-
-The species occurs locally throughout Central Europe, also in Transylvania,
-Northern and Central Italy, and Eastern Armenia. In Ussuri, and Japan, it
-is represented by the form _dodonides_, Staud.
-
-THE LUNAR MARBLED BROWN (_Drymonia chaonia_).
-
-The fore wings of this moth (Plate 28, Fig. 2) are dark fuscous, almost
-blackish, a short white line near the base; the central third is white
-clouded with the ground colour and limited by white edged black wavy lines;
-a black crescent just above the centre of the wing. Hind wings smoky grey
-with a pale curved line. The egg, which is bluish white in colour, is of
-the usual Notodont shape. Caterpillar green, merging into bluish-green on
-the back; the lines are pale yellow, or creamy white, that along the black
-margined spiracles is rather broad and is sometimes tinged with reddish on
-the three front rings. Head green, mouth marked with pale yellow. Feeds in
-June, July, and August on oak. From about a dozen eggs that I had in May,
-1907, the caterpillars hatched on the 13th of the month. Only one got
-through safely to the chrysalis stage which it reached at the end of June.
-On June 26th some half-grown and smaller caterpillars were received from
-the New Forest, only one of these was seen on July 19th, but it was then
-nearly full grown and appeared to be quite healthy, and others had pupated
-or died.
-
-The chrysalis is deep red brown, enclosed in a silken cocoon covered with
-particles of earth; generally found at the roots of isolated oak trees
-(Plate 29, Figs. 1, 1a).
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 28.
- 1. MARBLED BROWN MOTH.
- 2. LUNAR MARBLED BROWN.
- 3. DUSKY MARBLED BROWN.
- 4. SWALLOW PROMINENT, _female_; 5 _male_.
- 6. LESSER SWALLOW PROMINENT.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 29.
- 1, 1a. LUNAR MARBLED BROWN: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
- 2, 2a, 2b. SWALLOW PROMINENT: _egg, caterpillar and chrysalis_.
- 3, 3a, 3b. LESSER SWALLOW PROMINENT: _egg, caterpillar and chrysalis_.
-
-{69} The moth emerges in May, sometimes at the end of April, generally in
-the afternoon; it sits on the tree trunk to expand and dry its wings, and
-then ascends higher up the tree. It is found in Berkshire, Buckinghamshire,
-and in most of the southern counties of England, and in the west, but it
-seems to be rarer eastward and northward, and also in Scotland. In Ireland
-it has been found, very sparingly, in Wicklow and Kerry, and "numbers were
-taken in a moth trap at Clonbrook."
-
-The range abroad is very similar to that of the next species.
-
-THE SWALLOW PROMINENT (_Pheosia tremula_).
-
-Normally whitish, with a brown shaded black stripe along the inner margin
-of the fore wings, and a brownish cloud, with black streaks in it, towards
-the tips of these wings; the outer extremities of the veins are white,
-there is a white wedge-shaped streak between veins 1 and 2, and from the
-apex of this an indented white line runs to the base of the wing. Sometimes
-the whole discal area is suffused with brownish. The moth is shown on Plate
-28, Figs. 4, 5, and the early stages on Plate 29, Figs. 2, 2a, and 2b. The
-egg when laid is creamy white, and the newly hatched caterpillar is pale
-green. When full grown the caterpillar is green with rather darker, but not
-always clearly defined, lines along the back, and a yellow line along the
-region of the black spiracles; the underside is sometimes reddish. Another
-form is brownish in colour and the yellow line is then generally obscure.
-The green form is figured on Plate 29. The usual food is poplar, but sallow
-is also eaten. It may be found in late June and early July and again in
-September and October. The chrysalis is reddish brown and glossy except on
-the wing covers, which are granulated and appear darker. The cocoon is
-roughly constructed of silk and earth, and before spinning it the autumnal
-caterpillar sometimes burrows a good depth under the surface of the soil;
-the summer cocoons are said to be made up among leaves. The moth is on the
-wing in May and August. {70}
-
-The species is perhaps most common in the southern and eastern counties of
-England, but seems to be pretty generally distributed throughout the
-country, and extends into Scotland as far as Moray. In Ireland it has a
-wide range but is only common near Londonderry. Abroad it is found in
-Central and Northern Europe, and as far east as Amurland and Ussuri. In
-America it is represented by _P. dimidiata_, H.-S., which does not seem to
-be really specifically distinct.
-
-THE LESSER SWALLOW PROMINENT (_Pheosia dictaeoides_).
-
-Very similar to the last species, but generally smaller, and the ground
-colour has usually less brown in it; the chief character, however, by which
-it may be distinguished, is the broader and clearer white wedge-shaped mark
-between veins one and two on the fore wings. Reference to the figures of
-each species on Plate 28 will show this at once.
-
-The eggs are greenish white, and the full-grown caterpillar is purplish
-brown on the back merging into violet on the sides; there is a broad yellow
-stripe along the spiracle area; the head is violet, faintly marked with
-black. A noticeable feature of this caterpillar is its varnished
-appearance. It feeds on birch in June and July, and sometimes in September
-and October. The early stages are figured on Plate 29, Figs. 3, 3a, and 3b.
-
-The species has a somewhat similar distribution to that mentioned for the
-preceding, but it seems to be commoner in the North of England and in
-Scotland than elsewhere in the British Isles.
-
-THE PEBBLE PROMINENT (_Notodonta ziczac_).
-
-This moth varies in the colour of the fore wings from pale ochreous brown
-to a darker brown tinged with reddish; the usual pale greyish patch in the
-middle of the costal area is {71} sometimes obliterated by a suffusion of
-the darker colour; the dark-brown first and second lines are often only
-visible towards the front edge of the wings; a blackish lunule or crescent
-forms, in conjunction with the strongly curved outer line, the outline of
-the characteristic pebble-like mark on the apical area of the wings; a pale
-saw-edged line, which is inwardly shaded with dusky and intersected by
-black streaks on the veins, traverses the pebble mark, but in the lighter
-coloured specimens this line is not traceable. The female has browner hind
-wings than the male. The moth is depicted on Plate 31, Fig. 2; and the
-early stages on Plate 30, Figs. 1, 1a, and 1b.
-
-The caterpillar, when full grown, is pale ochreous grey, sometimes tinged
-with pink or purplish brown, or with yellowish, and especially on the hind
-rings; a yellow stripe along the back is edged here and there with
-brownish; the diffuse dusky line along the area of the black margined
-spiracles is edged with yellowish. It is occasionally found on poplar, but
-sallows and willow are the more usual food plants, and it feeds upon these
-in June and July and again in August and September. The reddish brown
-chrysalis is enclosed in an earthen cocoon just under the surface of the
-ground at the roots of tree or bush upon which the caterpillar fed. The
-moth emerges in May and June from chrysalides of the previous year, and in
-August as a second generation. Three broods in the year have been obtained
-in confinement, but this is probably exceptional.
-
-Widely distributed throughout the British Isles, but seems to have a
-preference for fens and marshy ground. It occurs all over Central and
-Northern Europe, its range extends through France to Spain, Italy, and
-Corsica, and it has been recorded from Armenia and Amurland. {72}
-
-THE IRON PROMINENT (_Notodonta dromedarius_).
-
-The specimen shown on Plate 31 is from Surrey, and represents the form most
-frequently obtained in the south of England. Northwards the species becomes
-darker in colour, and the reddish and yellow marking much reduced. The form
-_perfusca_, as figured by Stephens, has the fore wings dark purplish grey,
-streaked with dark brown; a pale patch at the base is russet marked, the
-line before the middle of the wing is russet, and a dash of the same colour
-lies at the lower extremity of the line beyond the middle; the hind wings
-are brownish grey with a broad whitish cross line. The specimen, which is
-of the female sex, was from Dublin, and the form was not then supposed to
-occur in any other part of the British Isles. It is now, however, well
-known in Scotland and the North of England, and also in Ireland. Some
-examples that I have seen from Scotland are much larger and darker than the
-figure referred to. In his description of this form Stephens states that
-the fore wings are fuscous mixed with chestnut, with darker clouds. The
-caterpillar, which is figured on Plate 30, is green, becoming yellowish on
-the back; a rather broad stripe on the back of the front rings and the
-markings on the humps and on other parts of the body are purplish brown. It
-feeds on birch, alder, and sometimes hazel, usually on the former, in June,
-July, and August. In some seasons, and localities, the moth appears twice
-in the year: the caterpillar may then be found in September and October.
-The chrysalis is blackish-brown and rather glossy, enclosed in a cocoon
-composed of silk and sand or other soil, and may be obtained by lightly
-digging up the earth and sods at the roots of trees.
-
-THE THREE HUMPED (_Notodonta phoebe_ = _tritophus_).
-
-Very little is known in Britain of this Central European moth (Plate 31,
-Fig. 3). The first specimen of which we have any {73} knowledge was reared
-on August 10, 1842 from a caterpillar found in Essex on aspen. This example
-was included, with two others, one of which was captured in Suffolk, in the
-collection of the late Dr. Mason, which was dispersed at Stevens' Auction
-Rooms in March, 1905.
-
-Besides the specimens mentioned above, a caterpillar, which subsequently
-died, was beaten from alder in the Exeter district in 1870; another was
-obtained from hazel in Gloucestershire, but this was "ichneumoned." Then
-there is a record of a moth or caterpillar, presumably the former,
-occurring in the neighbourhood of Paisley; and there is a report that a
-caterpillar was once found at the base of an aspen growing on Clapham
-Common. A specimen was taken at electric light at Bedford, May, 1907.
-
-The caterpillar is green, with three reddish humps on the back, and an
-interrupted reddish line along the sides. It feeds on poplar in July and
-August.
-
-THE LARGE DARK PROMINENT (_Notodonta tritophus_ = _torva_).
-
-Another Central European species, of which only one specimen is known to
-have occurred in Britain. This was reared from an egg, or from a
-caterpillar, obtained in Norfolk in the latter part of the summer of 1882.
-The moth might be mistaken for a small dark coloured specimen of the next
-species (_N. trepida_), but the dark hindwings readily distinguish it
-(Plate 31, Fig. 4).
-
-The caterpillar, although darker, bears considerable resemblance to that of
-the Pebble Prominent; it feeds in June and July, and also in September, on
-aspen.
-
-According to Staudinger this species is the _tritophus_ of Esper, an
-earlier name than _torva_, Hubn.; whilst the preceding species, that has so
-long been referred to _tritophus_, Fabricius (or _trilophus_), is found to
-be _phoebe_, Siebert, which name has seventeen years' priority. {74}
-
-THE GREAT PROMINENT (_Notodonta trepida_).
-
-Fore wings greyish, or ochreous grey, with dark cross lines; a blackish
-tuft from middle of inner margin, and a series of dark, or sometimes
-reddish, spots on a pale cross line before the inner margin. Hind wings
-whitish, sometimes ochreous tinged; clouded with greyish on costal area
-(Plate 31, Fig. 5). When full grown the caterpillar is rather larger than
-the one figured on Plate 30. In colour it is green, with yellow lines along
-the back, seven reddish-edged yellow oblique streaks on the sides, and a
-reddish tinged stripe on the two rings nearest the head. It is stated to
-assume a purplish tint when quite mature. May be found from end of June to
-early August on oak. The dark reddish brown chrysalis, which is enclosed in
-an earth-covered cocoon, may be found at the roots of oak trees in the
-autumn or winter.
-
-The moth emerges between late April and early June, sometimes remaining in
-the chrysalis for two winters. Light attracts it freely, and it is
-frequently seen in the illuminated moth trap, and may be occasionally noted
-on the iron frame of a gas lamp in suitable places. Sometimes the moth is
-met with in the daytime, resting on the trunks or branches of oak trees in
-woods, or on palings adjacent thereto. When such specimens happen to be
-females, they should be kept for eggs, which they lay freely.
-
-It occurs in most of the southern counties of England, is somewhat rare in
-the Midlands, and scarce in the northern counties and in Scotland. Recorded
-by Birchall as "not uncommon in Co. Wicklow," but Kane ("Cat. Lep.
-Ireland") states that he has no information concerning its occurrence in
-the sister island. Distributed throughout Central Europe, extending into
-Spain, Italy, and Corsica; also to South-east Russia, Armenia, and possibly
-Ussuri. {75}
-
-THE WHITE PROMINENT (_Leucodonta bicoloria_).
-
-The glossy white moth, prettily marked with orange and black, shown on
-Plate 33, was not known to inhabit the British Isles until 1858 when
-Bonchard obtained one specimen in a large birch wood in the Killarney
-district, Ireland; in the following year he took a second specimen. Both
-captures were made in the month of June. In June, 1861, one example of the
-moth was found in Burnt Wood, Staffordshire; and in the same wood, June,
-1865, no fewer than six specimens were secured, and eggs obtained from one
-of the females. The caterpillars duly hatched out, but most of them were
-lost, only seven attaining the moth state. Kane states that in 1866 a
-specimen was taken in Mucross demesne, and caterpillars "were said also to
-have been beaten." Miss Vernon of Clontarf showed him her collection of
-insects from Kerry, and he found therein two rather poor specimens of the
-White Prominent from a new locality in Kerry. Barrett mentions the capture,
-in 1880, of a specimen near Exeter, Devonshire. From the foregoing, which
-comprises all that appears to be definitely known about British _L.
-bicoloria_, it will be gathered that the species is not only very local,
-but exceedingly rare.
-
-The caterpillar, figured on Plate 32, from a coloured drawing by Mr. A.
-Sich, is pale yellowish green, rather whiter on the upper surface; the
-lines are green, the central one darkest; the stripe along the spiracles is
-yellow edged with green. It feeds on birch in July; and changes in due
-course to a dark reddish brown chrysalis, which is enclosed in a compact
-silken cocoon spun up between leaves. The moth emerges in May or June.
-Abroad the species seems to be generally distributed in Central Europe, and
-is also found in the Ural, Amurland, Ussuri, and Japan. {76}
-
-THE MAPLE PROMINENT (_Lophopteryx cuculla_).
-
-To Donovan and the entomologists of his time this moth (Plate 33, Fig. 4)
-was known by the English name still in use, Stephens considered it a rare
-insect, and remarks that he once caught a specimen at Darenth Wood, by
-"mothing," in June, 1820; several other examples had been taken in the same
-place, and in the neighbouring woods. Although many more localities are now
-known for the moth, it still continues to be rather a scarce species. It
-appears to inhabit woods on a chalky soil almost exclusively, and is found
-less uncommonly in the woods of Buckinghamshire than in its other haunts in
-Berkshire, Oxfordshire, Kent, Sussex, Devonshire, Essex, Cambridgeshire,
-Suffolk, and Norfolk. The bulk of the specimens in collections were
-probably reared from the egg, or from caterpillars obtained by beating or
-searching the maple bushes growing in the woods frequented by the moth.
-
-The caterpillar is whitish green, rather glossy, with a dark green line
-along the middle of the back, which is broadest on the front rings, and a
-pale yellow stripe on the sides, the latter edged above with pale green;
-spiracles pinkish edged with black; a hump on the eleventh ring is purplish
-tinted. Head pale ochreous brown marked with reddish brown. Sometimes the
-general colour is yellowish or pinkish ochreous. May be found in June and
-July on maple (_Acer campestris_) and in confinement will feed very well on
-sycamore (_A. pseudoplatanus_). The moth usually emerges in May or June,
-but in 1901 Mr. Adkin reared ten moths, July 24 to 31, from eggs deposited
-in the spring of that year. The species does not seem to be a common one
-even abroad; its range extends through Central Europe to Italy and Sicily,
-and it is also found in Ussuri.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 30.
- 1, 1a, 1b. PEBBLE PROMINENT: _egg, caterpillar and chrysalis_.
- 2, 2a, 2b, 2c. IRON PROMINENT: _eggs, caterpillar, chrysalis and cocoon_.
- 3, 3a. GREAT PROMINENT: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 31.
- 1. IRON PROMINENT.
- 2. PEBBLE PROMINENT.
- 3. THREE HUMPED MOTH.
- 4. LARGE DARK PROMINENT.
- 5. GREAT PROMINENT.
-
-{77}
-
-THE COXCOMB PROMINENT (_Lophopteryx camelina_).
-
-Probably the commonest of the true Prominents, and certainly the most
-variable. The early stages are figured on Plate 32, and two forms of the
-moth on Plate 33. In its typical and southern form the fore wings are more
-or less pale reddish brown with a darker cloud on the inner marginal area;
-there are three dusky, or blackish, cross lines, but two of these are
-generally very indistinct, the third runs from the blackish "tooth" on the
-inner margin to the front edge of the wing, and is followed by a pale wavy
-band often outwardly bordered with dusky. Sometimes the fore wings are
-clouded with dark brown, and in the North of England a dark reddish form
-occurs. In Scotland the fore wings vary in colour from dusky brown through
-reddish to pale yellowish brown; sometimes the "tooth" is reddish in
-chestnut coloured specimens. The whitish eggs are laid on the undersides of
-the leaves of various trees and bushes upon which the caterpillar feeds;
-these are chiefly birch, oak, hazel, sallow, and beech.
-
-The caterpillar, which appears in July to October, and sometimes even
-later, is green, with a darker line on the back, and a yellow one on the
-sides; two reddish tipped wart-like projections on the back of ring eleven.
-Occasionally the general colour is ochreous with a pinkish tinge, or it may
-be even purplish. There are two broods in the south of England, but only
-one in the north. The moths of the first brood fly in May and June, and
-those of the second in July and August, sometimes rather later. Pretty
-generally distributed throughout England and Wales, Ireland and Scotland.
-Abroad its range extends over Northern and Central Europe to Northern
-Spain, Northern and Central Italy, Dalmatia, Turkey, Armenia, Siberia,
-Amurland, Corea, and Japan. {78}
-
-THE SCARCE PROMINENT (_Odontosia carmelita_).
-
-In 1828, when Stephens figured this moth, he only knew of two British
-specimens, both of which had been reared about sixteen years previously
-from caterpillars found at Darenth Wood. The wings, which are not thickly
-scaled, are purplish grey, becoming reddish brown on the front margins of
-the fore wings; the outer transverse line of the fore wings starts from a
-conspicuous creamy patch on the front margin, and the line on the hind
-wings is most distinct above the anal angle, where it runs through a
-purplish cloud (Plate 33, Fig. 5).
-
-In April and May the pale blue eggs are laid on the underside of birch
-leaves. The caterpillar in June feeds on the foliage of the birch, and when
-full grown is green freckled with yellowish above; a darker line runs along
-the middle of the back, and a reddish spotted, or tinted, yellow stripe
-along the sides; the small head, also green, is marked with yellowish. When
-the chrysalids are kept indoors the moths emerge earlier than in the open,
-and it therefore sometimes happens that eggs are laid and the caterpillars
-hatch before the birch leaves are ready for them. In such cases I have got
-over the difficulty in a measure by removing a portion of the outer
-covering of one or two of the most forward buds to give the caterpillars a
-chance of getting at the unexposed leaves. The moth emerges in April or
-May, and, as pointed out by Mr. R. Adkin, it sometimes remains in the
-chrysalis for two winters. Possibly this species may be found in most
-districts where birch abounds; but, so far as its distribution in our
-islands is known, it certainly appears to be distinctly local. Besides
-Darenth, it also occurs in West Wickham Wood, and at Wateringbury, in Kent;
-the Weybridge district, Dorking, and Haslemere, in Surrey; Ashdown Forest,
-Blackdown Woods, Haywards Heath, and Tilgate Forest, in Sussex; New Forest,
-Hampshire, and Berkshire. There seems to be no record of the moth having
-been found in any other part of England, except Keswick and Windermere. In
-Scotland it has been reported from Galashiels, Clydesdale, the Tay
-district, Argyleshire, and Moray.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 32.
- 1, 1a, 1b. PALE PROMINENT: _egg, caterpillar and chrysalis_.
- 2, 2a. WHITE PROMINENT: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
- 3, 3a, 3b. COXCOMB PROMINENT: _egg, caterpillar and chrysalis_.
- 4. MAPLE PROMINENT: _chrysalis_.
- 5, 5a. SCARCE PROMINENT: _chrysalis and cocoon_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 33.
- 1. WHITE PROMINENT.
- 2, 3. COXCOMB PROMINENT.
- 4. MAPLE PROMINENT.
- 5. SCARCE PROMINENT.
- 6. PALE PROMINENT.
- 7. PLUMED PROMINENT, _male_; 8, _female_.
-
-{79}
-
-THE PLUMED PROMINENT (_Ptilophora plumigera_).
-
-The thinly scaled fore wings are ochreous brown in the male, and purplish
-brown in the female, and the markings, which are most in evidence in the
-male, are yellowish. Hind wings, more sparsely scaled than the fore wings,
-are pale ochreous brown in the male and darker in the female. It varies in
-the tint of general colour and in the intensity of the yellowish markings.
-In the female the antennae are simple, but in the male they are very
-plume-like, hence the English name. Buckler describes the caterpillar as
-whitish blue-green, with a broad deep green stripe down the middle of the
-back, and a narrow yellow line on each side of it; spiracular line slender,
-white, and wavy; head rather small, glossy, yellowish green. When quite
-full grown and mature it changes to a uniform semi-transparent green, like
-the underside of a leaf of maple, upon which, and also sycamore, the
-caterpillar feeds in May and early June. Maple bushes growing in hedgerows
-are usually selected by the female moths when laying their eggs. These are
-placed on the twigs near a bud, and may be searched for at any time from
-November until April. The moth is shown on Plate 33.
-
-This species was figured by Stephens (1828) as _Ptilophora variegata_ and
-the only locality then known to him was Darenth Wood, where, he states, the
-caterpillar was obtained almost every year. It still occurs in Kent and
-possibly in its old haunt; it is also recorded from Watergate, Sussex;
-South Devon (Torquay district); and Gloucestershire. In Bucks, Berks, and
-Oxfordshire it is more frequent than in either of the counties previously
-mentioned, and in all it seems to be found chiefly in chalky localities.
-The moth, which is on the wing in November {80} or sometimes in late
-October, has rarely been taken when flying at night or resting by day.
-Light has an attraction for the male, but apparently not for the female.
-
-Distributed through Central Europe, its range extends to Southern
-Scandinavia, Northern Italy, Livonia, Bulgaria, S.E. Russia, and Japan.
-
-THE PALE PROMINENT (_Pterostoma palpina_).
-
-This blackish streaked, pale brownish grey moth has been known as the Pale
-Prominent since 1775, when Moses Harris gave it this name. Beyond the black
-scaled tooth-like projection the inner margin is notched. The antennae of
-the female are pectinated, but the teeth are shorter than those of the
-male; and the blackish streak on the wings are usually less defined. Except
-that some specimens are more strongly marked than others there is little to
-note in the way of aberration. Mr. Harwood of Colchester has, however,
-recorded an almost black variety, and this may be referable to the form
-from Russian Lapland, known as var. _lapponica_, Teich. The moth is figured
-on Plate 33, and the early stages on Plate 32.
-
-The caterpillar is bluish green, with white lines along the back and sides,
-and a black edged yellow stripe along the spiracles; the stripe is marked
-with reddish on the three rings nearest the head. It feeds chiefly on
-poplar, but has been found on willow and sallow. Usually to be obtained
-full grown early in July or late in June; in the south and south-east of
-England, it is found also in September and October. The chrysalis is
-purplish, or reddish, brown and rather shining. It may be found, in a
-cocoon formed of silk mixed with particles of earth, among the roots of
-grass, etc., at the foot of poplar or willow trees. Moths are on the wing
-in May and June, and again in July and August. Coming to electric and gas
-lamps, as well as entering lighted rooms, and illuminated moth traps, they
-are often secured; otherwise they are rarely seen in a state of nature. The
-species is most frequent, perhaps, in the southern countries, but seems to
-occur throughout England; it becomes scarcer from the Midlands northwards
-to Durham and Cumberland. It occurs in Southern Scotland, and has been
-recorded from Moray. In Ireland it is widely distributed, but is not noted
-as common in any locality. The range abroad extends through temperate
-Europe into Asia Minor, and as far east as China and Japan.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 34.
- 1, 1a, 1b, 1c. CHOCOLATE TIP: _egg, caterpillar, chrysalis and cocoon_.
- 2, 2a, 2b. SMALL CHOCOLATE TIP: _caterpillar, chrysalis, cocoon and
- larval retreat_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 35.
- 1, 2. CHOCOLATE-TIP MOTH.
- 3. BUFF-TIP MOTH.
- 4. SCARCE CHOCOLATE-TIP, _male_; 5 _female_.
- 6. SMALL CHOCOLATE-TIP, _male_; 7 _female_.
-
-{81}
-
-THE BUFF-TIP (_Phalera bucephala_).
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 21.
-
-EGGS OF BUFF-TIP MOTH.]
-
-This species (Plate 35, Fig. 3) is easily recognized by its violet-grey
-fore wings, and the more or less round, pale, ochreous blotch on the outer
-third. The blotch is clouded, to a greater or lesser extent, with pale
-brown, and the inner area of the wings is flecked with silvery grey; the
-cross lines are edged with reddish brown.
-
-The rather downy caterpillar is yellow, with several interrupted blackish
-lines, and of these the one along the middle of the back is the broadest
-and blackest; head black. It feeds, during August and September, in
-companies, until nearly full grown, and the foliage of almost any kind of
-tree or bush appears to be suitable food, although that of elm, lime, and
-hazel is often selected by the female moth when depositing her whitish
-eggs, which {82} she lays in neatly arranged batches on the undersides of
-the leaves. If undisturbed, a company of these caterpillars quickly clear a
-fair-sized branch of all leafage. The chrysalis is purplish brown (the
-early stages are shown on Plate 37).
-
-The moth flies in June and July, but is rarely seen in the daytime. The
-wings in repose are closely folded down to the body and the insect has then
-a very stick-like appearance, and may thus easily escape detection.
-
-Occurs throughout England and Wales, Ireland, and Scotland. It is most
-common, and the caterpillar often abundant, in London and its suburbs, as
-well as other southern parts of the country. Its range extends through
-Europe to Northern Asia Minor, Armenia, and Siberia.
-
-THE CHOCOLATE-TIP (_Pygaera curtula_).
-
-Two examples of this moth are shown on Plate 35. Fig. 2 represents the
-spring (April and May) form, and Fig. 1 the summer (July and August) form.
-Sometimes there is a third brood, in September or October, and Barrett
-describes the individuals of this as "pale drab, dusted with darker atoms,
-and with the chocolate blotch paler towards the apex." Hybrids have been
-obtained from a pairing between _curtula_ female and _anachoreta_ male, and
-these were most like the female parent. The early stages are figured on
-Plate 34, Figs. 1-1c.
-
-The verdigris-green eggs are laid in batches on the leaves of poplar and
-aspen, upon which the caterpillars feed in May and June, and, as a second
-brood, in August and September. In colour the caterpillar, which is rather
-hairy, is grey, with a pinkish tinge, sprinkled with black, and with orange
-spots on the sides; there is a raised black spot on the fourth ring, and
-another on the eleventh; head blackish. The chrysalis is reddish-brown,
-spun up in a packet of leaves. This species appears to be less common in
-England than formerly. It is, {83} perhaps, more often observed in Kent and
-Sussex than in the other counties it inhabits, which, according to Barrett,
-are Berks, Essex, Suffolk, Norfolk, Cambridge, in all of which it is local;
-also, but more rarely, in Gloucestershire, Worcestershire, Herefordshire,
-Leicestershire, Yorkshire, and Cumberland, the latter county being its
-northern limit. To the above may be added Hertfordshire and Middlesex.
-Although caterpillars are reported to have been found in Ireland, the moth
-has not been reared in that country.
-
-This species is distributed through Northern and Central Europe, extending
-to South France, Corsica, North Italy, Bulgaria, Armenia, and Mongolia.
-
-THE SCARCE CHOCOLATE-TIP (_Pygaera anachoreta_).
-
-This moth is distinguished from that last referred to by the black spots in
-and just below the blotch at the tip of the fore wings; the blotch itself
-is dull reddish, merging outwardly into greyish, and is intersected by a
-white line. There is some variation in the tint of the general colour,
-ranging from dusky to reddish grey, but otherwise the species is constant
-(Plate 35, Figs. 4, 5).
-
-The caterpillar, which feeds on poplar and sallow from May to August, or
-even later, is rather hairy, dark grey or blackish in colour; there are
-four ochreous or whitish lines on the back, and a row of black spots
-followed by a series of orange ones on the sides; below the spiracles are
-some yellowish markings; the raised spots on rings four and eleven are
-reddish brown; the former has a white spot on each side, and the back of
-the latter is edged with white; head black and rather glossy. Chrysalis
-blackish in hue, spun up among leaves. The moths emerge in May, and again
-in July; in confinement there is sometimes a third brood in September.
-Except that two {84} specimens were reported as found in a street at Deal,
-the moth does not seem to have been noticed at large.
-
-This species was known to Haworth, but, as a British insect, was
-exceedingly rare until 1859, when Dr. Knaggs found some caterpillars upon
-poplar in the neighbourhood of Folkestone. From the stock then obtained the
-moths were reared in numbers for some time. Batches of eggs were also put
-down in various localities, and the species seems to have flourished in
-some of them for a while, but failed eventually to establish itself in any
-of them. Then the species disappeared from the Folkestone locality,
-although a caterpillar or two were found there in 1861, and on to 1912 in
-other places on the Kentish coast. In 1893 eggs were obtained at St.
-Leonard's, in Sussex, and thus originated a new stock.
-
-The species has a wide range in Central and Northern Europe, extending to
-some of the southern parts; it also occurs in Siberia, Amurland, China, and
-Japan.
-
-THE SMALL CHOCOLATE-TIP (_Pygaera pigra_).
-
-This species will be recognized by its smaller size and less distinct
-chocolate blotch on the tips of the fore wings. The ground colour varies
-from whitish grey to pale brownish grey; the pale cross lines are usually
-well defined; the first is bordered with chocolate colour, and angled above
-the middle; the third line runs from a white spot on the costa and through
-the chocolate patch. The moth is shown on Plate 35, and the early stages on
-Plate 34.
-
-Of the offspring resulting from eggs laid by a female _curtula_ that had
-paired with a male _pigra_, and also those from a female _pigra_ crossed
-with a male _curtula_, the hybrids in each case most nearly resembled the
-female parent.
-
-The eggs are pale olive green tending to brownish, and all that I have seen
-have been laid in irregular lines on leaves, or {85} on the sides of a chip
-box. The caterpillar is greyish, with some short hairs and black dots; the
-back is broadly marked with yellow, and there is a yellow stripe, with
-black dots on it, low down on the sides; rings four and eleven have each a
-raised black spot; head blackish. Feeds from June to September, on dwarf
-sallow (_Salix repens_), and also on young plants of aspen. Like other
-caterpillars of this genus, it hides by day in a packet of leaves spun
-together. There are certainly two broods, if not more, in the year. The
-moth emerges in May, and more irregularly in July or August, and October.
-Except when attracted to a light, the moth is rarely seen, but in fens,
-marshes, and boggy places generally, the caterpillars may often be obtained
-in numbers almost throughout the United Kingdom. Its distribution abroad
-embraces Northern and Central Europe, with extension into Northern Spain
-and Italy; Bulgaria, South-east Russia, and Armenia.
-
-THYATIRIDAE.
-
-The nine British species next to be considered belong to the old family
-Cymatophoridae, but as the name _Cymatophora_, as indicated by Hubner in
-the "Tentamen" (1816), is now generically used by authors for some species
-of Geometridae; and as Hubner's _Verzeichniss_ generic names will have to
-be used for the species previously included in _Cymatophora_, Tr., the term
-Thyatiridae has here been adopted for this family--the Polyplocidae of
-Meyrick and others.
-
-THE BUFF ARCHES (_Habrosyne derasa_).
-
-This pretty species (Plate 36, Figs. 1, 2) is well distributed over the
-greater part of England and not at all uncommon in the more sylvan
-districts of the southern counties. It occurs in Wales but has only once
-been recorded from Scotland. In {86} Ireland it is found in almost every
-well-wooded locality, but is not generally common. The moth hides among the
-foliage of the bramble and also creeps under the withered leaves on the
-ground. It comes freely to sugar, and is often the earliest to attend the
-banquet, but is rather skittish at first and should be given time to settle
-down.
-
-The fore wings are pale olive grey with two whitish streaks across them,
-the first oblique approaching the second towards the inner margin; the
-space between the streaks is clouded with brownish buff and there is a
-whitish cloud on the costal area, and some strongly waved cross lines
-before the second streak.
-
-The caterpillar, which is rusty brown, with a blackish central line on the
-back, a black edged yellowish spot on ring four, a smaller one on ring
-five, and sometimes a tiny one on ring seven, feeds in August and
-September, sometimes later, on bramble, and is said to eat hawthorn and
-hazel. It hides during the day and comes up to feed at night. The
-chrysalis, which is enclosed in an earthen cocoon below the surface of the
-ground, or sometimes among moss, is purplish black with the ring divisions
-reddish; the anal spike is furnished with hooks. As a rule the moth does
-not emerge until June or July following the year of pupation, but it has
-been found on the wing in September and October.
-
-Distributed over Central Europe, extending into Southern France, and
-Northern Italy, Southern Sweden and Livonia, and eastward to the Himalayas,
-Corea, and Japan.
-
-THE PEACH-BLOSSOM (_Thyatira batis_).
-
-The olive brown fore wings of this moth are adorned with five pink-tinged
-whitish spots, and clouded with brown; the pink tinge varies in amount and
-in brightness, and sometimes gives place to pale ochreous. The moth is
-figured on Plate 36, and the early stages on Plate 37.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 36.
- 1. BUFF ARCHES MOTH, _male_; 2 _female_.
- 3. PEACH-BLOSSOM MOTH, _male_; 4 _female_.
- 5. FIGURE OF EIGHTY, _male_; 6. _female_.
- 7. POPLAR LUTESTRING, _male_; 8 _female_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 37.
- 1, 1a. BUFF-TIP: _eggs and caterpillar_.
- 2, 2a, 2b. PEACH-BLOSSOM: _eggs, caterpillar and chrysalis_.
-
-{87}
-
-The fluted greenish-white eggs are laid upon the edges of bramble-leaves.
-
-The caterpillar is pale reddish brown shaded with darker and freckled with
-whitish (in the young stage the second and third rings are whitish above);
-a slender dark brown line along the middle of the back, and a broader one
-along the sides, the latter not distinct on the first three rings; the two
-rings nearest the head each have a divided ridge, the second being the
-larger; there are also similar ridges on the fifth to ninth rings, and the
-back of ring eleven is slightly raised; a series of pale triangular marks
-on the back. It feeds on bramble in July, and may be found from that month
-until September.
-
-In confinement it will thrive on raspberry or the cultivated kinds of
-blackberry. From some thirty eggs I had in June this year (1907) the
-caterpillars hatched on the 27th; several of these fed up rapidly and one
-or two had spun up for pupation, among the leaves, in July (about 24th),
-whilst others remained quite small, and a few were in the last skin but
-one. Early in August the larger caterpillars just referred to pupated, and
-the smaller ones began to feed up, and by the end of the month they had
-attained to full growth, although they did not spin cocoons until the
-second week in September.
-
-From July chrysalids moths will often emerge in August or September of the
-same year, but none have appeared from those under observation. The
-chrysalis is pale brown mottled with dark purplish or reddish brown, wing
-cases reddish. The species frequents woods or wooded localities, and is
-generally distributed throughout England and Wales, but commoner in some
-parts than others. Rather local in Scotland but not uncommon in Perthshire.
-Sometimes very abundant in Ireland, occurring in similar localities to the
-preceding species. It is found over the greater part of Northern and
-Central Europe, and as far east as Amurland and Japan. {88}
-
-THE FIGURE OF EIGHTY (_Palimpsestis octogessima_).
-
-This moth (Plate 36, Figs. 5, 6) may be distinguished by two whitish marks
-on the fore wings which have some resemblance to the numerals 80, hence the
-common name. These are really the white outlines of the reniform and
-orbicular stigmata, each of which has the central part filled in with
-black; sometimes the lower portion of the 8 is obscure, but in a general
-way the character is not difficult to make out.
-
-The caterpillar is yellowish tinged with greyish on the back; a greyish
-plate on the back of the ring nearest the black marked orange head; three
-black spots on each side of the first ring, two such spots on ring two, and
-one on each side of rings three to eleven; the back of the last ring has a
-greyish plate. It feeds in July and August, earlier or later in accordance
-with season, on poplar. During the day it hides between united leaves, or
-in a curled up withered leaf, upon the tree. The shining black chrysalis
-with somewhat reddish ring divisions is enclosed in a rather loosely
-constructed cocoon spun up between leaves, or among moss etc., at the base
-of poplar trees. The moth emerges in May or June. It is partial to sugar,
-and is said to prefer its sweets served up on poplar trunks. Probably it is
-most often and regularly obtained in the Eastern Counties, but it is
-locally not uncommon in Worcestershire and Herefordshire; also found in
-Gloucestershire, Somerset, Hertfordshire, Middlesex, Surrey, and, I
-believe, Sussex. The range abroad is similar to that of _T. batis_.
-
-THE POPLAR LUTESTRING (_Palimpsestis or_).
-
-May be recognized in the typical form by the four-lined bands,
-"lutestrings," on the greyish, sometimes pink-tinged fore wings; the
-reniform and orbicular marks are often present although the first is
-generally obscure, and they never assume the similarity {89} to figures
-noted in the last species (Plate 36, Figs. 7, 8). In Scotland the moths
-have a paler ground colour generally, var. _scotica_, Tutt; one from
-Ireland with ground colour pearly white and broad black "lutestrings" has
-been named var. _gaelica_, Kane. Hybrids from a cross pairing of this
-species with the last have been obtained by Mr. W. H. B. Fletcher. These
-specimens have the "lutestrings" of _or_, and the "figure of 80"
-characteristic of _octogessima_. Caterpillar yellowish green with a dark
-line along the middle of the back, and two black spots on the front edge of
-the ring next the yellowish brown head. It feeds on poplar, and hides
-between united leaves in the daytime; may be found from July to September
-or even later. Chrysalis, reddish brown, the surface minutely pitted, and
-spike pointed, and thickened at the base; in a brownish cocoon spun up
-between leaves. The moth emerges in June or July, and it comes freely to
-sugar, but like other members of this family is not always easy to box. It
-seems to occur in most places where poplar trees are well established;
-widely distributed over England, and found throughout Scotland even to the
-Shetland Isles. In Ireland it seems to be local and rare. Distribution
-abroad much as in the last species.
-
-THE LESSER SATIN MOTH (_Palimpsestis duplaris_).
-
-Figs. 1, 2, on Plate 39, represent the typical southern form of this
-species. The fore wings are pale greyish with a whitish edged, broad, dark
-central band; two black dots on the outer edge of the band distinguish this
-species from the next. In Scotland and in Northern England the general
-colour is blackish or purplish grey (Fig. 3), and sometimes specimens more
-or less suffused with the darker colour are found in the southern half of
-England. Quite the darkest, almost black, form seems to occur in Cannock
-Chase, Staffordshire, and in Delamere Forest, Cheshire. The caterpillar is
-greenish; central area of the back {90} green, margined on each side by an
-olive green, or brighter green, stripe; some black dots along the sides;
-head reddish brown marked with black. Feeds on birch, and may be found from
-August to October. It spins the leaves together for a shelter during the
-daytime, and comes out to feed at night, when it may be obtained by beating
-the boughs. Other food plants mentioned are alder, oak, and hazel. The pupa
-is of a dull reddish colour, in a slight cocoon between leaves.
-
-Widely distributed throughout England and common in most woodlands,
-especially in the south and east; it ranges through Scotland to the
-Shetlands. In Ireland, where the moth has the ground colour silvery grey
-(var. _argentea_, Tutt), it has been obtained in many localities, from
-Donegal and Tyrone to Kerry and Cork.
-
-THE SATIN CARPET (_Palimpsestis fluctuosa_).
-
-In colour and general pattern this species (Plate 39, Fig. 4) is very
-similar to the last in its typical form. The points of distinction are, the
-slightly larger size, whiter ground colour, and the absence of the two
-black dots from the edge of the band. In August and September the
-caterpillar feeds, at night, on birch, and by day conceals itself between
-leaves. It is reddish or violet grey above, and pale ochreous-white
-beneath; the lines down the centre of the back and along the sides are
-darker; on the first ring there is a greenish-tinged yellow plate, and from
-this to the eleventh ring there are two series of black dots along the
-back. Head yellow-brown, blackened above; a black circle on each cheek.
-Chrysalis reddish-brown, in a cocoon among leaves either on the tree or on
-the ground. The moth emerges in June, and is distinctly local. Sometimes it
-may be disturbed from its resting place among the foliage; it becomes
-active on the wing at dusk for a short time; sugar does not seem to possess
-any great attraction for it, anyway it does not attend the feast prepared
-for Noctuae so frequently as other members of this family. It is known to
-occur, chiefly in woods, in Kent, Surrey, Sussex, and Hampshire in the
-south; Essex and Suffolk in the east; also in Worcestershire (Wyre Forest),
-and Herefordshire; in the Barnsley and Sheffield districts of Yorkshire;
-and it has been reported from Cumberland. In Ireland it is rare and only
-recorded from Killarney, Kerry, and Sligo. Abroad it occurs in Central
-Europe, the range extending to Southern Scandinavia, and to South-east
-Russia.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 38.
- 1. FROSTED GREEN: _caterpillar_.
- 2, 2a, 2b, 2c. YELLOW HORNED: _egg, caterpillar, chrysalis and cocoon_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 39.
- 1. LESSER SATIN MOTH, _male_; 2 _female_; 3 _northern var_.
- 4. SATIN CARPET MOTH.
- 5. LESSER LUTESTRING, _male_; 6 _female_.
- 7, 8. YELLOW-HORNED MOTH.
- 9. FROSTED GREEN MOTH, _male_; 10 _female_.
-
-{91} THE LESSER LUTESTRING (_Asphalia diluta_).
-
-The fore wings are whitish or greyish, and sometimes tinged with brown;
-crossed by two brownish bands. Variation is chiefly in the tint of the
-bands and also in their width and definition. In var. _nubilata_, which
-occurs in Yorkshire, the general colour of the fore wings is darker than
-normal, and there is a basal patch and three cross-bands of reddish or
-purplish brown (Plate 39, Figs. 5, 6).
-
-Caterpillar, yellowish above and greyish beneath; a dusky line along the
-middle of the back, and one, dotted with black, low down on the sides; head
-dark brown, almost blackish. It feeds in May and June on oak, but only at
-night; it constructs a leafy chamber in which it sits tight during the day,
-and is not easily evicted unless its apartment is forcibly opened. The
-reddish chrysalis is enclosed in a flimsy cocoon between, or among, leaves.
-Although September is the month during which the moth usually emerges, it
-is sometimes seen earlier. It is so partial to sugar, that it may often be
-seen at an old patch before the new feast has been set out for the evening
-entertainment. The species is fairly well distributed throughout England
-and Wales, and most common in the south of the former country. It extends
-into Southern Scotland, but {92} apparently does not occur in Ireland.
-Abroad it is found in Central Europe, Belgium, North Germany, North Italy,
-and North-east Asia Minor.
-
-THE YELLOW HORNED (_Polyploca flavicornis_).
-
-In the South of England this species is greenish grey, sometimes speckled
-or dusted with darker grey; the reniform and orbicular marks are generally
-clear and distinct, but in some examples they are united and form a whitish
-blotch outlined in blackish; the cross lines are usually well defined, but
-in the dark grey dusted form are very obscure. Specimens from Scotland are
-generally larger, there is less green, if any, in the ground colour, and
-the markings are often more pronounced and brighter. This form is the var.
-_scotica_, Tutt, and may be more or less identical with the var.
-_finmarchia_, Schoyen, from Norway and Lapland (Fig. 7, Plate 39, shows the
-English form, and Fig. 8 the Scotch form).
-
-The caterpillar is greenish, light olive green, or dark olive green above,
-and yellowish beneath; a line along the middle of the back is paler, and on
-each side there is a row of black spots and finely black-edged white dots;
-a line above the brownish outlined spiracles is yellowish: the head is
-yellow brown with blackish jaws and black mark on each cheek. It feeds in
-June and July on birch, preferring the foliage of bushes. During the
-daytime it resides in a leaf neatly folded in half; when quite young, the
-caterpillar then being blackish, a small leaf or just the turned-over edge
-of a large one answers its purpose. The chrysalis is reddish, enclosed in a
-flimsy cocoon among leaves, moss, or roots of grass, etc., sometimes just
-under the surface of the soil. The early stages are figured on Plate 38,
-Figs. 2-2c. The moth emerges in March or April of the year following
-pupation, as a rule, but it may remain in the chrysalis for two winters. It
-is often obtained in birch woods, or wherever there {93} is a good growth
-of birch, by jarring the twigs and branches of birch upon which it rests
-during the day, or it may be found by searching the low bushes and
-underwood. Soon after dusk it is on the wing, and will then visit sugar and
-sallow bloom.
-
-Generally distributed throughout Great Britain. In Ireland it appears to be
-very rare. Its range abroad, in the typical form, extends over Northern and
-Central Europe to North Italy and to South-east Russia.
-
-THE FROSTED GREEN (_Polyploca ridens_).
-
-This moth (Plate 39, Figs. 9, 10) is also on the wing early in the year,
-but although it is sometimes found on tree trunks in April or perhaps as
-late as the first week in May, it seems to be rarely obtained otherwise in
-the perfect state. It does not "come to sugar" often, if at all, and so far
-as is known, does not visit any of the usual natural attractions.
-
-The ground colour of the fore wings varies from whitish to green, but in
-some specimens the general hue is olive or blackish green, and the markings
-then appear to be wavy whitish lines crossing the wings, one near the base,
-and the other before the outer margin.
-
-The caterpillar (Plate 38, Fig. 1) is yellow above and rather greenish
-beneath; a greenish grey double stripe along the back is interrupted at the
-ring divisions; there are also white dots with black or blackish edges on
-the back and the sides; a yellow line along the spiracle area is shaded
-above and below with greenish grey; the head, which is notched on the
-crown, is yellowish, with a black mark on each cheek. It feeds, at night,
-on oak, from May to July; hiding by day on the underside of a leaf, a
-portion of which is folded over and secured with silk, to form a suitable
-retreat. These caterpillars respond more readily to the persuasive
-beating-stick than others of the group.
-
-The species affects woodland localities in most of the southern {94}
-counties of England, and it is also found in South Wales. Its range extends
-into the Eastern Counties and through the Midlands northward to Cumberland.
-It does not seem to have been noted from Scotland or Ireland. Abroad it is
-distributed over Central Europe and northward to Denmark and Livonia, and
-southward to South France and Andalusia.
-
-TUSSOCK-MOTHS (_Lymantriidae_).
-
-About seventy-two species, referred to this family, are known to occur in
-various parts of the Palaearctic region; ten of these are found in our
-islands. The Black V-moth (_Leucoma v-nigrum_ or _Arctornis l-album_) has
-been reported as British, but if the few examples that have been recorded
-were natives, the species has long since disappeared from this country.
-
-Some of the caterpillars, as, for example, those of the Brown and
-Yellow-tails, are not altogether pleasant to handle, as the hairs with
-which they are covered have a disagreeable trick of transferring themselves
-to our hands, whence they find their way to our face, and when there are
-apt to set up most unpleasant irritation and swelling of the parts
-affected. These urticating hairs are more troublesome when received from
-the caterpillar or cocoon, but those from the moth itself communicate a
-very respectable simulation of the skin trouble known to the doctor as
-Urticaria.
-
-THE SCARCE VAPOURER (_Orgyia gonostigma_).
-
-The male of this species, and also of the next, flies in the sunshine, but
-the female of each is wingless, or nearly so, and has to remain at home on
-the cocoon from which she emerged. Here she lays a large number of eggs,
-from four to five hundred, upon the exterior. The eggs of this species are
-whitish and rather glossy when first laid; the top is sunken. Apart from
-{95} the deeper brown colour of the fore wings and the blacker hind wings,
-the male of this species has a white mark near the tip of each fore wing,
-and this character will distinguish it from the same sex of the Common
-Vapourer.
-
-The caterpillar is blackish with star-like tufts of hair, white on the back
-and greyish on the sides; on rings four to seven are brushes of brown
-hairs; a pencil of black hair on side of the first ring pointing forward,
-and a thicker one on the back of ring eleven directed backward; the
-interrupted stripes along the back and sides are reddish orange,
-approaching vermilion; those along the back are united in front of the
-pencil on ring eleven, and those of the sides unite behind the pencil. Head
-glossy, black. The foliage of sallow, willow, and oak, is perhaps the more
-usual food, but it has been known to eat beech, elm, hawthorn, sloe, and
-nut, and has been found on meadow-sweet. The chrysalis is brown, inclining
-to yellowish between the rings, and the back is hairy; enclosed in a cocoon
-spun up among leaves or in any suitable cranny. The male and female moths
-are figured on Plate 40 (Fig. 3, 5), and the caterpillar and chrysalis on
-Plate 41.
-
-The moths emerge in June, and from their eggs caterpillars result in July.
-These, feeding up quickly, attain the perfect state in late July or early
-August. Caterpillars from this second generation usually go into
-hibernation when quite small, and feed up in the following April and May;
-in confinement they may, however, get through their metamorphosis and reach
-the moth state in September or October. Sometimes it happens that a part of
-the summer brood of caterpillars will feed up straight away and produce
-moths in August; others, feeding and growing more slowly, assume the winged
-state in November; whilst a third portion will remain small and go into
-hibernation.
-
-This very local species used to be obtained in the Wimbledon district, but
-it has not been seen there for some years past. {96} Other localities for
-it are the Norfolk and Cambridge fens, Bewdley Forest in Shropshire, and
-Wyre Forest, Worcestershire; it is also found in some parts of Devonshire,
-Suffolk, Essex, and Yorks. Its range abroad extends through Northern and
-Central Europe, southward to North Spain, Piedmont, and Corsica, and
-eastward to Amurland, Corea, and Japan.
-
-THE VAPOURER (_Orgyia antiqua_).
-
-The male has the wings rather more ample than the same sex of the last
-species, the colour is a more ochreous red and there is a large white spot
-at the lower angle of the fore wings, but no white mark at the tips of
-these wings. Specimens from the north of England are rather darker than
-southern examples. In the course of temperature experiments it has been
-noted that the colour of the moth is darkened if the chrysalids are put in
-a refrigerator for a few weeks, and then brought into a mean temperature of
-40deg Fahr. In the female the appendages representing wings are somewhat
-larger than those of the female of the Scarce Vapourer, but are quite
-useless as organs of flight (Plate 40, Figs. 4, 6).
-
-In general colour the caterpillar is violet or smoky grey; the markings on
-the back comprise a creamy, red-dotted line along the middle area, this is
-edged with black, and on each side of it is a series of raised red spots;
-the broken line along the sides is yellowish, and the four brushes of hair
-on the back are yellow, sometimes merging into brown above; the pencils of
-longer hairs are blackish on the ring nearest the head, and dark grey or
-brownish on the last ring. It may be found through the summer on the leaves
-of most trees and bushes. Chrysalis blackish, glossy, and rather hairy. The
-cocoons are spun up in the crevices of bark on tree trunks, or in the fork
-of a twig, under the eaves of an out-house or shed, on palings and fences,
-etc. The hairs of the caterpillar are mixed with the silk of the cocoon;
-the female lays her pale brownish eggs, which are minutely pitted and have
-a darker ring below the sunken top, on the outside of the cocoon, and there
-they remain through the winter.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 40.
- 1. DARK TUSSOCK MOTH, _male_; 2 _female_.
- 3. SCARCE VAPOURER, _male_; 5 _female_.
- 4. VAPOURER, _male_; 6 _female_.
- 7. PALE TUSSOCK, _male_; 8 _female_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 41.
- 1, 1a. SCARCE VAPOURER: _caterpillar and cocoon_.
- 2, 2a. COMMON VAPOURER: _egg-batch on cocoon and enlarged egg_.
- 3, 3a, 3b, 3c. PALE TUSSOCK: _egg, caterpillar, chrysalis and cocoon_.
- 4. DARK TUSSOCK: _caterpillar_.
-
-{97} Generally distributed throughout the United Kingdom, but not so common
-in Ireland as in England and Scotland. It is quite a Cockney insect, and is
-found in almost every part of the Metropolis where there are a few trees.
-Occurs practically over the whole of Europe, and in North-east Asia Minor,
-Armenia, Siberia, Amurland, and North America.
-
-THE DARK TUSSOCK (_Dasychira fascelina_).
-
-The figures of the sexes of this species on Plate 40 represent the dark
-grey form. Sometimes the forewings are whitish grey and occasionally slaty
-grey; the cross lines may be stronger or fainter, and in some specimens are
-nearly absent; the yellowish colour usually seen on the cross lines may be
-missing, or, on the other hand, other parts of the wings may be stippled
-with yellowish. Laying her eggs in batches, the female carefully covers
-them with dark brown hairs from the tuft at the end of her body.
-
-The caterpillar (Plate 41, Fig. 4) is blackish, with star-like tufts of
-hairs, yellow, mixed with longer blackish ones towards the head and tail,
-brownish grey on the middle portion; a brush of black hairs on rings four,
-five, and eleven, and of white hairs on six, seven, and eight. Head black.
-When full grown (Plate 42, Fig. 3) the hairs of the body are greyish, and
-those of the brushes on the back are black flanked with white. When
-disturbed it rolls in a ring. It feeds on hawthorn, and various species of
-_Salix_, also on broom and ling. It hibernates when still small, in a
-silken cocoon-like envelope which it spins in the fork of a branch, or
-among the twigs of a bush; growth is completed in April or May, and the
-winged state attained in {98} June or July. Sometimes the young
-caterpillars have been found in their winter quarters about the middle of
-July, and this would seem to imply that they occasionally lie dormant for
-two winters; at least this would appear to be so in Scotland whence such
-individuals have been recorded, with the additional information that they
-did not eat through the summer and that one was still alive in the
-following March. The chrysalis is glossy black, and hairy (Plate 42, Fig.
-3a).
-
-This is chiefly a northern insect, occurring most commonly on the Cheshire,
-Lancashire, and Cumberland coast. It is more generally distributed in
-Scotland and is often abundant on the moorlands. In Ireland three
-caterpillars were found by Mr. Kane in the Bog of Allen, and the species
-has also been recorded from Tullamore and Mullingar. Distribution: Northern
-and Central Europe, extending to the Altai.
-
-THE PALE TUSSOCK (_Dasychira pudibunda_).
-
-This moth is much commoner and more widely distributed in England than that
-last mentioned. The central area of the greyish white fore wings is subject
-to variation in width and also in tint; this latter may be darker or
-lighter than the example shown on Plate 40, and the cross lines are in some
-specimens black and very distinct. The colour of the female ranges from
-pale greyish white through various tones of grey, and the bands on the hind
-wings may be as well defined as in the male. Black males of the species
-have been recorded.
-
-The hairy caterpillar is green or yellow, the former mottled with whitish
-and the latter with greenish; on rings 4 to 7 are thick brushes of yellow
-hairs, and on ring 11 there is a tuft of reddish hair; the back is marked
-with black between the brushes, and there are black spots on the sides of
-the hind rings. Sometimes the caterpillar is light or dark brownish and the
-brushes are then greyish, or tinged with pale reddish or blackish.
-Altogether it is a pretty creature, and as it is, or was previous to the
-modern "washing," common in hop gardens at picking time, it was christened
-the "hop dog." It may be found from July to September on the foliage of
-birch, hazel, oak, and many other trees, as well as on hop. The moth
-appears in May and June, and rests by day on herbage, especially on bracken
-in woods (see Fig. 6, p. 7); at night it comes readily to light, but
-specimens so obtained are generally of the female sex.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 42.
- 1, 1a. YELLOW-TAIL: _caterpillars_.
- 2. BROWN-TAIL: _caterpillar_.
- 3, 3a. DARK TUSSOCK: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 43.
- 1. BROWN-TAIL MOTH, _male_; 2 _female_.
- 3. YELLOW-TAIL MOTH, _female_; 4, 5 _males_.
- 6. WHITE SATIN MOTH, _female_.
-
-{99} It is most at home in the southern portion, but occurs throughout
-England and Wales, to Cumberland. Only doubtfully recorded from Scotland,
-but in Ireland it has occurred in Galway, Kerry, Waterford, Cork, and
-Wicklow.
-
-Distribution: Central and Northern Europe eastward to North-east China and
-Japan.
-
-THE BROWN-TAIL (_Euproctis chrysorrhoea_).
-
-Although sometimes found in the East and West of England, and even in
-Yorkshire and Durham, this appears to be essentially a coast species in
-Britain, and confined at that to Kent and Sussex, the former especially.
-Even in these favoured localities where it is usually abundant, it is,
-however, not always in evidence. The moths sit about at the end of July and
-early August on leaves of hawthorn, sloe, sea-buckthorn (_Hippophae
-rhamnoides_), and wild rose, generally on the underside. Near the females
-will be found batches of eggs, which are covered with "fur" from the anal
-tuft of the female. The caterpillars hatch out in August, and while still
-very small go into hibernation in a common nest. In the spring, when active
-again, they construct a new habitation, and another or perhaps two more
-before they are full grown, about June. The chrysalis is very dark, almost
-blackish-brown, with tufts of hair, and the fairly substantial brownish
-cocoon in which it is enclosed {100} is composed of silk and caterpillar
-hairs, and is spun up on the food-plant, often singly, but not
-infrequently, several are made up in a common silken covering.
-
-The caterpillar is blackish with brownish warts, each bearing a tuft of
-brownish hairs; a row of tufts of white downy scales on each side of the
-back of rings four to eleven; the central line on the back is black, edged
-on each side by a red line of variable width from rings six to ten; a
-vermillion round spot on nine and ten. Head blackish.
-
-The moth is shown on Plates 43, 45, and the caterpillar on Plate 42, Fig.
-1.
-
-Distribution, Central and South Europe to North-west Africa and Asia Minor.
-
-In 1897 an appeal was made to British entomologists to refrain from taking
-many specimens of this species; while American entomologists were seeking
-power to compel local authorities to suppress the Brown-tail, which about
-that time was a new, and no doubt introduced, insect pest in the State of
-Massachusetts.
-
-THE YELLOW-TAIL (_Porthesia similis_).
-
-The male has usually only one black mark on the fore wings, but sometimes
-there are two, as seen in Fig. 5, Plate 43; more rarely there is a dot or
-two towards the tips of the wings. The habit of the moth is to sit upon the
-foliage of bushes and the branches of trees, where it might easily be
-passed over for a fluffy white feather; occasionally it may be found on
-palings or even iron railings. About dark it is on the wing, and light has
-then a great attraction for it. The caterpillar is black with black and
-grey hairs; a vermillion stripe down the middle of the back has a black
-central line, and is expanded on rings four, eleven, and twelve; along each
-side there are tufts of snowy white fluffy scales; the back of rings four,
-{101} five, and eleven is velvety black and slightly raised, especially on
-ring four. Head black and glossy.
-
-The caterpillars hatch from the eggs, which are laid in batches, in August,
-hibernate, each in a silken case, and recommence feeding in the spring
-(Plate 42, Figs. 1, 1a). In May, when nearly full grown, they separate and
-are then common objects on hawthorn hedges in many districts. They also
-feed on the foliage of oak, beech, birch, sallow, rose, apple, pear, and
-other fruit trees. Sometimes a nearly fully mature caterpillar has been
-found in August, this has pupated and produced a moth the same year. The
-chrysalis is rather hairy and of a brownish colour; the cocoon is similar
-to that of the last species. In late June and through July the moth is
-generally common throughout the Southern part of England, and as far
-northwards as Lancashire and Yorkshire. It has been very rarely seen in
-Scotland, and not at all in Ireland.
-
-Distribution, Central and South-eastern Europe, extending to Amurland,
-China, Corea, and Japan.
-
-THE REED TUSSOCK (_Laelia coenosa_).
-
-This insect (Plate 45) was formerly abundant in some parts of fenland, and
-was first met with, as a British species, at Whittlesea Mere about 1819 or
-1820. It was subsequently found in Yaxley and Burwell fens. Up to 1860 it
-continued to occur freely in all stages, but by 1865 larvae at a shilling
-per dozen, the price at which they had been sold by the reed cutters, were
-no longer obtainable, and they became so scarce that in the year 1871 or
-thereabouts, only two caterpillars were seen. The species was at that time
-seemingly on the decline, but a year or two later a good many males were
-attracted by the rays of a powerful lamp that had been set up at Wicken.
-Then the moths became fewer and fewer {102} until at last, somewhere about
-1880, even the lamps would not draw a single specimen, and soon it appeared
-probable that the last of the Reed Tussock had been seen in the fens, its
-only known habitat in Britain.
-
-Caterpillar, dusky with a blackish stripe along the middle of the back; the
-raised dots are ochreous grey with pale yellowish brown hairs arising from
-them; there are four brushes of yellow hairs on the back, bunches of long
-hairs on the first ring extended over the brownish head, and a pencil of
-similar hairs on ring eleven directed backward. The food plants given are
-bur-reed (_Sparganium_), Stephens; _Cladium mariscus_, Barrett, and reed
-(_Phragmites communis_). Stephens states that the caterpillar and the moth
-were found at the end of July and beginning of August, but other
-authorities give August to June for the caterpillar, and July for the moth.
-The caterpillar described above, and of which a figure is given on Plate
-44, was obtained, together with eggs and cocoon, from Dr. Staudinger and
-Bang Haas, of Dresden. All are preserved examples.
-
-Abroad this species is found in Northern Germany and France, Hungary,
-Bulgaria, Amurland, China, Corea, and Japan.
-
-THE WHITE SATIN MOTH (_Stilpnotia salicis_).
-
-The English name of this species dates back to about 1773, and is a very
-suitable one for it, the fore wings being especially glossy and satin-like.
-It seems to be less generally distributed over the country than formerly,
-but it is still common in most years, and in many places; more particularly
-in the south of England, and on the Lancashire coast. Even yet it occurs in
-the suburbs of London, and on the southern side is sometimes not uncommon.
-In Scotland it appears to be rare; Barrett mentions it from Aberdeen,
-Pitcaple, Inverurie, Peterhead, and Ayrshire. Kane states that in Ireland
-the species, so far as he knew, only occurred in a locality near Ahascragh.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 44.
- 1, 1a, 1b. REED TUSSOCK: _egg, caterpillar and cocoon_.
- 2, 2a. WHITE SATIN: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 45.
- 1. REED TUSSOCK MOTH, _male_; 2 _female_.
- 3, 4. BROWN-TAIL _varieties_.
-
-{103}
-
-The caterpillar, which is hairy and variegated with reddish and black and
-white, may be recognised by the large bright white marks on the back. It is
-often seen in the daytime on the boles or branches of poplars, as well as
-on the foliage. It frequently falls a victim to the parasitical flies, and
-it is probably due to these enemies that the species is less common in some
-years than in others. Besides poplar, it will feed upon sallow and willow.
-Hibernating when quite tiny, it reappears in April, and, feeding up, is
-ready to enter the chrysalis state in June or July, when it spins a flimsy
-silken cocoon among the leaves, or in some suitable cranny on the tree or
-bush. The moth is shown on Plate 43, Fig. 6, and the caterpillar and
-chrysalis on Plate 44, Fig. 2, 2a.
-
-The moth emerges in July or August, and may be found resting on or under
-the leaves, and on stems and branches of the trees upon which the
-caterpillar fed, or on palings, etc., adjacent thereto.
-
-Distribution, Northern and Central Europe, Iberia, Corsica, Italy, Balkan
-Peninsula, South-east Russia, North-east Asia Minor, and Armenia. In the
-Far East, including China, Corea, and Japan, it is represented by the var.
-_candida_, Staud.
-
-THE GIPSY (_Lymantria dispar_).
-
-Up to some sixty-five years ago, this species (Plate 46, Figs. 1 [male], 2
-[female]) seems to have flourished in a wild state in the fens of Norfolk
-and Cambridgeshire, and also in Huntingdonshire. Just how long it had been
-common in those localities history does not inform us, but about 1792
-Donovan was unable to obtain a native specimen to figure. Stephens,
-however, writing in 1828 states that at that time it abounded in the
-Huntingdonshire fens. "It is said," he remarks "to have been introduced
-into Britain by eggs imported by Mr. Collinson, but the abundance with
-which it occurs near {104} Whittlesea, and the dissimilarity of the
-indigenous specimens (which are invariably paler, with stronger markings)
-to the foreigner, sufficiently refute that opinion." There appears to be no
-doubt that some time near 1840 the Gipsy moth began to decrease in numbers,
-and that about 1850 it had almost or quite ceased to exist, as a wildling,
-in England. At the present time, and probably since the date last
-mentioned, the species has been semi-domesticated, and so reared year by
-year, at first possibly direct from the original wild stock, but afterwards
-from fresh stock derived from eggs of foreign origin. Futile attempts have
-been made to re-establish the species in various parts of England, and also
-in Ireland. Such failure is curious, seeing that in America the accidental
-introduction of a few moths has resulted in the species becoming so
-numerous that at least one state has been expending thousands of dollars in
-endeavouring to destroy it. The eggs are laid in batches and covered with
-the down-like scales from the anal tuft of the female.
-
-The caterpillar hatches in April, and in warm weather feeds up pretty
-quickly. It is grey, covered with black dots and fine marks; the hairs
-arising in spreading tufts from the raised warts, are longer on the sides
-than on the back; these warts on the back on each side of the pale central
-line are bluish on rings one to five, and reddish thence to eleven. Head,
-pale brown marked with black. Feeds on the foliage of most fruit trees,
-also on oak, elm, sallow, hawthorn, and sloe.
-
-Chrysalis rather hairy, brownish in colour, in a fairly strong silken
-cocoon, which is spun up in any suitable angle.
-
-The moths appear in August, and there is a striking difference in the size
-and coloration of the sexes. The male is pale or greyish brown, lined and
-clouded with darker brown on the fore wings, and the female is whitish with
-brownish cross lines, and a black central V-mark on the fore wings.
-
-Distributed over the whole of the Palaearctic Region, except {105} the most
-northern, and, as adverted to, it has now become a pest in parts of North
-America.
-
-THE BLACK ARCHES (_Lymantria monacha_).
-
-Two examples of each sex of this moth are figured on Plate 46, and these
-show the normal form of the species; the central markings of the fore wings
-vary in width and intensity, and in some specimens the whole of the central
-area is more or less filled up with black or sooty black. Sometimes the
-wings are partially suffused with blackish, and the normal markings are
-consequently somewhat obscured. Examples wholly suffused with black are
-referable to var. _eremita_, a form not uncommon on the continent, and
-modifications of it are found in a wild state in this country. By selecting
-parents showing a tendency to vary in the direction of this dark form, it
-has been found possible to obtain a good percentage of darkened specimens,
-some of them closely approximating to var. _eremita_.
-
-The early stages are figured on Plate 47.
-
-The eggs of this species are laid in August in the chinks of bark on tree
-trunks, and do not hatch until the spring.
-
-Caterpillar, whitish varying to greyish, a deep brown stripe along the
-middle of the back with an irregular black line on each side of it; the
-stripe is interrupted by a whitish or greyish patch on rings seven to nine;
-on ring two there is a black mark, and occasionally red dots appear on
-eight and nine; black dots on the back and sides are furnished with hairs.
-Head, brownish marked with a paler tint. It feeds from April to July on the
-leaves of oak and various other trees, including apple and pine.
-
-The chrysalis, which is enclosed in a somewhat transparent silken cocoon
-spun up in a fissure of the bark, is brownish, hairy, and has a very glossy
-metallic appearance.
-
-The moth emerges at the end of July and in August. It flies {106} at night,
-and may be seen resting by day on the trunks of trees. Although it occurs
-in most of the counties of England from Yorkshire southwards, and in some
-parts of Wales, it is nowhere so often met with as in the New Forest,
-Hants.
-
-Distribution, Central Europe extending to parts of Northern Europe, and
-southwards to North Italy and Greece, and eastwards to Ussuri and Japan.
-
-LACKEYS AND EGGARS (_Lasiocampidae_).
-
-Staudinger in his catalogue of Palaearctic Lepidoptera refers twenty genera
-comprising sixty-three species to this family. Of these, eleven species
-belonging to ten genera occur in the British Isles. According to some
-authorities a twelfth species, _Dendrolimus pini_, Linn., should be
-included. This is the _Eutricha pini_ of Stephens (1828) and the "Wild Pine
-tree Lappet moth" and "Pine tree Lappet" of the more ancient authors. The
-claim of this species to a place in the British list rests chiefly on a
-specimen captured in the Norwich Hospital, in July, 1809, by Mr. Sparshall.
-Wilkes (1773) states that he once found a caterpillar near Richmond Park,
-but the moth was not reared. For generations the species now classified as
-Lasiocampidae have been referred to Bombycidae, but the silkworm (_Bombyx
-mori_) is typical of that family, which has but few genera in it, and none
-of them occur in Europe. Although some of the moths are of considerable
-size, most of them are not large. The general colour is some shade of
-brown. Both sexes have the antennae bipectinated, but more strongly in the
-male than the female.
-
-In his treatment of the species here included under Lasiocampidae, Tutt.
-("A Natural History of the British Lepidoptera," vols. i., ii.) separates
-them into two families, Lachneidae and Eutrichidae. The first family is
-divided into five sub-families and the same number of tribes. The latter
-family has three sub-families and three tribes. The whole are embraced in a
-super-family styled Lachneides. Lasiocampidae disappears as a family name,
-but the genus _Lasiocampa_ is retained for _quercus_, L., whilst
-_trifolii_, Schiff., is referred to the genus _Pachygastria_, Hb., and
-these with _Aurivillia_, Tutt, not represented in Britain, constitute the
-Pachygastriidi tribe of the Pachygastriinae, a sub-family of Lachneidae.
-All this will no doubt appear very complicated to the beginner, but he need
-not worry himself very greatly about the matter at present. When he feels
-that he has a fair knowledge of the species in the group he will be in a
-position to grapple with the niceties of classification.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 46.
- 1. GIPSY MOTH, _male_; 2 _female_.
- 3, 4. BLACK ARCHES, _males_; 5, 6 _females_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 47.
- BLACK ARCHES MOTH.
- _Eggs, natural size and enlarged; caterpillars and chrysalids._
-
-{107} THE LACKEY (_Malacosoma neustria_).
-
-The colour of the male ranges from pale yellow ochre, through pale brown to
-reddish or dark brown; and in the female from pale brown to reddish brown;
-two cross lines are generally present on the fore wings; the space between
-the lines is usually darker in the female, and sometimes in the male also,
-forming a dark central band. All these colour forms were reared from some
-caterpillars taken by myself at Byfleet, Surrey, in 1901. Another year a
-few caterpillars taken at Esher produced ochreous coloured males and pale
-brown females only; the bands of the latter were narrower than usual and
-much contracted below the middle. As the females last mentioned are
-somewhat under the normal size I am inclined to think that the caterpillars
-from which they were reared had been on short commons during their last
-stage. Two males and a female are shown on Plate 48.
-
-The greyish brown eggs are laid during July and August in a ring cluster
-around a twig as shown on Plate 49, and so they remain exposed to all
-weathers during the winter. In April the caterpillars hatch out, and as
-they live in company throughout the greater part of their larval existence,
-the first business is to {108} construct a silken tent-like web (Fig. 22).
-The exterior of the tent affords a suitable surface upon which they can lie
-when they take a sun bath, which they seem fond of doing whenever the
-opportunity offers. It is also used, as well as the interior, for the
-process of skin-changing.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 22. WEB OF LACKEY CATERPILLARS. (Photo by W. J.
-Lucas.)]
-
-The full-grown caterpillar is slaty blue above; along the middle of the
-back is a bluish white line, bordered on each side by a
-reddish-orange-lined black stripe; towards the lower limit of the slaty
-blue colour is a black edged reddish-orange line, and below this again the
-ground colour is flecked with orange, sometimes forming a line in the
-region of the spiracles; there are two velvety black spots on the back of
-the ring nearest the head, and a smaller black spot on each side of the
-next two rings; the hairs are brownish, rather more numerous on the sides
-than on the back. Head slaty-blue with two black eye-like spots. It feeds
-from April to June on hawthorn, sloe, and various fruit trees in orchards
-and gardens; also on birch, elm, oak, sallow, willow, etc.
-
-Chrysalis blackish, rather downy enclosed in a double {109} oval-shaped
-cocoon; the inner compartment is of rather closer woven silk, and is
-thickly covered with a yellowish substance, which is ejected by the
-caterpillar as a fluid, and afterwards drying forms a sulphur-like powder
-on the cocoon, and in a lesser degree on the chrysalis also. The moth is on
-the wing in July and August, but it is rarely seen in the daytime, and not
-often at night, except when attracted by light into the house, or to the
-gas or electric lamps. It is exceedingly easy to rear, either from eggs or
-from collected caterpillars; the latter are often abundant.
-
-Generally distributed throughout England, but becoming scarcer from the
-Midlands to Lancashire and Yorkshire, and not often occurring further north
-than the last named county. In Ireland it is unknown in the north, but
-occurs in many parts of the south and south-west.
-
-THE GROUND LACKEY (_Malacosoma castrensis_).
-
-This also is a variable species. Most frequently the fore wings of the male
-are pale buff, cross lined, and more or less clouded with brown; hind wings
-brown. The female has all the wings reddish brown, the front pair being
-crossed by two pale buff lines. The fringes are pale buff, chequered with
-brown in both sexes. Colour and marking are, however, subject to
-considerable variation. Sometimes all the wings are pale buff (male), or
-reddish brown (both sexes), and the fore wings without marking. The cross
-lines on fore wings of the female may be either very slender or very broad;
-occasionally almost the whole of the basal area up to, and including, the
-first cross line is buff. Two examples of each sex are shown on Plate 48.
-
-The eggs are laid in a similar manner to those of the last species, around
-stems of wild carrot, sea wormwood, and other {110} plants that flourish in
-the insects' favourite haunts, which, in this country, are the salt marshes
-along the estuaries of the Thames and Medway.
-
-The caterpillar is black, inclining to bluish between the rings; along the
-back are four much broken reddish orange lines and a central bluish line; a
-bluish stripe followed by a reddish one along the sides, and below this the
-colour is bluish, speckled with black; the hairs are golden brown. Head
-blackish grey, without black spots (Plate 49, Fig. 3).
-
-The chrysalis and its cocoon are similar to those of the Lackey, and spun
-up among herbage.
-
-The moth emerges in July and August and, although it may be occasionally
-attracted by light, is rarely seen in the open. The caterpillars are to be
-found, most years, in plenty from May to July. They feed on almost every
-kind of plant growing on the salterns, and as they are fond of sunning
-themselves on sea wormwood, sea plantain, etc., are easily seen at such
-times. In dull weather they retire to their webs, which are generally
-rather low down in the herbage. In confinement they will do very well if
-supplied with fresh sprays or leaves of almost any fruit tree, or of birch,
-whitethorn, etc. The receptacle containing them should be constructed and
-placed so that the caterpillars get plenty of air and sunshine. It is
-considered desirable to sprinkle both food and caterpillars with water now
-and then; some rearers deem it necessary to put a tiny pinch of salt in the
-water used for sprinkling; and in my own experience I have found that
-better results were obtained when the food was thus treated than when the
-salt was omitted.
-
-On the continent this species occurs in woods, and on heaths, etc., but in
-Britain it is seemingly confined to salt marshes. Although it has been
-recorded from the Suffolk coast, and other places, the best localities for
-it are probably the salterns, from Gravesend to the Isle of Sheppey, and at
-Southend and Shoeburyness.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 48.
- 1, 2, 3. LACKEY MOTH.
- 4, 5, 6, 7. GROUND LACKEY.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 49.
- 1, 1a, 1b, 1c. LACKEY: _eggs, caterpillar, chrysalis and cocoon_.
- 2, 2a. HYBRID BETWEEN LACKEY AND GROUND LACKEY: _eggs and
- caterpillar_.
- 3. GROUND LACKEY: _caterpillar_.
-
-{111}
-
-_Malacosoma_ hybr. _schaufussi_, Standf.--In 1884 Dr. Standfuss made some
-experiments in crossing three species of _Malacosoma_, and one of these was
-the pairing of _M. neustria_ [male] with _M. castrensis_ [female]; the
-offspring he christened as above. Since that time others have succeeded in
-crossing the two species with varying results.
-
-On August 13, 1906, Mr. Percy Richards sent me a small batch of eggs (Plate
-49, Fig. 2a) laid by a female, _M. castrensis_, that emerged in a breeding
-cage, and had paired with a captured male, _M. neustria_, he introduced.
-The larvae hatched out one or two at a time, from April 7 over a period of
-more than a fortnight. Few of the caterpillars would commence to feed, and
-of those that took to the plum and sallow with which they were supplied,
-only four reached maturity. Three of these pupated during late June and
-early July, and three moths, all females, have emerged up to date, one on
-July 28, another on August 6, and a third on August 13. The second specimen
-was very much crippled, probably owing to the cocoon having been
-accidentally injured. One caterpillar was still feeding on August 14, but
-died about the 26th.
-
-The mature larva (Plate 49, Fig. 2) has the head and markings thereon like
-_neustria_, also the black spots on the first thoracic segment, but they
-are rather large and inclined to unite. The bluish line along the sides is
-dotted and freckled with black rather more thickly than in _castrensis_;
-the dorsal line is very thin, but bluish as in _castrensis_, and the red
-lines on each side of it are broad.
-
-In colour the three moths are deeper brown than any form of either parent
-species that I have seen, but the transverse lines, and especially the
-outer, are most like those of _neustria_.
-
-It should be mentioned that much information on Hybridism in the Lackey
-moths and other species will be found in Tutt's "British Lepidoptera," vol.
-ii. {112}
-
-THE PALE OAK EGGAR (_Trichiura crataegi_).
-
-In its typical form the male of this species (Plate 50, Figs. 1, 2) is ashy
-grey, with a darker central band on the fore wings; and the female is dusky
-greyish-brown, also with a darker band. The colour of the male varies in
-shade from almost whitish (var. _pallida_, Tutt), to blackish grey; in the
-paler forms the central band of the fore wings is often of a purplish tint,
-and in the darkest forms the band is almost black. The female var.
-_pallida_, is pale buff.
-
-The eggs, which are brownish, inclining to reddish on the micropylar area,
-are covered with dark grey hairs from the body of the female and laid side
-by side in a chain-like arrangement on a twig of hawthorn or sloe (those
-figured on Plate 51 were deposited in a box, and not securely attached).
-From eight to twelve is said to be the usual number in a batch, and each
-female will deposit an average of 160 eggs.
-
-The caterpillars do not hatch out all at the same time, but by ones and
-twos, at intervals spreading over a period of two, or perhaps three, weeks.
-Several forms of the caterpillar have been described, but the ground colour
-is generally more or less black above and greyish on the sides; the
-ornamentation comprises interrupted white or whitish stripes, streaked or
-clouded with reddish, and reddish warts; the hairs are reddish brown. The
-example figured on Plate 51 was from eggs laid by a female moth in Selkirk,
-South Scotland. From the age of three weeks until it became full grown it
-was black marked with yellow on the back and orange on the sides; hairs
-pale greyish mixed with black ones, especially on the back towards the
-black, glossy, and somewhat hairy head. It hatched on April 26, was reared
-on plum, pupated early in June, and the moth, a darkish grey female,
-emerged on July 31. Another caterpillar that hatched on May 1, and two
-others from still later hatchings, were then in chrysalis.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 50.
- 1. PALE OAK EGGAR, _male_; 2 _female_.
- 3. DECEMBER MOTH, _female_; 4 _male_.
- 5. SMALL EGGAR, _male_; 6 _female_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 51.
- PALE OAK EGGAR.
- _Eggs enlarged, and caterpillar._
-
-{113} The caterpillar may be found from April to June on hawthorn and sloe,
-and it is said also on birch, oak, sallow, apple, bramble, etc. Those that
-I have found resting by day on shoots of hawthorn, apparently enjoying the
-sunshine, have almost invariably been "ichneumoned"; but others that came
-up after sunset to feed on the shoots were generally healthy. Usually the
-caterpillar feeds up and pupates the same year, but on the moors in
-Aberdeenshire and some other parts of Scotland it is said to hibernate and
-to complete its life cycle the following summer and autumn. Furthermore,
-the moths from these winter larvae are much darker than normal, and have
-been doubtfully referred to var. _ariae_, Hubn., a form found in the Alps,
-Scandinavia, and Finland.
-
-The moth is out in August and September, and occurs in wooded districts
-throughout the southern half of England, but northwards from the Midlands
-it is uncommon; it is found in several parts of Scotland to Inverness. In
-Ireland it is reported (Birchall) to have occurred in Killarney, and Kane
-mentions that "a blackish form was taken at Magilligan, near Derry, by W.
-Salvage. Its larvae were feeding on blackthorn." The range abroad extends
-through Europe to Armenia and Asia Minor.
-
-THE DECEMBER MOTH (_Poecilocampa populi_).
-
-This is a rather thinly scaled moth; the general coloration is sooty brown;
-the wings are suffused more or less with greyish; there are two pale
-ochreous cross lines on the fore wings, the first enclosing a reddish brown
-basal patch; hind wings rather paler with a diffuse whitish central band;
-fringes brown chequered with pale ochreous. Head brown, collar brownish,
-tipped with pale ochreous in the male. The female is rather larger than the
-male. The moth is figured on Plate 50, and the eggs and caterpillar on
-Plate 53.
-
-The eggs, which are laid on the bark of trees, are whitish grey, variegated
-or mottled with darker grey. {114}
-
-The caterpillar hatches out in April, and when nearly full grown is
-ochreous, but so thickly dotted and freckled with black as to appear of a
-dark brown coloration; the back is clothed with dark short hairs, and the
-sides with long paler hairs; on the back of the first ring is a reddish
-brown mark divided by a white line; a double row of whitish dots along the
-back, most distinct on rings two and three, where they are placed on a
-velvety black bar; on each side of the white dots is a reddish brown
-interrupted line. Head ochreous brown, thickly dotted with black and
-clothed with pale hairs. Underparts ochreous, spotted and lined with
-blackish. Feeds on the foliage of most trees, and is said to eat lettuce.
-April to June.
-
-Chrysalis glossy red brown, in a cocoon spun up among dead leaves, etc.,
-under loose bark, or on the ground.
-
-The moth does not emerge until October, and in that month, but more
-frequently in November and December, the males may be seen around gas lamps
-quite late at night.
-
-Although found chiefly in woods it is not essentially a woodland species,
-as it occurs in districts where there are no woods but plenty of trees
-growing in parks, fields, or even hedgerows. It is fairly common generally
-throughout England and Wales, but becoming rather more local northwards to
-Cumberland. It occurs through Scotland to Sutherland, but is nowhere
-common. In Ireland it is widely distributed, and not uncommon near Dublin,
-and at Favour Royal, Tyrone. Abroad it ranges through Northern and Central
-Europe.
-
-THE SMALL EGGAR (_Eriogaster lanestris_).
-
-Also a brownish insect with somewhat thinly-scaled wings. The fore wings
-are light reddish brown with a whitish patch at the base, a white spot
-about the centre, and a whitish transverse line beyond; the hind wings are
-smoky brown and have a pale central band. The female, which is larger than
-the male, has a conspicuous greyish anal tuft, the hairs from which she
-uses to cover over her pale oily green eggs when they are deposited in
-clusters on twigs of hawthorn or sloe in February or March. Plate 50, Figs.
-5, 6; Plate 53, Figs. 2, 2a.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 52.
- OAK EGGAR MOTH.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 53.
- 1, 1a. DECEMBER MOTH: _eggs and caterpillar_.
- 2, 2a. SMALL EGGAR: _eggs and caterpillar_.
-
-{115} The caterpillar is black or greyish black, with reddish brown hairs,
-and a series of black-edged yellowish brown, or reddish brown blotches on
-each side of the back; these blotches are outlined in pale yellowish and
-occasionally connected by a line of the same colour. From the time they are
-hatched until nearly mature the caterpillars live in companies on a closely
-woven web of silk on a branch of hawthorn or sloe, only leaving their
-habitation to feed. These webs may often be seen on hedgerows from May to
-July. The brown chrysalis is enclosed in a solid-looking oval cocoon of a
-pale ochreous or whitish colour. Not all the moths emerge the following
-year: some will remain in the chrysalis over two or three winters, and
-occasionally they have been known to emerge seven years after pupation. The
-moth is said to be fully formed within the chrysalis all the time, but for
-some reason will not emerge, although if extracted from its shell, the moth
-has been known to expand its wings in the ordinary way. Barrett states that
-in the middle of February, after a moth had emerged, he "put a large number
-of cocoons upon a warm mantelpiece and obtained scores of moths within a
-few hours."
-
-Generally distributed over the southern half of England; plentiful in some
-years in the Southern and Eastern Counties. Northwards and in Scotland it
-is local and less frequent. Kane states that in Ireland it is very locally
-abundant. The range abroad is through Central and Northern Europe to
-Southern Lapland, and eastward to Siberia and Amurland.
-
-THE OAK EGGAR (_Lasiocampa quercus_).
-
-The three moths, one male and two females, shown on Plate 52, were reared
-from caterpillars obtained in Kent, and they {116} represent the more or
-less ordinary South English forms of the species. Sometimes the ground
-colour of the male is more distinctly reddish, or rust tinted, and the
-yellowish bands narrower on all the wings. Or the bands may be much broader
-than in the male figured, and the widening is effected by extension in the
-form of rays towards the outer margins of the wings. A form that has been
-referred to, in error, as var. _roboris_, Shrank (= _marginata_, Tutt), has
-the outer margins of all the wings broadly yellow. I have not seen an
-English example of this form, but I have a reddish specimen in which the
-yellow band on the fore wings is broader than usual, and the whole of the
-outer third of the hind wings yellow, with a slight brownish shade on the
-external margin; this is _semimarginata_, Tutt, and is also identical with
-var. _roboris_ of other British authors. The white spot usually present on
-the fore wings varies somewhat in size and shape; it is often seen on the
-under as well as the upper surface of the wings, except in the lighter
-coloured forms.
-
-Var. _callunae_ (The Northern Eggar), is shown on Plate 54. The chief
-features of this form are the generally darker coloration in both sexes,
-the yellow patch at the base of the fore wings of the male, and the outward
-turn of the lower ends of the yellow bands. All these characters are
-subject to modification; the yellow bands may be very narrow at one
-extreme, or greatly widened at the other, and the hind wings may
-occasionally be bandless; the basal patch is often of large size, but in
-some examples it is entirely absent. Sometimes the bands are greenish in
-colour (var. _olivaceo-fasciata_, Cockerell), and more rarely, perhaps, the
-greenish tinge extends over the whole of the wings (ab. _olivacea_, Tutt).
-It should be noted here that the var. _olivaceo-fasciata_ has occurred once
-or twice in South England, but this phase of aberration seems to be more
-connected with _callunae_ than with _quercus_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 54.
- NORTHERN EGGAR.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 55.
- OAK EGGAR.
- _Egg, natural size and enlarged; caterpillars and cocoon._
-
-{117} _Callunae_ was not recognized as British until the year 1847, when it
-was introduced as a species distinct from _quercus_. The late Richard
-Weaver, who gave it the English name of the "Scotch Eggar," took specimens
-of the moth at Rannoch in 1845, and he found caterpillars in that year, as
-well as in 1844 and 1846. It is now well known to occur not only in
-Scotland, including the Hebrides and Orkneys, but also on the moors of
-Northern England, and in Ireland and Wales. In North Devonshire it is found
-not uncommonly in the Exmoor district, and it has been recorded from
-various parts of the New Forest in Hants.
-
-The egg of _callunae_ is figured on Plate 55. It appears rather polished,
-and in colour is pale brown mottled with darker brown. The eggs are stated
-to be deposited whilst the female is on the wing, and consequently they
-fall to the ground or are arrested in their descent by the herbage over
-which they are scattered.
-
-The full-grown caterpillar of _quercus_, beneath the brownish fur with
-which the body is clothed, is dark brown on the back and rather violet
-brown on the sides; the ring divisions are velvety black; there is a white
-stripe along each side and below the stripe some reddish marks; the ring
-nearest the head is edged with reddish, and the next two rings each have
-two reddish centred white spots. The dull purplish brown chrysalis is
-enclosed in a hard oval-shaped cocoon which is spun up on or near the
-ground in a flimsy web among herbage, dead leaves, etc. Sometimes it is
-placed among the twigs of the food plant.
-
-In Southern England the caterpillars hatch from the egg in August and
-usually hibernate when quite small. They feed up during the following
-spring and early summer, perhaps in June or July, and the moth appears in
-July or August. Occasionally, however, a few individuals depart from the
-general habit and complete their growth the same year, hibernate in the
-pupal stage, and produce moths the next year, possibly earlier than
-hibernating caterpillars. On the other hand, perhaps owing to adverse
-weather conditions, feeding after hibernation may be continued well on into
-the autumn, when the caterpillars pupate, {118} but emergence of the moth
-is postponed until the following year, the second after hatching from the
-egg.
-
-In the case of _callunae_, at least as regards its normal habit in Scotland
-and southwards to the moorland districts of Yorkshire and Lancashire, the
-young caterpillar hibernates the first winter, feeds through the following
-summer, and passes the second winter as a chrysalis, the moth emerging in
-the following May or June.
-
-Generally speaking, then, it may be stated that _quercus_ has a
-twelve-month life cycle, whilst that of _callunae_ extends almost or quite
-to twenty-four months, of which at least twelve months are passed as a
-caterpillar. However, as has been noted, _quercus_ sometimes passes one
-winter as a caterpillar, and another as a chrysalis, thus assuming the
-_callunae_ habit; whilst _callunae_ occasionally attains the perfect state
-during the summer following that in which the caterpillar left the egg.
-
-The food plants comprise bramble, dogwood, hawthorn, heather (_Calluna_),
-and various low plants; it is even content with ivy.
-
-Newman, in the _Entomologist_ for 1845, gives a life history of the
-Northern Eggar (_callunae_), and from this the following details are
-extracted. The male flies rapidly over the heather by day at the latter end
-of May or beginning of June; its flight is jerking or zigzag, and its
-object is evidently to find the female, who rarely moves until impregnation
-has taken place. Subsequently the female flies over the heather, dropping
-her eggs at random as she flies, and the eggs, having no glutinous
-covering, do not adhere to any object which they may accidentally touch in
-falling. On emergence from the egg the young caterpillar is dark
-ash-coloured, the divisions between the rings of the body being indicated
-by two minute orange streaks, each of which is accompanied by a small black
-spot. After the first moult the ground colour becomes more smoky, the
-divisions velvety black, and on each ring a triangular orange spot appears;
-these markings become more conspicuous later on, and by the end of October,
-when it hibernates, they are very distinct. It rests in a straight
-position, and, if disturbed, falls off its food plant, and rolls in a ring
-with its head slightly on one side.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 56.
- GRASS EGGAR MOTH.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 57.
- GRASS EGGAR.
- _Eggs, natural size and enlarged; caterpillar._
-
-{119} The habits of the Oak Eggar moths (_quercus_) are pretty much the
-same as those of the Northern form, except that the moths fly in July and
-August, and frequent hedgerows, the borders of woods, heathy commons, and
-cliffs and sand dunes at the seaside.
-
-A bred female of either form will attract numerous males, and even the
-receptacle in which a newly emerged female has been placed is almost as
-effective as the lady herself. When staying at a cottage on the edge of a
-moor near Lynton, North Devon, some years ago, I had some pupae of the Oak
-Eggar. One day, late in July, quite a number of males entered the cottage
-and made their way to the cage in which the pupae were, and I had no
-difficulty in boxing several of them. The next day I put the female moth,
-which had emerged the previous day, into a roomy chip box, and carried it
-in a satchel to the moor, where it was placed on the ground, the males
-began to arrive soon afterwards and some fine examples were secured.
-Although the female was taken on the moor only on the one occasion, that
-satchel continued to be an object of interest to the male Eggars for
-several days afterwards.
-
-Generally distributed, and often common in some localities, throughout the
-British Isles. Abroad, its range extends over Europe into Asia Minor,
-Armenia, and Siberia.
-
-THE GRASS EGGAR (_Lasiocampa trifolii_).
-
-This moth is usually brown in colour. The fore wings are inclined to dark
-reddish brown, and have a pale ochreous brown curved band or ring at the
-base, a slightly curved line or band of the same colour beyond the middle
-of the wing; central spot {120} white, finely margined in black. Except
-that the female is generally larger, and the cross lines usually less
-distinct, the sexes are much alike. This brown form occurs most frequently
-in Britain, but in parts of the Kentish and Sussex coast, and especially
-the Romney Marsh district, a yellowish form is obtained. In such specimens
-the cross lines are darker. In both forms one or both cross markings may be
-faint or quite absent, and even the white central dot, which varies in size
-and shape, may be missing. Sometimes the outer band is distinctly broad and
-outwardly diffuse (Plate 56).
-
-The eggs, which appear to be laid loosely, are pale whitish brown,
-roughened with darker brown, and the micropylar area is purplish brown.
-Some that I received on March 2, 1907, appeared to be on the point of
-hatching on the 5th of that month, but no larva came out, although one of
-the eggs was chipped at one end. It has been frequently stated that the
-caterpillars hatch out in the autumn and hibernate, but as has been pointed
-out by Tutt ("Nat. Hist. Brit. Lep.," ii. 20), the eggs of this species
-probably do not hatch until some time during February or March, although
-when kept indoors the caterpillar has emerged from the egg in January.
-
-The full-grown caterpillar is black, velvety between the rings, covered
-with golden brown hair on the back and greyer hair on the sides, among
-which are some black ones; three interrupted whitish lines on the back;
-some of the hairs along the middle of the back stand erect and form a
-ridge, looked at from either end. Head lightish brown in colour, lined with
-black. Feeds in the spring months and up to June chiefly on various kinds
-of grass. Among many of the plants that it has been known to eat are
-trefoils, bird's-foot (_Ornithopus_), sea thrift (_Statice_), heather,
-sallow, hawthorn, sloe, plum, bramble, etc. With regard to the food, it is
-interesting to note that although one rearer will find that sallow is
-excellent for the caterpillars, another considers that sallow or hawthorn
-are but poor {121} substitutes for kidney-vetch (_Anthyllis vulneraria_)
-upon which the caterpillars were feeding when found (Plate 57).
-
-The brownish chrysalis is enclosed in a hard but somewhat brittle, brown,
-oval cocoon, and when spun upon the surface of the ground, protected by an
-outside covering of loose silk webbing. In August and early September the
-moths appear. Emergence from the chrysalis usually takes place soon after
-midday; the males are early on the wing, and when reared in captivity they
-should be secured as soon as the wings are dry, or they may spoil
-themselves in their efforts to escape. Reared females are apt to be
-deformed, but for "assembling" they may probably be as useful as more
-perfect examples if the rearer happens to be able to exhibit the attraction
-in a locality for the species. Both sexes have been taken at electric
-light.
-
-The best known localities for the species in England are, besides those
-already mentioned, the sand hills on the Cheshire and Lancashire coast. It
-is, or has been, found also on the coast of Cumberland; Lyndhurst and
-Ringwood, in Hampshire; Isle of Purbeck, Poole, Swanage, and Bloxworth, in
-Dorsetshire; Devonport, Bolt Head, and Salcombe, in Devonshire; and
-Penzance and the Scilly Isles. Its range extends through Central and
-Southern Europe to Asia Minor and North Africa.
-
-THE FOX MOTH (_Macrothylacia rubi_).
-
-The male is reddish brown, and the female generally greyish brown, but
-sometimes is of a reddish grey coloration; the fore wings in both sexes are
-crossed by two pale ochreous lines on the central area (Plate 59).
-
-The ground colour in the male ranges in tone from foxy red to dullish red
-brown or to greyish red brown. The cross lines in either sex may be widely
-apart, near together, or even united throughout their length, forming a
-band (var. _fasciata_, Tutt); sometimes one of the lines (var. _unilinea_,
-Tutt), or both lines, are absent from the fore wings, or from one of them.
-{122}
-
-The brown clouded greyish eggs are laid in batches, during June, on stems
-and stalks of plants, or on heather; sometimes they have been found on a
-fence, a rock, or a stone. The caterpillars hatch out at the end of June
-and through July. At first they are black, including the glossy head, and
-covered with long hairs which are black with some white ones amongst them;
-the ring divisions are pale yellow; later on they are more chocolate brown
-with yellow bands which, however, do not encircle the body entirely.
-
-When full grown, in the autumn, the caterpillar is velvety black, and above
-this colour is most in evidence between the rings; the back is clothed with
-dense, short, bright reddish brown or tawny hair, and the whole body is
-covered with brownish hairs, varying in length, but always much longer than
-the tawny ones; along each side are some whitish hairs. Head blackish
-covered with brownish hairs. It feeds in August and onwards to October,
-when it seeks winter quarters, reappearing in the following spring, but not
-feeding again. After enjoying the sunshine whenever the opportunity offers
-through the early months of the year, it finally pupates in March or April.
-The cocoon is a long, more or less tubular, brownish construction of silk
-and larval hairs. It is spun up, usually somewhat upright, low down among
-the food plant, or at the roots of grass, etc.; sometimes among moss, when
-the rounded head end can just be seen above the moss (Plate 58).
-
-In certain localities and seasons the caterpillars have been seen in
-enormous numbers, but such profusion only happens now and then. In some
-districts they may be abundant one year, and then scarce or quite absent
-for several years.
-
-When handling the larvae it will often be noted that the tips of one's
-fingers are thickly felted with the tawny hairs from the creature's back;
-if these hairs get transferred to the face or neck considerable irritation
-may be the result.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 58.
- FOX MOTH: _caterpillars_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 59.
- 1, 2. FOX MOTH, _males_; 3 _female_.
-
-{123} The late Mr. Robson used to collect the caterpillars on fine days in
-early spring, put each caterpillar into a separate paper box about two
-inches square, and keep them on a shelf over the kitchen fire, where they
-would duly pupate. Various methods for keeping these caterpillars through
-the winter have been described, and all appear to have been fairly
-successful. The most simple would seem to be the following: Bore a number
-of holes in the bottom of a roomy box, and fasten wire gauze on a close
-fitting frame to serve as a top. Cut a tuft or two of heather to cover the
-floor space of the box. Caterpillars collected in the autumn may be put
-into this receptacle and supplied with food, such as bramble or sallow, as
-long as they seem inclined to feed. Do not crowd too many into the box, and
-let it stand out in the garden, preferably on the soil.
-
-The moths emerge in May or June. The males are very active on the wing in
-the afternoon sunshine, and later on, and may often be seen in numbers
-dashing hither and thither in an apparently erratic flight over heaths and
-open spaces, in search of the females. The latter do not fly till night,
-and occasionally they are attracted to a bright light.
-
-Except that it has not been noted in the Shetlands, the species occurs
-throughout the British Isles. Abroad its range extends over Europe, and it
-is found in Amurland.
-
-THE DRINKER (_Cosmotriche potatoria_).
-
-The male is reddish brown, more or less clouded on the forewings with
-ochreous; and the female is yellow, or whitish ochreous. Sometimes this
-colour distinction of the sexes is reversed, and the males are pale whilst
-the females are dark. In the fens of Cambridgeshire notably, pale or
-yellowish males are not altogether uncommon. Such specimens would seem to
-accord better with the Linnean type than the more usual form indicated
-above. Barrett mentions, among other aberrations, male specimens from South
-Wales with the whole of the fore and hind wings deep rich glossy purplish
-chocolate. {124}
-
-There is variation in the two whitish or silvery marks on the fore wings,
-the upper one is often very small, sometimes quite absent, and the lower
-one reduced to a crescent. The chocolate brown cross lines, of which there
-are usually two on the fore wings, are sometimes faint or entirely missing.
-Tutt has recently named nine forms, chiefly colour aberrations, and two
-others were previously named. (The moth is figured on Plate 61, and the
-early stages on Plate 60.)
-
-The eggs, which are white with bluish grey markings, are laid in clusters
-on grass stems, etc.
-
-The caterpillar is slaty grey inclining to blackish; the lines on the back
-are formed of yellowish dots and dashes; two rows of tufts of short black
-hairs on the back, with longer brown hairs between; low down on the sides
-are shaggy tufts of white and yellowish hairs and longer brown hairs; an
-erect pointed tuft of brown hair on second ring, and a similar one on ring
-eleven but the latter inclines backward. Head greyish, striped and lined
-with brown and yellowish brown, and clothed with brown hair. It feeds on
-coarse grasses, including the ribbon grass grown in gardens, in August to
-September or October.
-
-In the latter month it goes into hibernation, being then but little over an
-inch in length. About April it resumes feeding and becomes full grown in
-June or thereabouts. The long yellowish or whitish brown cocoon in which it
-changes to a brown chrysalis is more or less pointed at the lower end, and
-generally attached to a culm of grass or a reed. A showery season seems to
-suit these caterpillars better than a hot, dry one. The partiality of the
-caterpillar for a drop of dew, mountain or otherwise, has frequently been
-noted. The old English name of The Drinker Caterpillar (1682) is therefore
-not only an appropriate one but shows that this larval habit was observed
-even at that early date. The specific name _potatoria_ given to the moth by
-Linne is of similar significance.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 60.
- DRINKER MOTH.
- _Eggs, natural size and enlarged; caterpillars and cocoon._
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 61.
- DRINKER MOTH.
-
-{125} The moth emerges in July. It seems most addicted to damp grassy
-lanes, ditch-sides, fens, marshes, moorlands, and sandhills; and is not
-really uncommon in very many suitable districts throughout the United
-Kingdom. Abroad, it is common over the greater part of Europe and its range
-extends to Amurland and Japan.
-
-THE SMALL LAPPET (_Epicnaptera ilicifolia_).
-
-This exceedingly local and rare British moth has the fore wings pale
-reddish-brown, suffused on the outer marginal area with grey; about the
-centre of the wings there is a short black line preceded by a whitish mark;
-beyond is a blackish, indistinct, wavy line; the greyish outer area is
-limited by a brown line, and this is inwardly edged with whitish: hind
-wings purplish brown with the central area whitish and crossed by a
-blackish line. Fringes whitish, marked with brown at the ends of the veins
-(Plate 63).
-
-Kirby states that the caterpillar is rust coloured, with a black stripe on
-the back, on which stand white dots; and with reddish-yellow transverse
-spots on the second and third rings. Another form is grey, and the back
-white, with a broad black central stripe interrupted by rust-coloured spots
-dotted with black.
-
-The following brief description is taken from an inflated skin of an
-immature caterpillar received from Dresden: brownish inclining to reddish,
-paler between the rings; clothed with short greyish hair, and longer hairs
-from and above the fleshy tubercles low down along the sides; there is a
-hair-clothed eminence on ring eleven. The only conspicuous markings are on
-rings two and three; each of these has two orange spots separated and
-narrowly edged externally with velvety black; there are two small black
-spots on the back of each of the other rings, and indications of reddish
-circles around some of these. Head blackish, covered with greyish hairs
-(Plate 62). {126}
-
-In this country the caterpillar feeds on bilberry (_Vaccinium myrtillus_),
-but on the Continent it is said to eat the foliage of sallows and willows,
-also of birch.
-
-The cocoon is spun up among the leaves of the food plant. That figured on
-Plate 62, of foreign origin, was on a shoot of bilberry; a moth emerged
-from it on April 5, 1907. The first detailed account of this species in
-Britain is that in the _Zoologist_ for 1852, in which Mr. Atkinson records
-that he took a specimen in May, 1851, at Cannock Chase in Staffordshire. A
-year earlier two larvae were found by Mr. Green on a moor near Sheffield,
-and one of these attained the moth state in April, 1851. After this moths
-and caterpillars seem to have been taken in varying numbers down to 1896,
-when a specimen was captured by Dr. R. Freer of Rugby. Tutt, quoting from a
-letter received from Dr. Freer, states that two moths were reared from
-three caterpillars found at Cannock in 1898. The only other known British
-locality is in the neighbourhood of Lynton, North Devon, where a
-caterpillar, which, from the description, must have been this species, was
-found in 1864. It was taken on August 3 in a wood abounding with bilberry.
-
-The species ranges over Central Europe, but seems to be generally rare; it
-also occurs in Amurland and Japan.
-
-THE LAPPET (_Gastropacha quercifolia_).
-
-Warm reddish brown is the prevailing colour of this fine moth. The wings
-are more or less suffused with purplish grey, and crossed by blackish
-lines--three on the fore wings and two on the hind wings. Except in the
-reddish tinge, which may be bright or dull approaching chocolate, this
-species is pretty constant in its coloration. Barrett mentions a specimen
-of a light brown colour, and another of a pale buff. The first of these
-forms seems to approach the var. _meridionalis_, Staudinger (Tutt), and the
-other to var. _ulmifolia_, Heuacker, which are well known on the Continent.
-In certain favourable seasons a second generation of the moth has been
-obtained, chiefly perhaps, in confinement, and on the Continent; although
-in Britain a caterpillar or two will sometimes feed up and attain the
-perfect state the same year they hatch from the egg. These examples, which
-are much smaller, but do not otherwise differ from normal specimens, are
-referable to var. _hoegei_, Heuacker.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 62.
- 1, 1a. LAPPET MOTH: _eggs, natural size and enlarged; caterpillar_.
- 2, 2a. SMALL LAPPET: _caterpillar and cocoon_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 63.
- 1. SMALL LAPPET MOTH, _male_; 2 _female_.
- 3. LAPPET MOTH, _male_; 4 _female_.
-
-{127} The moth is figured on Plate 63, and the eggs and caterpillar on
-Plate 62.
-
-The eggs, which are whitish in colour with greyish markings, are laid, in
-July or early August, in twos, threes, or more, on twigs or the undersides
-of leaves of sloe, apple, sallow, hawthorn, etc. A single female moth has
-been known to lay over a thousand eggs, but this is perhaps exceptional,
-and somewhere about half that number is possibly near the average. Even the
-latter would take the moth some time to distribute here and there in small
-batches.
-
-The caterpillars hatch out in about a fortnight, feed for a few weeks, and
-in the autumn, when about three-quarters to one inch in length, take up
-their winter quarters low down on the stems of the food plant, but, in
-confinement, often on a withered leaf.
-
-Caterpillar dark grey, so thickly sprinkled with minute black dots as to
-appear almost black; the whole body is clothed with fine and rather short
-blackish hair; low down on the side there is a fringe of brownish hair, and
-this covers the fleshy lappets (the older writers named this larva the
-"Caterpillar with the Lappets"); two white marks edged in front with black
-on the third ring, and a hairy prominence on the eleventh, are the most
-conspicuous features of this caterpillar. When the front rings are
-extended, the divisions between them are seen to be deep blue. Head grey,
-with darker stripe and paler lines. Occasionally several white marks appear
-on the back, and this is stated by Professor Poulton to occur more
-especially in the caterpillars when the twigs and stems of the food plant
-upon {128} which they have grown up are covered with grey lichen. Sometimes
-the caterpillar has been reported as destructive in orchards; two or three
-large ones feeding on a small apple tree would certainly afford evidence of
-their presence in the shape of denuded twigs, but it is doubtful if they
-ever occur in sufficient numbers to cause any very serious damage to fruit
-trees.
-
-The chrysalis is dark brown, inclining to blackish, and covered with a
-whitish powder, which does not shake off. It is enclosed in a long,
-grey-brown, tight-fitting cocoon of silk and hairs of the caterpillar,
-which is generally spun up among the lower twigs, or to the stem of the
-food plant.
-
-The moth emerges in June or July, and is on the wing at night, when it may
-be sometimes netted as it flies along or over hedgerows. When caught in
-this way it dashes about so wildly in the net that it is rarely of much
-value for the collection. The same may be said of examples taken by light,
-which at times attracts the moths freely. When resting in the daytime, it
-very closely resembles a withered bramble-leaf or bunch of leaves. The fore
-wings are folded down, roof-like, over the hind wings, which are flattened
-out and their edges project beyond the margins of the fore wings. It is,
-however, very rarely seen in the open at such times.
-
-The species does not seem to have been recorded from Ireland or from
-Scotland, but it has a wide distribution in England, although much less
-frequently met with in the north than in the south. In the Cambridge fens
-it is perhaps more plentiful than elsewhere, but it is not uncommon in some
-parts of Berkshire, Huntingdonshire, and Kent. The range abroad extends
-through Central, Southern, and Eastern Europe, to Armenia, Tartary,
-Siberia, and Amurland; it is also represented in China, Corea, and Japan.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 64.
- KENTISH GLORY MOTH.
- _Eggs, natural size and enlarged; caterpillars, chrysalis and cocoon._
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 65.
- KENTISH GLORY.
- 1 _male_; 2 _female_.
-
-{129}
-
-ENDROMIDIDAE.
-
-THE KENTISH GLORY (_Endromis versicolor_).
-
-This species has the fore wings of the male brownish clouded and suffused
-with ochreous; there is a white patch at the base, and some white marks
-including three spots towards the apex, on the outer marginal area; two
-black cross lines, the first inwardly and the second outwardly, edged with
-white; the space between the lines is sometimes clouded with whitish, and
-there is an almost central black [sideways vee]-shaped mark. Hind wings
-tawny with a black central line, some brownish marks beyond, and sometimes
-two white spots at the upper angle. The female is much larger in size,
-without ochreous suffusion on the fore wings, and the hind wings have the
-ground colour whitish. It varies in the tone of the brown colour, and, in
-the male, in the amount of ochreous suffusion (Plate 65).
-
-The eggs are laid in rows, generally two deep, on a birch twig. At first
-they are greenish, but soon change to brownish olive or shining purplish
-brown.
-
-When young the caterpillars cluster together on the twigs, as shown on
-Plate 64. They are at first black with glossy dots, and later, greenish,
-but still dotted with black. After the third skin change, they are without
-the black dots, and the colour is then pretty much that of the mature
-caterpillar, which is green, rather whitish on the back, and with a dark
-green central line; a series of seven creamy oblique stripes along the
-sides, and on the sides of the first three rings there is a whitish stripe
-broken at the divisions; these markings are often edged with dark green; on
-the eleventh ring there is a somewhat horn-like prominence, striped with
-creamy white, and below it a yellow stripe; the spiracles are white, ringed
-with black. Head small, paler green, with whitish marks. Feeds on birch,
-from late May to {130} July. Alder, sallow, and lime have also been
-mentioned as food plants.
-
-The rough, blackish, or sooty-brown chrysalis is enclosed in a coarse
-netted cocoon, dark brown in colour, and more or less covered with moss,
-leaves, or other material, among which it is spun up, generally on the
-ground, but sometimes just under the surface. Assisted by the points on the
-rings of the body, the chrysalis is able to work itself partly out of the
-cocoon, and this it does some days before the moth emerges.
-
-The moths usually emerge in late March and in April, earlier or later in
-some seasons. They do not always come up the year after pupation, but often
-remain two or more winters in the chrysalis.
-
-The males fly in the sunshine, and are very strong on the wing; the females
-are not active until dark. This sex has been found resting on the twigs of
-birch, also on heather, and occasionally on a tree trunk. The males
-"assemble" freely to a freshly emerged female. The species inhabits the
-more open parts of woods and forests, moors and hillsides where birches
-flourish. It is probably more plentiful in its Scottish localities, such as
-Rannoch and Forres, than elsewhere, but it occurs also in Aberdeenshire,
-Kincardineshire, and Argyllshire. In England it seems to be not uncommon in
-Wyre Forest, Worcestershire, and the Reading district in Berkshire. It used
-to be so plentiful in Tilgate Forest, Sussex, that over a hundred males
-were brought to the net in one day by a bred female put down to allure
-them. This happened some fifty years ago, and compares curiously with a
-record of one male attracted by a female in Tilgate Forest, April 13, 1869.
-Other localities in Sussex that have been mentioned are St. Leonard's
-Forest and near Petersfield; it has also been found in Herefordshire and in
-some parts of Suffolk. Distributed over Central and Northern Europe, the
-range extending to North Italy.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 66.
- 1, 2. EMPEROR MOTH, _males_; 3 _female_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 67.
- EMPEROR MOTH.
- _Eggs, natural size and enlarged._
- _Caterpillars and cocoon._ (_Photos. by W. J. Lucas._)
-
-{131}
-
-SATURNIIDAE.
-
-THE EMPEROR MOTH (_Saturnia pavonia_).
-
-In a general way the fore wings of the male may be described as purplish
-grey, suffused with rosy or with tawny shades; a reddish cloud, black
-marked above, at the tips of the wings; the outer margins are more or less
-whitish, and there is a whitish patch about the middle of each wing, in
-which is an eyed spot; the hind wings are tawny, with a central eye spot
-and a blackish band towards the outer margin. The female has all the wings
-pale purplish grey, with whitish bordered outer margins; markings much as
-in the male, but the central area of the hindwings is more or less whitish.
-There is some variation in the ornamentation; occasionally the white
-markings are of large size, or, on the other hand, may be almost or quite
-obscured. Very rarely the eye-spots are absent from all the wings (ab.
-_obsoleta_, Tutt), and sometimes they are of abnormal shape. Now and then
-specimens of the female sex are dark in colour, with red bands, and Barrett
-mentions an example of this sex smoky black in colour, with still blacker
-markings (Plate 66).
-
-The olive brown, clouded greyish eggs are laid in neatly arranged batches
-around the stems or twigs of plants; I once found a batch in North Devon on
-a loose piece of rock. The caterpillar when full grown is bright green,
-with black markings; the warts from which blackish bristles arise are
-yellow, sometimes pink or blackish. In an early stage it is black, with an
-orange line low down along the sides; later on it is still black, but
-ringed with orange. It feeds in June, July, and August on many kinds of
-plants, among which may be mentioned heather, bramble, sallow, sloe; also
-meadow-sweet (_Spiraea ulmaria_) and purple loose-strife (_Lythrum
-salicaria_).
-
-The curious cocoon formed by the caterpillar (Plate 67) is {132} so
-constructed at the narrow end that the moth on emergence can easily pass
-through; after the insect's escape, the converging fibres forming the
-"door" spring to again, and the point of exit looks pretty much as before
-the moth had pushed through. This kind of opening can only be worked from
-the inside, therefore enemies from without are unable to effect an
-entrance.
-
-The moths are out in April and May, and the males may be seen on sunny days
-flying at a great pace over heaths, moorlands, and mosses, also about the
-borders of woods. The female flies at night, but it may occasionally be met
-with resting on heather or other herbage in the daytime. A freshly emerged
-female moth will, as a rule, attract as many specimens of the opposite sex
-as one would care to take; all that one has to do is to take her in a box
-to some likely spot, and there await the coming of the males.
-
-The species seems to be generally distributed throughout the British Isles,
-but is commoner in some parts than in others, and apparently rare in
-portions of the Midlands.
-
-The distribution abroad extends through Europe to North Asia Minor and
-Armenia, and to Siberia, Amurland, and Ussuri.
-
-DREPANIDAE.
-
-The British species belonging to this family, with one exception, have the
-tips of the fore wings pointed and curved downwards, forming a sort of
-hook, hence the English name Hook-tips. The exception is _Cilix spinula_, a
-round winged moth, not at all like other members of the family, but its
-caterpillar is very like others of the group.
-
-The bristle and catch arrangement for locking the wings is present in all
-the species, but the tongue or proboscis is absent, or practically so. The
-caterpillars are not furnished with anal {133} claspers, therefore have
-only fourteen legs, that is, six true legs and eight false legs (pro-legs).
-The last ring of the body is more or less tapered, sometimes terminating in
-a point; the back is roughened with raised spots and warts, or humped. They
-feed on the leaves of trees and bushes, usually exposed, and they pupate in
-a silken cocoon, spun up between leaves, or in a folded leaf, of the food
-plant.
-
-Of the eleven species occurring in the Palaearctic Region, seven are
-European, and six of these are found in the British Isles.
-
-THE PEBBLE HOOK-TIP (_Drepana falcataria_).
-
-The fore wings are brown, whity brown, or whitish; the central area is
-crossed by three blackish wavy lines, a blackish blotch in the third line
-and two blackish dots between it and the second line; beyond there is a
-dark brown, or reddish-brown curved line from the tip of the wing to the
-inner margin. Hind wings similar in colour to the fore wings, but paler on
-the front area; crossed by five wavy dusky lines, sometimes not well marked
-except on the inner margin; generally, there is a black central dot. The
-paler forms have a dusky shading on each side of the curved line on the
-fore wings.
-
-The egg is yellow freckled with orange, chiefly at one end. Caterpillar
-green, the back reddish-brown, except towards the black-marked yellowish
-head; two conspicuous warts on rings two to five, and less noticeable
-raised spots on the other rings, all bearing hairs. In a younger stage it
-is blackish, with white marks on the fourth and seventh rings; later it
-becomes greenish below, and the markings on the back of rings four, seven,
-eight, and ten are whitish or creamy. Until nearly full grown it usually
-lives on the underside of a leaf, the edges of which are turned over and
-held down by silken threads; sometimes it may be seen on the upper side of
-a leaf under a slight web. It feeds {134} chiefly on birch, but is
-occasionally found on alder, in June and July, and in September and
-October, and may be obtained by searching or by beating, but the former,
-although perhaps slower, is much the better method. The moth is shown on
-Plate 68, and the early stages on Plate 69.
-
-The species is widely distributed, and seems to occur, sometimes commonly,
-wherever there are birches, especially of bush-like growth, in most English
-counties and also in Scotland. In Ireland it appears to be somewhat local
-and scarce.
-
-THE SCARCE HOOK-TIP (_Drepana harpagula_).
-
-The general colour of this species is brownish; the fore wings are slightly
-tinged with ochreous and speckled with minute violet-tinged silvery scales;
-between the first and second brown lines there is an irregular ochreous
-brown mark enclosing yellowish spots; the violet-tinted glistening scales
-are most in evidence on both sides of the black mark before the outer
-margin. Hind wings similar in colour to the fore wings; crossed by two
-brown lines, the second with an ochreous brown blotch above it (Plate 68).
-
-Caterpillar, yellow freckled with brown; clouded with brown on first three
-rings; a reddish brown irregular stripe runs along the sides and upwards
-towards middle of the back on rings five, six, eight, and nine; a
-double-pointed hump on the back of ring three, the points tipped with
-yellow. Head notched on the crown, dotted and clouded with brown. It feeds
-on the small-leaved lime (_Tilia parvifolia_), and may be found from July
-to September and even later. I have not seen a living caterpillar of this
-species; the above short description has been drawn from an inflated skin
-(Plate 69).
-
-The only British locality for this species is the Leigh Woods near Bristol,
-where it was first met with in 1837. It is, however, very rare and
-difficult to obtain. Abroad it ranges through Central Europe to Livonia,
-Southern Sweden, and to Northern Italy. On the Continent the caterpillar
-feeds on the foliage of other trees than lime, and there are two broods in
-the year.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 68.
- 1. SCARCE HOOK-TIP, _male_; 2 _female_.
- 3, 5, 6. PEBBLE HOOK-TIP, _males_; 4, 7 _females_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 69.
- 1, 1a, 1b. SCALLOPED HOOK-TIP: _eggs, caterpillar and chrysalis_.
- 2, 2a, 2b. PEBBLE HOOK-TIP: _caterpillar, chrysalis and cocoon_.
- 3. SCARCE HOOK-TIP: _caterpillar_.
-
-{135}
-
-THE OAK HOOK-TIP (_Drepana binaria_).
-
-The male is of an ochreous-tinged brown coloration; all the wings are
-crossed by two slender deep ochreous lines, and have two obliquely set,
-almost central, black dots; outer margin of fore wings often blackish,
-marked towards the tip; the hind wings are deep ochreous on the front
-marginal area. Fore wings of the female paler, and the hind wings ochreous
-yellow; the cross lines on the latter often lost in the ground colour
-(Plate 71).
-
-In freshly emerged male specimens the brown is sometimes purplish tinged,
-and in some examples of the same sex the hind wings may be described as
-ochreous, with brown bands. The female occasionally has the fore wings
-tinged with greyish, and the hind wings are sometimes banded with brown,
-especially on the inner marginal area.
-
-The caterpillar is ochreous brown with a double-pointed hump on ring three,
-a yellowish diamond on the back of rings five to ten; the front and hind
-rings are brown, more or less tinged with purple; yellowish lines, shaded
-below with purplish brown, on the sides meet on the back and form an edging
-to the diamond mark. The figure on Plate 70 shows the caterpillar in its
-usual resting attitude. It feeds on oak.
-
-A widely distributed species in the southern half of England, but not
-especially abundant in any locality, and not known to occur north of
-Lincoln.
-
-THE BARRED HOOK-TIP (_Drepana cultraria_).
-
-Fore wings pale fulvous or ochreous brown, with two paler cross-lines on
-all the wings, space enclosed by the lines darker brown; a black or
-blackish central dot, and before the brownish {136} outer margin there is a
-pale line ending on the tip of the wing. The hind wings have an obscure
-dusky central dot placed in the upper edge of the band, and usually there
-are two brownish bands on the outer marginal area, but these do not extend
-to the front margin. Except that the female is generally larger, and the
-antennae are simple, the sexes are much alike (Plate 71).
-
-This species is best distinguished from _binaria_ by the dark bands, and
-the straighter second line. The central dots are less trustworthy
-characters, because summer specimens of the present species often have two
-of these spots on the fore wings (var. _aestiva_, Spr.), and in occasional
-examples of _binaria_ the lower central spot of the hind wings is absent.
-As a rule, however, the central dots are more conspicuous in _binaria_ than
-in _cultraria_. The egg is yellowish, tinged with reddish at the ends and
-along the sides. The caterpillar is somewhat similar to that of the last
-species, but the hump on ring three is smaller, and the side lines and
-diamond mark are whiter. It may be found in June and July, and again in
-September, and even in October in some years. It feeds on beech (Plate 70).
-
-This species is found where beech trees occur, preferably on a chalky soil,
-in the counties of England from Norfolk southwards. The male may often be
-seen in May, flying around the beech trees or neighbouring bushes, in the
-sunshine; or both sexes may be caused to leave their resting places among
-the foliage by tapping the boughs.
-
-Its range extends through Central Europe to Asia Minor.
-
-THE SCALLOPED HOOK-TIP (_Drepana lacertinaria_).
-
-The name Scallop Hook-tip given to this species by Moses Harris in 1775,
-doubtless referred to the ragged outlines of the fore wings. These wings
-are pale brown in colour, freckled and clouded with darker tints, and
-crossed by two dark-brown lines; the central dot is black, but often
-minute; fringes {137} white, chequered with brown. Sometimes the freckling
-is heavy and the clouding very dark, becoming almost black on the outer
-margin; such specimens seem to be referable to var. _scincula_, Hubn. In
-another form the fore wings are ochreous brown, with very tiny freckling
-and only light clouds on the upper part of the outer margin. The hind wings
-in all the forms are pale whitish brown, with a black central dot, and
-brown marginal line; in the darker specimens these wings are clouded or
-suffused with dark brown (Plate 71).
-
-The egg is pale yellowish when laid, but changes afterwards to reddish. The
-full-grown caterpillar is pale brownish, marked with darker or reddish
-brown on the back and sides, and raised spots; there are double-pointed
-humps on rings two and three, and a similar but smaller elevation on ring
-eleven. In the younger state the caterpillar is blackish, with whitish
-marks on the fourth, seventh, and eighth rings, and some white dots on the
-end rings. It feeds on the upper surface of the leaves of birch in June and
-July, and again in August and September.
-
-Chrysalis, reddish brown, the ring divisions blackish grey; powdered with
-whitish, and appearing as though dusted with flour. Attached by the anal
-spike to the interior of the silken web-like cocoon. In the Figure (Plate
-69) the pupa is shown hanging from the ruptured cocoon, upon the covering
-leaf of which a half-grown caterpillar is depicted.
-
-The moth is out in May and June, and a second generation appears in August.
-It is not uncommon in most birch woods, and on heaths and commons, where
-birch flourishes; but the perfect insect, which rests on leaves and twigs
-of trees and bushes, and the herbage under them, is not so frequently or so
-easily obtained as the caterpillars. The latter may be searched for in the
-daytime, or they may be dislodged by beating.
-
-Widely distributed throughout England, but local or scarce in Lancashire
-and Yorkshire and northwards; also, according to {138} Barrett, in
-Devonshire and in the fens of Norfolk and Cambridge. It occurs in the
-Clydesdale district, Ross, Argyllshire, and Sutherland in Scotland; and in
-Ireland it seems to be widely spread and common in some localities.
-
-THE CHINESE CHARACTER (_Cilix glaucata_).
-
-Probably in reference to the grey-brown oval blotch on the middle of the
-white fore wings, this moth was known to the older entomologists by the
-English name of "Goose-egg." On the blotch, however, there are silvery
-marks on the veins, and below it (often attached) there is a blackish
-blotch with some bluish silvery scales upon it. These markings probably
-suggested to Haworth the name Chinese Character by which it is commonly
-known (Plate 71).
-
-The caterpillar is reddish brown, with a darker line along the back, and a
-paler patch on rings three to five, extending as a narrow stripe to the
-dark-brown spiked tail; two raised warts on rings two and three, with a
-white dot between the hinder pair. Head darker brown, paler in front. It
-feeds in June and early July, and in September and October, chiefly on
-hawthorn and sloe, but it will also eat apple and pear. The chrysalis,
-which is enclosed in a brown, rather tough, silken cocoon, spun up among
-leaves or under loose bark, is greyish on the wing covers, and reddish on
-the body.
-
-The moth is out in May and early June, and again from late July well into
-August. Sometimes it may be seen resting on a leaf in a hedgerow. When
-disturbed in the daytime, which may happen where one is beating the bushes,
-it falls, rather than flies, to the ground. At night it may be netted as it
-flies along the hedgeside or wood borders in almost every county of England
-and Wales. In Scotland its range seems not to extend north of Clydesdale.
-Kane states that it is "widely spread, but not generally at all numerous"
-in Ireland.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 70.
- 1. OAK HOOK-TIP: _caterpillar_.
- 2, 2a, 2b, 2c. BARRED HOOK-TIP: _egg, enlarged; caterpillar, chrysalis
- and cocoon_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 71.
- 1. OAK HOOK-TIP, _male_; 2 _female_.
- 3. BARRED HOOK-TIP, _male_; 4 _female_.
- 5, 7. SCALLOPED HOOK-TIP, _males_; 6, 8 _females_.
- 9. CHINESE CHARACTER, _male_; 10 _female_.
-
-{139}
-
-NOLIDAE.
-
-Some thirteen or fourteen species occurring in Europe are referred by
-Staudinger to this family. Only five of these occur in the British Isles.
-The moths are of rather small size, less, in fact, than some of the
-so-called "Micros," among which they have been placed. Probably they may,
-for this reason, be overlooked. They mostly sit head downwards on the
-trunks, branches, or leaves of trees, sometimes on palings, but the rarer
-ones hide themselves among the thick, low herbage. The time of flight is
-after dark, and the moths occasionally visit the sugar patch. The
-caterpillar has only eight false legs (prolegs), the first pair being the
-absent ones; the body is clothed with tufts of hair, the hairs of the front
-and rear tufts longer than the others. When full grown it spins a more or
-less spindle-shaped, toughish cocoon of silk mixed with the larval hairs,
-which is usually coated with particles scraped from the surface of twig or
-stem upon which it is spun up.
-
-THE SHORT-CLOAKED MOTH (_Nola cucullatella_).
-
-The fore wings are whitish or greyish, with a dark, almost black, patch at
-the base; this patch is marked with whitish, and is limited by the first
-cross line, which is black and curved; the second line, also black, is wavy
-and curved inwards towards the front margin; between these lines is a dusky
-central shade, commencing in a blackish spot on the front margin, and
-sometimes forming an inward border to the second line; a raised tuft of
-white, grey-capped scales on the basal patch, and two other tufts beyond it
-and in a line with the front margin; hind wings dark grey, paler towards
-the base (Plate 73).
-
-The caterpillar is reddish brown, clothed with short greyish hairs; the
-spots and central line on the back are whitish. It {140} hatches from the
-egg early in August, and after feeding for a while, retires to winter
-quarters, selecting some sheltered cranny, such as a chink in the tree
-bark, where it spins over itself a few strands of silk. Feeding is resumed
-in May and June, after hibernation, usually on the upperside of leaves of
-sloe and whitethorn, and also of fruit trees, such as apple and plum, and
-sometimes pear (Plate 72).
-
-The moth is out in June and July. It flies at dusk.
-
-Widely distributed and generally common in the south of England; somewhat
-rare in Scotland--perhaps overlooked. It has been reported from Ireland,
-but is not mentioned by Kane in his catalogue of Irish Lepidoptera.
-
-THE SMALL BLACK ARCHES (_Nola strigula_).
-
-Fore wings greyish white, freckled and dusted with grey brown at the base
-and on the front and outer margins; two black wavy and toothed cross lines;
-between the base of the wing and the second line are three raised tufts of
-grey brown tipped whitish scales: hind wings dark grey, paler towards the
-base (Plate 73).
-
-The caterpillar feeds, probably after hibernation, from April to June, on
-the undersides of oak leaves. It is pale ochreous in colour, with pale
-reddish brown warts and star-like tufts of hair; a blackish bar on the back
-of ring six; head blackish.
-
-The moth emerges from the chrysalis in July. It occurs in oak woods in
-Kent, Surrey, Sussex, Hants, Somerset and Gloucestershire; also in Berks,
-Norfolk, Suffolk, and Essex, but it is very local and seems to be
-restricted to a more or less limited area in all its known haunts, among
-which the most favoured are perhaps the New Forest in Hampshire and Abbots
-Wood in Sussex. In some years it may be fairly common, or even plentiful,
-and then becomes quite scarce during several seasons in the same place.
-{141}
-
-THE LEAST BLACK ARCHES (_Nola confusalis_).
-
-Very similar to the last species, but whiter; the first line is curved
-towards the second tuft of raised scales, thence gently curved to the inner
-margin, above which there is a slight inward angle or elbow; the second
-line is less wavy; hind wings whitish grey with a black central dot, and in
-the male whiter along the inner area. The head and palpi of this species
-are white, but _strigula_ has a greyish white head and dark palpi. Again,
-the antennae in the male of the present species are ciliated, but in male
-_strigula_ they are bipectinated (Plate 73).
-
-The caterpillar, which feeds in July and August on the leaves of oak,
-beech, sloe, and apple, etc., is reddish, inclining to yellow on the back,
-which is traversed by black lines, the central double and interrupted on
-rings seven to nine by rusty V-shaped marks.
-
-The moth flies in May and June.
-
-This species appears to have a wider distribution than either of the
-others. It is the only one known with certainty to occur in Ireland, and it
-is widely spread in that country. In Scotland it is found in Perthshire and
-Ayrshire, and probably is present in other parts. In England it is obtained
-in most counties, except perhaps the northern, although it has been
-recorded from various parts of Yorkshire.
-
-KENT BLACK ARCHES (_Nola albula_).
-
-Fore wings white, largely light brown between the obscure cross lines;
-outer marginal area clouded, and front margin dotted with light brown;
-three tufts of raised scales placed as in previous species; hind wings of
-the male, greyish white, browner on the outer margin; of female, brownish
-grey. Varies in the amount of light brown, and sometimes this is much
-reduced; more rarely it disappears entirely (Plate 73). {142}
-
-The caterpillar varies in colour from ochreous with pink tinge to bone
-white; the warts are set with pale hairs and those along the back and at
-each extremity are longest; a double greyish line along the middle of the
-back, and a series of black marks on each side; these marks unite across
-the back on rings six and ten. After hibernation, it feeds in Spring until
-June, on the young growth of bramble, raspberry, strawberry, and cinquefoil
-(_Potentilla reptans_), and is stated to also eat hemp agrimony
-(_Eupatorium cannabinum_). The brownish cocoon is constructed on a stem of
-grass and in appearance looks not unlike a swelling of the stem.
-
-This species was first observed in England in the year 1859, when four
-specimens were taken in July at Chattenden Roughs, a large hilly wood in
-North-east Kent. It still occurs, no doubt, in the Kentish locality
-referred to, but is now very scarce there compared with what it must have
-been some twenty-five years ago. Barrett notes a specimen from the Isle of
-Wight. Mr. G. T. Porritt states that he has seen one of two examples
-captured in South Devon in 1901; and another, a male, has been recorded as
-taken at light in a house near Weymouth, Dorset, in August, 1904, and from
-Lewes in 1906.
-
-At the time the first specimens were met with in England the species seems
-to have been rare, or little known on the Continent. Since then knowledge
-of its distribution has vastly increased, and it has now been found not
-only in many parts of Central Europe, but also in Finland, Italy, Dalmatia;
-Asia Minor, Persia, and extending into Amurland and Japan.
-
-THE SCARCE BLACK ARCHES (_Nola centonalis_).
-
-The general colour of this moth is white; the fore wings more or less
-sprinkled and clouded with brownish grey or dark grey, and crossed by two
-black lines, the first curved and the second slightly waved, indented and
-edged inwardly with ochreous brown; the three raised tufts are white,
-capped with grey (Plate 73).
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 72.
- 1, 1a. SHORT-CLOAKED MOTH: _caterpillar and cocoon_.
- 2, 2a, 2b. GREEN SILVER-LINES: _caterpillar and cocoon_.
- 3, 3a, 3b. SCARCE SILVER-LINES: _caterpillar before hibernation,
- chrysalis and cocoon_.
- 4, 4a. LARGE MARBLED TORTRIX: _caterpillar and cocoon_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 73.
- 1. CREAM-BORDERED GREEN PEA.
- 4, 7. GREEN SILVER LINES.
- 10. SCARCE SILVER LINES.
- 2, 3. SHORT-CLOAKED MOTH.
- 5. SMALL BLACK ARCHES.
- 6. LEAST BLACK ARCHES.
- 13. KENT BLACK ARCHES.
- 8, 9, 11, 12. SCARCE BLACK ARCHES.
-
-{143} This is the only really variable species among the five occurring in
-this country. In some specimens the space between the cross lines is
-largely filled in with dark grey, and in other specimens the wings are
-almost entirely white, traces of the cross lines being the only markings.
-
-Mr. Robert Adkin, who has reared this species from the egg, kindly allowed
-me to select specimens from his fine series to illustrate the range of
-aberration; these are figured on Plate 73.
-
-Caterpillar brownish inclining to purplish, with an ochreous line along the
-middle of the back and some brown V-shaped black marks. Head blackish
-brown. It feeds in May, after hibernation, on various clovers, preferring
-the blossoms, and bird's-foot trefoil (_Lotus corniculatus_).
-
-The moth appears some time between mid-July and mid-August. The late Mr.
-Tugwell, by keeping some larvae, reared from the egg, in a warm room
-induced them to feed up instead of hibernating, and they attained the moth
-state in December.
-
-This is another exceedingly local species in England. It was first taken at
-Bembridge in the Isle of Wight in 1858, and one or two specimens have since
-been obtained in that island. Examples have also occurred on the cliffs
-near Hastings, and at Folkestone; and one has been recorded as taken in a
-light trap at Woodbridge in Suffolk, July 21, 1904. The headquarters for
-the species in this country are the Deal sand-hills, on the Kentish coast,
-where it was discovered over a quarter of a century ago, and probably
-occurs still.
-
-CHLOEPHORIDAE.
-
-Authors are not at all agreed as to the systematic position of this family,
-and there seems to be some difference of opinion as to the species that
-properly belong to it. Sir George Hampson {144} has transferred the group
-to the Noctuidae and separated _S. revayana_ from the others, placing it in
-his sub-family Sarrothripinae, to which also belong certain Indian species.
-
-Only four species occur in our islands. Three of these have green fore
-wings and pale grey or whitish hind wings. The other species, _Sarrothripa
-revayana_, has the fore wings of various shades of grey, brown, or
-blackish; its boat-shaped cocoon is very like a small edition of that of
-_Hylophila bicolorana_, and, although the caterpillar is in some respects
-not very dissimilar to those of the green-winged species, the moth does not
-seem quite to be one of their set.
-
-THE CREAM-BORDERED GREEN PEA (_Earias chlorana_).
-
-In size, colour of the fore wings, and general appearance this moth might
-be mistaken for the much more common Green Tortrix (_Tortrix viridana_). On
-examination however, it will be seen to have white hind wings, whilst those
-of the _Tortrix_ are grey. Again, the head, front of thorax, and front edge
-of the fore wings are white in the present species (Plate 73).
-
-The caterpillar is green, inclining to whitish on the back, the latter
-lined with brownish, and bearing warts on rings six and eleven. It feeds in
-July and August on the terminal leaves of osier and willow; these leaves
-are drawn together with silk, and the solid appearance of the foliage at
-the end of the twig will afford a clue to the probable whereabouts of the
-caterpillar when one is searching for it. Chrysalis, brown, darker on the
-back, paler on the under parts, and on the wing covers; enclosed in a tough
-boat-shaped cocoon which is often constructed on the bark of a twig or stem
-of the food plant. As a rule the moth does not emerge until the following
-year, but in some years a few will appear in the autumn, and others remain
-in the chrysalis until the following May or June.
-
-This species inhabits damp places where there are osiers, {145} and it is
-especially common in the fens. It occurs in most of the southern and
-eastern counties of England, but does not seem to be recorded from other
-parts of the British Isles.
-
-GREEN SILVER LINES (_Hylophila prasinana_).
-
-The bright green fore wings are crossed by two shaded silvery lines, and a
-narrow silvery band, the latter running from the tip of the wing to the
-inner margin, and usually there is a whitish shade between the two lines;
-the fringes are reddish, or pinkish, and the front and inner margins are
-tinged with the same colour, sometimes strongly so on the inner margin. The
-hind wings of the male are whitish, tinged with yellowish green; fringes
-white, more or less tinted with reddish; in the female the hind wings are
-entirely silky white. Antennae reddish (Plate 73).
-
-Caterpillar, green, with yellowish dots, lines on the back, and edging to
-first ring of the body; the anal claspers are marked above with red. It
-feeds in August and September on the leaves of oak, birch, beech and nut
-(Plate 72).
-
-The chrysalis is purplish above merging into pale brown beneath; wing-cases
-ochreous brown; the dorsal surface, especially the ring divisions, are
-dusted with whitish dots. It is enclosed in a papery cocoon of a pale pinky
-brown colour; frequently spun up on the back of a leaf, but also in a
-curled leaf, bark chink, or among herbage and litter on the ground.
-
-The moth flies in June and July, and is not uncommon in woods throughout
-the greater part of England, it may be beaten from trees, and is often to
-be seen sitting on bracken and other undergrowth. It is also found in
-Scotland up to Moray, and seems to be pretty generally distributed in
-Ireland. The range of this species abroad extends through Northern and
-Central Europe, South Russia, Siberia, to Japan. {146}
-
-SCARCE SILVER LINES (_Hylophila bicolorana_).
-
-The green colour of the fore wings of this moth is rather paler than of
-those of the last species; they are crossed by two almost parallel
-yellowish lines; hind wings white and silky. Antennae whitish towards the
-tip and reddish towards the base (Plate 73).
-
-Caterpillar green, sometimes tinged with yellow, a dark line along the
-middle of the back is edged on each side with whitish.
-
-The chrysalis is pale greenish, with a narrow black stripe from the head
-along the thorax extending to the fourth abdominal ring; the wing cases
-reach the sixth ring, which together with the back of the fifth are
-roughened with fine blackish points.
-
-Cocoon boat-shaped with the keel raised at the head end. When the moth
-emerges from this end the cocoon closes up tightly again, so that no
-opening is to be seen; slight pressure on the back will cause the exit slit
-to open.
-
-This rather local species is perhaps commoner in the eastern counties of
-England than elsewhere, but it occurs in the oak woods of Berkshire, and
-southward to Kent and Hampshire. Much scarcer in the west and midlands, and
-apparently unknown in the north. Barrett gives Galway and Queen's County in
-Ireland, but adds that it is rare.
-
-Distributed over Central and Southern Europe, and its range extends to
-South Sweden, and Asia Minor.
-
-SARROTHRIPINAE.
-
-THE LARGE MARBLED TORTRIX (_Sarrothripa revayana_).
-
-This is a most variable species, ranging from greyish white through various
-shades of brown to blackish; the grey and the {147} brown forms are
-sometimes tinged with green. In the illustration some of the more usual
-forms of marking are shown. 1 (more or less typical) and 2 are the most
-common; 5 (_ramosana_) is less frequently met with; 4 (_ilicanus_) has ashy
-brown fore wings with a black bar at the base, three black dots on the
-disc, and a series of black dots before the outer margin, the triangular
-marking on the front margin is reddish; 3 is a modification of the typical
-form approaching var. _dilutana_; 6 is of the _afzelianus_ form, with shiny
-brownish fore wings and black markings.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 23.
-
-LARGE MARBLED TORTRIX.]
-
-The caterpillar is green with whiter ring divisions; a few long whitish
-hairs on each segment; a faintly darker line along the back, and a paler
-interrupted line along the sides. Head yellowish green marked with brownish
-and sparsely clothed with whitish hairs. It feeds in June and July on the
-leaves of oak and sometimes on sallow. It spins a whitish boat-shaped
-cocoon on the under side of an oak leaf or twig, and therein turns to a
-pale green chrysalis with a broad purple brown stripe along the back from
-the head; the blunt last ring is tinged with purplish brown and the edge of
-the ring immediately before it is fringed with minute hooks (Plate 72,
-Figs. 4, 4a).
-
-The moth seems to be out from August to April. It may be {148} beaten from
-trees and bushes throughout the autumn, and during the later months of the
-year it seems to hide in yews and hollies. Just before dusk it becomes
-active and may then be netted as it flies; later on it may be seen regaling
-itself on overripe blackberries, or on the ivy blossom, and it is not an
-infrequent visitor to the sugar patch.
-
-The species has been found in almost every part of England and Wales
-wherever there are oak woods. In Scotland it occurs up to Argyllshire and
-Moray. For Ireland, Kane gives Tyrone, Westmeath, Galway, Kerry, and
-Limerick.
-
-Distribution abroad: Central and Southern Europe, extending northwards to
-Scandinavia, and eastwards to Amurland and Japan.
-
-ARCTIIDAE.
-
-In this family Staudinger includes 161 species known to occur in the
-Palaearctic Region. About forty of these are found in Europe, and
-thirty-one of the latter rank as British species.
-
-The family is usually divided into two sub-families--Arctiinae and
-Lithosiinae, fifteen of our species being referred to the former and
-sixteen to the latter. In both groups the caterpillars are hairy, but the
-hairs are usually longer in those of the "Tigers" than in those of the
-"Footmen"; the latter, too, are lichen feeders, whilst the others prefer
-the foliage of plants.
-
-TIGER MOTHS (_Arctiinae_).
-
-The moths in this sub-family have short, or, rather, stout bodies, and
-ample wings; and as the tongue is imperfectly developed in most of the
-species, flowers have not the same attraction for them as for the
-long-winged and slender-bodied Lithosiinae, most members of which have this
-organ well developed.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 74.
- WHITE ERMINE MOTH.
- _Caterpillar, chrysalis and cocoon._
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 75.
- 1, 2, 3. WHITE ERMINE MOTH.
- 4, 5. MUSLIN MOTH, _females_; 6 _male_.
- 7. WATER ERMINE, _male_; 8 _female_.
-
-{149}
-
-THE WHITE ERMINE (_Spilosoma menthastri_).
-
-Older English names for this generally distributed and often common species
-are The Great Ermine Moth of Wilkes (1773), Harris (1778), and The Large
-Ermine of Haworth.
-
-On Plate 75 will be found three colour-forms of the moth. Fig. 1 has the
-typical whitish colour, Fig. 2 is creamy on the fore wings, and Fig. 3 has
-the fore wings buff. The last represents a specimen from Scotland, where,
-especially in the western parts of the country, and also in the north of
-Ireland, and the north-west of England, buff forms, both paler and much
-darker than the one figured, are not uncommon. Sometimes the Scottish
-specimens have smoky hind wings. As regards the black spots on the wings,
-the species is subject to considerable variation. In some examples almost
-all the markings are entirely absent; in others they are very small and
-numerous, or large in size and number; the central spots on the fore wings
-are often united, forming irregular designs. Again, there may be an unusual
-amount of black spotting on the outer margins, and all other parts of the
-wings free of spots. All these aberrations in marking, except, perhaps, the
-central cluster, seem to occur in the various colour forms. An uncommon
-form, known as var. _walkeri_, Curtis (Plate 78, Fig. 5), has the black
-scales gathered together into streaks along the nervures of the fore wings;
-modifications of this variety have also been found, or reared. Possibly by
-the careful selection of parent moths showing tendency to the streaked
-aberration it might happen in a generation or two that var. _walkeri_ would
-turn up in the breeding cage to reward the rearer for trouble taken in the
-experiment.
-
-The caterpillar, which is often not uncommon in gardens in August and
-September, or even later, is brown, with long hairs, and a reddish stripe
-along the middle of the back. It feeds on {150} the foliage of low-growing
-plants, and does not appear to be specially attached to any particular
-kind. The chrysalis is dark brown, in a close-fitting cocoon of silk and
-hair from the caterpillar, spun up in odd corners on the ground or at the
-base of a wall or fence, sometimes between the pales (Plate 74).
-
-The moth emerges in June, and may be seen sitting on walls, fences, trees,
-or on the herbage growing on hedge banks; or even on the bare ground. It
-often flies into houses when lighted up, and is a frequent attendant at the
-public gas lamps and electric lights. The geographical range of this
-species extends through Northern and Central Europe southward to North-West
-Africa, and eastward to Amurland.
-
-THE WATER ERMINE (_Spilosoma urticae_).
-
-The specimens of this white moth, depicted on Plate 75, are of the form
-usually met with in Britain. To Haworth, Stephens, and other early
-entomologists this was known by the English name of the "Water Ermine" (_S.
-papyrata_, Marsham), whilst a rarer form--with a minute dot on the disc of
-the fore wings, and three dusky spots on the hind wings, as in the White
-Ermine--was the "Dingy White" of Haworth. Occasionally specimens are
-obtained with extra black spots on the basal and front areas of the fore
-wings.
-
-Caterpillar, dark brown with a purplish tinge, the hairs, arising in
-spreading tufts from black warts, are dark brownish; spiracles white; head
-black and glossy. Feeds in July and August on a variety of marsh plants,
-among which are yellow loosestrife (_Lysimachia vulgaris_), mint (_Mentha
-aquatica_), lousewort (_Pedicularis_), water dock (_Rumex hydrolapathum_),
-and iris. It seems to affect plants growing under bushes, rather than those
-more exposed. It is, presumably, not difficult to rear in confinement, as
-there is a record of eight broods belonging to three generations, and all
-descendants of a captured female, having been reared by Mr. Bacot.
-Chrysalis dark reddish brown, in a cocoon similar to that of the last
-species.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 76.
- BUFF ERMINE MOTH.
- _Eggs, natural size and enlarged; caterpillar, chrysalis and cocoon._
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 77.
- BUFF ERMINE MOTH _and varieties_.
-
-{151} The moth, which emerges in June, is rarely seen away from its
-favourite haunts, which are marshes and fens; its English name is therefore
-a very appropriate one. It is not often observed in the daytime, but is on
-the wing early in the evening, and later on is pretty sure to be attracted
-to any strong light that may be set up in its neighbourhood. The best
-localities for the species seem to be the fens of Norfolk and Cambridge,
-but it used to be fairly plentiful in many suitable parts of East Kent, and
-no doubt still occurs in some of the marshes between Dartford and
-Gravesend: it is found in Sussex in the Lewes and Brighton districts, and
-has been recorded from Kimmeridge in Dorsetshire, from the Isle of Wight,
-from near Burton-on-Trent, from the Lancaster district, and from
-Pembrokeshire, South Wales. In Scotland it is rare, and, with the exception
-of one example reported as taken in an illuminated moth trap at Clonbrock,
-May, 1896, not known to occur in Ireland.
-
-The distribution abroad extends over Central and Northern Europe, through
-South Russia to Amurland.
-
-THE BUFF ERMINE (_Spilosoma lubricipeda_).
-
-This species is now known by the English name of the Buff Ermine, but the
-names bestowed upon it by some ancient writers were perhaps hardly more
-suitable. Thus Wilkes in 1773 called it the "Spotted Buff Moth," and Harris
-five years later dubbed it the "Cream-dot Stripe." The ground colour is
-generally some shade of buff, in the paler specimens merging into cream,
-and in the darker to yellowish ochre. In the matter of black marking the
-range of variation is extensive. The specimens figured on Plate 77
-illustrate something of this variation, both as regards colouring and
-marking. The females are, as a rule, paler than the males, but occasionally
-examples {152} of the latter sex are quite as pale as any female. Figures 7
-and 8 represent var. _zatima_, Cramer. Originally this form was only known
-to occur in Heligoland. The same form, or a modification of it, was
-described by Haworth as _radiata_, from a Yorkshire specimen. Then, in
-1837, specimens of the variety were reared with the normal form of the
-species from caterpillars obtained at Saltfleet in Lincolnshire; and
-subsequently a few more examples were reported from the last named county,
-and elsewhere. In 1891 a specimen of var. _zatima_ emerged from an
-assortment of chrysalids sent to Mr. Harrison of Barnsley from a London
-correspondent. This particular specimen was of the female sex, and it
-paired with a male which was also an aberration, but not of the _zatima_
-form. Some of the offspring resulting from this union were of the female
-parent form, others favoured the male parent, and others again were
-intermediate. In the course of a few generations almost entire broods of
-the _zatima_ variety were obtained. Allowing the sexes of _zatima_ to mate
-with those of more or less ordinary _lubricipeda_, the late Mr. W. H.
-Tugwell obtained many very interesting aberrations, one of which he named
-var. _eboraci_, and another _fasciata_. The _zatima_ form and its various
-modifications have now been reared by entomologists all over the country,
-and presumably directly or indirectly from the original Barnsley stock. In
-Yorkshire especially the race has been improved; the specimens are larger
-and darker, and there is a tendency towards the almost entirely black form
-known as var. _deschangei_.
-
-The pale whitish green eggs are laid in batches on leaves, sometimes high
-up on birch trees, or virginia creeper, but more usually on the foliage of
-low growing plants; it is often common in gardens. At first the caterpillar
-is tinged with yellowish, but it afterwards becomes greyish, and finally
-brownish. When full grown the hairs, with which the body is clothed, are
-brown; there is a yellowish or whitish grey stripe along each side, and an
-obscure somewhat reddish {153} tinted line down the middle of the back.
-Head glossy brown.
-
-The glossy reddish-brown chrysalis is enclosed in a dingy coloured web-like
-cocoon, which is spun up among leaves or litter on the ground. Mr. R. Adkin
-found some of these cocoons spun up between the folds of an old brown
-blanket used as a covering for a rabbit hutch in winter. The moth emerges
-in June. Occasionally, in confinement, specimens will leave the chrysalis
-in the autumn instead of passing the winter therein, as they more usually
-do (Plate 76).
-
-A common and often abundant species over the greater part of the British
-Isles. Its range abroad extends through Central and Northern Europe, South
-Russia, and Tartary to Amurland, Corea, and West China.
-
-THE MUSLIN (_Diaphora mendica_).
-
-The early British authors knew this moth as the "Spotted Muslin" or "Seven
-Spot Ermine" (Harris, 1778). The male is dark brown or blackish, with a few
-usually obscure black dots on each wing. The female is silky white, with
-more clearly defined, and often more numerous, black dots (Plate 75, Figs.
-4-6). On Plate 78 will be found figures of the rarer and more extreme
-aberrations of the female. Those represented by Figs. 3, 4, 6, 7, were
-reared some years ago by Mr. G. T. Porritt, of Huddersfield, who at the
-same time obtained a number of other interesting intermediate examples
-("Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond.," 1889, p. 441, Pl. 14). Variation in the other
-direction is towards the complete suppression of the black dots; and I have
-seen specimens with only one such dot on each wing.
-
-In the var. _rustica_, shown on the same plate, it will be noted that the
-males assimilate somewhat to the female coloration; the specimens (Figs. 1,
-2), were bred by Mr. Robert Adkin in 1887. This form was not known to occur
-in the British {154} Isles until 1885, when Mr. de V. Kane detected
-specimens in a collection of insects made in Co. Cork, Ireland. It was next
-heard of from Belfast, and then, in 1886, again, in Co. Cork, an example of
-each sex was taken. The female specimen laid eggs, and some of these were
-sent to Mr. Adkin, who not only was successful in rearing the moths, but in
-1889 obtained a pairing between an almost white male _rustica_ and an
-ordinary English female. Only four eggs were laid, and from these two male
-moths resulted in May, 1890, both intermediate in colour between the two
-forms. In all its early stages _rustica_ is identical with ordinary
-_mendica_.
-
-Male specimens with pale yellowish grey coloured wings have been reared
-from eggs laid by a female captured at Eltham, Kent, exhibiting a tendency
-to the _rustica_ form. In the Barnsley district, Yorkshire, the males are
-paler than usual, but in the Sheffield area of the same county the males
-are black. From North Durham chrysalids, I have a smoky greyish form of the
-male.
-
-The caterpillar is brownish grey covered with yellowish brown hairs arising
-from greyish-ringed pale brown warts; a paler line along the middle of the
-back, and some white dots forming a broken line below the black outlined
-spiracles. Head pale chestnut brown, glossy. When newly hatched it is
-whitish, tinged with yellow and semi-transparent; the dots and hairs are
-dark grey. After the first moult the colour is greyish with black dots and
-blackish hairs. Head yellowish, brown tinged. It feeds in July, sometimes
-earlier, and August, and seems to thrive on the foliage of many kinds of
-low-growing plants, such as dandelion, dock, plantain, chickweed, etc., and
-also eats the leaves of birch and rose. Chrysalis, very dark brown, almost
-black, glossy, but minutely pitted, giving a roughened appearance; enclosed
-in a close fitting cocoon composed of silk and the caterpillar's hairs,
-with particles of earth on the outside (Plate 79). The moth flies at night,
-and except that a female may occasionally be seen on the wing, this species
-is rarely observed in the daytime. May and June are the usual months for
-this moth, but in 1906 a specimen was attracted to light on November 3.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 78.
- 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7. MUSLIN MOTH _varieties_.
- 5. WHITE ERMINE, _var. walkeri_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 79.
- MUSLIN MOTH.
- _Eggs, natural size and enlarged; caterpillar, chrysalis and cocoon._
-
-{155} Widely distributed, and often common in most English counties, in
-parts of Wales, and in Scotland as far north at least as Ross. In Ireland
-one male specimen of the typical form has been obtained in Co. Galway, and
-one in Co. Clare; var. _rustica_ occurs in Co. Dublin, and Kings Co.,
-Waterford, Cork, Kerry, and Galway.
-
-THE RUBY TIGER (_Phragmatobia fuliginosa_).
-
-The English name given to this moth only suitably applies to the southern
-reddish form of the species (Plate 80, Fig. 1 [male]). In the north of
-England the fore wings are darkened with brownish and the hind wings with
-blackish tints, until in Scotland the only trace of red colour is found on
-the inner edge of the hind wings (var. _borealis_, Staudinger, Fig. 2
-[female]). In these dark specimens the body is also blackish. Very
-occasionally, specimens approaching the northern form are obtained in South
-England. A female moth captured by Mr. G. E. J. Crallan in May, 1901, at
-Bournemouth, laid forty-eight eggs; thirty imagines were bred the same
-year, two of which were _borealis_. On the south and south-west coasts the
-black band of the hind wings exhibit a tendency to break up into spots; not
-infrequently this is completely effected, and the specimens then approach
-the larger South European form var. _fervida_, Staud. In a fine series of
-this species from Cornwall, lately seen in Mr. A. Harrison's collection,
-are a few specimens that come very close to the last-named form. A yellow
-aberration has been recorded. The eggs are whitish and deposited in batches
-on leaves. Up to the last moult the caterpillar is greyish or brownish,
-with dark greyish or blackish {156} warts from which arise star-like tufts
-of brown hairs; a reddish line along the middle of the back, and some
-reddish spots on the sides. When full grown it is black, and the reddish
-line on the back is almost hidden by closer and more compact tufts of black
-hairs. Head black and glossy.
-
-The leaves of various low-growing plants afford it nourishment, but it is
-very partial to dock, dandelion, golden-rod (_Solidago_), and plantain; it
-is also fond of groundsel and lettuce in confinement, but these plants have
-been found unsuitable if given too frequently. In the open it seems to feed
-through the summer, hibernate when full grown, reappear in the early
-spring, and in due course spin its brownish cocoon among herbage generally
-low down near the ground; on moors it often makes the cocoon among the
-twigs of heather as shown on Plate 81. The chrysalis is black, marked with
-yellowish on the hind edge of each ring. The vitality of the caterpillar is
-extraordinary. One known to have been embedded in ice for fourteen days at
-least, became active in less than half an hour after the ice around it
-melted. It pupated shortly afterwards.
-
-When eggs are obtained early, it is possible to have three generations of
-the moth during the same year. Thus eggs deposited on May 8 produced
-caterpillars which fed up quickly and attained the moth state in July. From
-July eggs some of the caterpillars will outstrip their companions, pupate
-in September, and appear as moths about a month later. The moth is to be
-found in May and June, sometimes in July or August, in wood clearings, on
-moors and rough hillsides, and also in water meadows, etc. It flies at
-night, is attracted by light, and although it occasionally flies in the
-sunshine, it is, as a rule, not often seen in the daytime. Occurs
-throughout the British Isles to the Orkneys. Distribution: Europe, Western
-and Central Asia, Amurland, Japan, North-west Africa, North America.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 80.
- 1, 2. RUBY TIGER MOTH.
- 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. WOOD TIGER MOTH.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 81.
- 1, 1a. WOOD TIGER: _eggs and caterpillars_.
- 2, 2a. RUBY TIGER: _caterpillar and cocoon_.
-
-{157}
-
-THE WOOD TIGER (_Parasemia plantaginis_).
-
-On Plate 80 are shown some of the forms of this attractive and somewhat
-variable species. Figs. 3, 4, are male and female of the typical form found
-in England. The most usual phase of variation is in the narrowing or
-widening of the pale yellowish markings of the fore wings, and the black
-markings on the hind wings; occasionally the yellow or the black increases
-to such an extent that the fore wings appear to be almost entirely of the
-one colour or the other. The hind wings range in colour from the normal
-yellow through orange to red, and through pale shades of yellow to white;
-on the other hand they are sometimes almost entirely black. The var.
-_hospita_, Schiff. (Fig. 7), has all the wings white, and although it has
-been reported from Shropshire, West Durham, the Lake District, etc., it has
-been chiefly obtained in the Hebrides and in the highlands of Scotland.
-Only males of this form are known; the females found with them have heavy
-black markings on the hind wings, almost crowding out the reddish ground
-colour. The creamy markings of the fore wings are narrow, and the central
-spot small.
-
-The full-grown caterpillar is blackish above with greyish-black warts from
-which arise tufts of blackish hairs, except on rings four to six, where the
-hairs and the warts at the base of each tuft are reddish; the black hairs
-of the hinder tufts are the longest (Plate 81).
-
-Twelve eggs laid by a female in Aberdeenshire were received on June 29,
-1906. They were shining yellowish in colour, and were on a leaf of
-plantain. The caterpillars resulting from these eggs were reared on a mixed
-diet of forget-me-not (_Myosotis_), plantain, and groundsel, but evinced a
-decided preference for the former. Some died young in moulting, but at the
-beginning of August five were full grown, and four duly pupated in a slight
-but roomy cocoon of silk, mixed with the caterpillar's hairs, {158} in
-which the blackish brown chrysalis with the cast-off skin attached to the
-tail was plainly visible. Four moths, all female, emerged at the end of
-August, when the other caterpillar was still feeding, and seemingly about
-mature. That caterpillar did not, however, pupate, or survive the winter.
-As a rule the caterpillars hibernate when about half grown, and feed up in
-April and May of the following year. The somewhat unusual rate at which
-those just mentioned completed their growth was no doubt due to the heat of
-the summer of 1906.
-
-The moth is to be found on heaths, moors, the slopes of chalk, and
-limestone hills; also in woods that are not too thickly timbered and have a
-good undergrowth of heather, etc. The males may sometimes be seen flying in
-the sunshine, and they will then be noted to wing their way to some
-particular spot where most likely a freshly emerged female will be the
-attraction. The male is often started up from the heather or other herbage
-as one walks along; or it may even rise from the bare ground upon which it
-sometimes has a fancy to sit. The female seems to be more sluggish during
-the daytime.
-
-The species is widely distributed over the British Isles, and its range
-extends through Central and Northern Europe, and Northern Asia to Japan.
-
-THE CLOUDED BUFF (_Diacrisia sanio_).
-
-Fore wings of the male yellow, with a reddish and greyish central mark;
-hind wings whitish, with blackish central spot and outer band; the inner
-margin, fringes, and front edge light crimson. The female has orange fore
-wings with reddish margins, veins, and central mark; hind wings orange,
-with black basal area, central spot, and outer band (Plate 82).
-
-The female of this species is so different in appearance from the male that
-it was described by Linnaeus as distinct, under the name _russula_. In the
-tenth edition of "Systema Naturae" it is {159} No. 510, whereas _sanio_,
-the male, is No. 506. We must, therefore, in accordance with the law of
-priority, adopt the earliest name for the species, however much we regret
-having to discard the old familiar name of _russula_.
-
-Although the central spot of the fore wings is subject to minor
-modification in size, shape, and colour, it is in the hind wings that
-variation chiefly occurs. In the male the blackish grey band on the outer
-area of the hind wing may be broad and complete, or it may be broken up by
-the veins into a series of bars; then, again, the bars tend to become
-smaller and smaller until only tiny portions remain. Usually, the basal
-third of the hind wings is more or less greyish, but sometimes the whole
-surface almost, or quite up to the outer band, is clouded with dark grey.
-The black markings of the female hind wings are apt to vary in a very
-similar way.
-
-The caterpillar is reddish brown, covered with brown hairs; a yellow-marked
-whitish stripe along the back, and two darkish stripes on the sides; a
-white spot below each black margined spiracle. It hatches from the egg in
-July, and as a rule hibernates when still small, completing growth in April
-and May. It feeds on the leaves of many low plants, among which are
-dandelion, dock, chickweed, and plantain. The chrysalis is brown, streaked
-with greyish, and is enclosed in a flimsy cocoon among herbage, generally
-on the ground.
-
-The moth, which inhabits heaths and mosses, is on the wing in June and
-early July; the male may be put up on sunny days, but the female is not
-often seen until early evening. After dark both sexes may be found on the
-heather.
-
-It should be noted here that there are usually two broods of this species
-abroad, and that in confinement it will develop a more or less complete
-second brood in September with us. An instance is recorded of sixty-three
-out of sixty-six caterpillars from eggs laid in early July, feeding up and
-producing moths in the last week of September. The caterpillar is not an
-easy one {160} to deal with during hibernation, so that it would always be
-to the advantage of the rearer to get it through to the perfect state the
-same year, whenever possible.
-
-The species is widely distributed over the south and east of England, and
-South Wales. It occurs in Cheshire in all suitable places; in Lancashire it
-is common on the moorlands, as at Witherslack and Methop, and it is not
-uncommon near Quernmore, Clougha, and other places, in July. Local and
-somewhat scarce as a rule in Yorkshire, but recorded as not uncommon in the
-Scarborough district. In Scotland it is found in Roxburghshire, and
-northwards to Aberdeen; and, according to Kane, it is widely spread,
-although local, in Ireland.
-
-THE GARDEN TIGER (_Arctia caia_).
-
-How frequently the collector has had introduced to his notice, by some
-non-entomological friend, or worthy cottage dame, a "fine butterfly," only
-to find that the supposed prize, usually imprisoned under an inverted
-tumbler, was just an ordinary specimen of the gaudy, but common, Garden
-Tiger. Few persons living in the country, and at all interested in the
-natural objects around them, will fail to recognize the portraits on Plate
-82; other figures, however, on Plate 84 will appear strange, and yet they
-only portray some of the many forms which the moths assume. Possibly it
-would be true to say that no two specimens could be found that were exactly
-identical in tint and marking. Even the markings of any one example are
-frequently not precisely alike on corresponding wings. Normally the fore
-wings are white or creamy-white with dark brown markings, and the hind
-wings are red with deep blue centred black spots, often ringed with yellow.
-The dark markings of the fore wings are most inconstant in size and in
-form; in some cases they are so greatly enlarged that these wings might be
-described as dark brown with narrow, irregular whitish markings (Plate 84,
-Fig. 1). On the other hand, but less frequently perhaps, the dark markings
-are narrowed, shortened, and reduced in number, until only spots remain on
-a white or creamy ground (Plate 84, Fig. 2). The red colour of the hind
-wings is sometimes crimson in tone, or it assumes an orange tint, and less
-often it gives place to yellow; the central spots often unite and form a
-band, or some, occasionally all, disappear; the marginal spots sometimes
-run into a band.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 82.
- CLOUDED BUFF MOTH, 1 _male_; 2 _female_.
- GARDEN TIGER MOTH, 3 _male_; 4 _female_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 83.
- CLOUDED BUFF MOTH.
- _Eggs natural size and enlarged; caterpillar._
-
-{161} Besides aberration, such as that referred to above, curious abnormal
-specimens occur in the breeding cage from time to time, but these are often
-more or less deformed. It is, perhaps, remarkable, that so few "good
-things" in the way of varieties are obtained from collected caterpillars,
-even when these are reared by hundreds. Possibly, if the breeder started
-operations with a stock of eggs from unusually pale or unusually dark
-females, and then reserving only the lightest or the darkest, as required,
-of each generation to continue the experiment, some interesting light or
-dark "strains" might result in course of time. The objection to this is
-that before the desired result was obtained the stock might be weakened by
-"inbreeding," and the moths consequently deformed. If, however, the same
-line of experiment were conducted by several people, each living in a
-different part of the country, and with stock selected from the products of
-his own locality, eggs, caterpillars, or chrysalids might be exchanged,
-say, after the second year, and in this way the effect of "inbreeding"
-would be minimized.
-
-The caterpillar, generally known as the "Woolly Bear," is not at all an
-uncommon object throughout the country, and is, perhaps, even more often
-noticed in gardens, including those of suburban London. The figures of the
-early stages of this moth, on Plate 85, are all from material obtained in
-my own small garden. {162}
-
-The foliage of pretty well all low plants, and tall ones, such as the
-hollyhock and sunflower, too, seem to be equally acceptable to this larva.
-It is not often seen before hibernation, but in the early days of spring it
-will be noticed sunning itself on walls and fences that have a good crop of
-nettles, dock, or other weeds at their base or around them; or it may be
-searched for on the undersides of dock, etc. Mr. Frohawk records these
-caterpillars as swarming from mid-May to mid-June, 1904, in the Scilly
-Isles. He states that they occurred in such myriads that no vegetation
-escaped them, and that they devoured anything from stonecrop to the foliage
-of shrubs of various kinds. Every path and roadway was dotted all over with
-their crushed bodies.
-
-In the open the moth is on the wing in July and sometimes in August. When
-kept indoors the caterpillars, or at least some of them, will feed up
-quickly and attain the moth state in September or October.
-
-The species is distributed over the whole of Europe, except Andalusia,
-Sicily, and the southern part of the Balkan Peninsula, and its range
-extends through Asia to Amurland, Corea, and Japan.
-
-THE CREAM-SPOT TIGER (_Arctia villica_).
-
-Although this moth does not vary to the same extent as its cousin the
-Garden Tiger, it is still subject to considerable aberration in the size,
-number, and position of the yellowish-white, or cream-coloured spots on the
-fore wings and of the black spots and hind marginal markings of the hind
-wings. The former are often much reduced in size, rarely perhaps so greatly
-as to leave the fore wings almost entirely black; but they are sometimes so
-greatly enlarged and united that these wings appear to be cream coloured
-with black markings. On the hind wings the black spots nearest the base are
-sometimes widened and lengthened so as to meet and form a transverse band;
-in other specimens the black markings on the outer area are run together
-into a patch. Occasionally both forms of hind wing aberration occur in the
-same specimen. I am not aware of any case in which the hind wings are
-spotless, but I have seen specimens in which this condition was very
-closely approached. Very rarely the hind wings are suffused with black, and
-at least two specimens with all the wings suffused with black have been
-recorded. (Plate 87, Figs. 1-3.)
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 84.
- GARDEN TIGER _varieties_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 85.
- GARDEN TIGER MOTH.
- _Eggs, natural size and enlarged; caterpillars and chrysalis._
-
-{163}
-
-The pearly white eggs are laid in neatly arranged batches on leaves. The
-caterpillars hatch out in July, feed for a few weeks, and go into
-hibernation while still small. They resume feeding in a favourable season
-as early as mid-March. Some that I obtained at the end of March, then about
-three parts grown, began to spin up on April 15. The full-grown caterpillar
-is black with several star-like clusters of brown hairs on each ring, the
-hairs on the back of the hinder rings rather longer and slightly curved
-backwards; the head, legs, and claspers are red, approaching crimson. A
-diet of dandelion suits it very well, but it will also eat chickweed, dock,
-nettle, groundsel, and in fact almost any low-growing plant. The outer
-leaves of lettuce are useful on occasion but should not be given
-exclusively, and it also likes the tender shoots of gorse (_Ulex
-europaeus_). Chrysalis and cocoon somewhat similar to those of the last
-species (Plate 86).
-
-The moth emerges in May and June. Occasionally a few larvae will feed up
-and the moths appear the same year, but this only happens in captivity and
-not in the open. When reposing in the daytime, on a hedgebank for example,
-with the fore wings closed down over and hiding the yellow hind wings this
-moth is not so conspicuous as one might suppose it would be. At night it is
-active on the wing and often flies into houses, attracted by the light. I
-have put up specimens now and then {164} in hay fields, and once found half
-a dozen along a short stretch of the Upper cliff at Ventnor, Isle of Wight.
-
-It is perhaps most frequent in the south-west, but the species seems to be
-widely distributed and fairly common from Kent to Cornwall, and westward
-from Hampshire to Gloucestershire. It also occurs in the eastern counties
-to Cambridge and Norfolk. From Cheshire it has been twice reported, and two
-specimens are said to have been taken, a few years ago, in the Lancaster
-district.
-
-THE JERSEY TIGER (_Callimorpha quadripunctaria_).
-
-This handsome species long known as _C. hera_, Linn., but for which Poda's
-earlier name _quadripunctaria_ must be adopted, has its English home in
-South Devonshire. The species had been recorded as British as far back as
-1855, when one moth was taken at Newhaven in Sussex; in 1859 a specimen was
-obtained in North Wales, two were taken in Sussex, 1868, and one was
-captured in the Isle of Wight in 1877. The last-mentioned example was
-kindly presented to me by the captor, Mr. Rowland Brown. For the county of
-Devon, the earliest record is that of a specimen netted in a garden at
-Alphington, near Exeter, in 1871, followed soon after by a report of others
-at a place near Lodderwell. Ten or eleven years later the moth was found at
-Dawlish, and in that neighbourhood and in other parts of a wide area
-stretching from Exeter to Teignmouth, and perhaps further west, it has been
-taken almost every year up to the present time (1907). Large numbers of
-eggs have been obtained and distributed among entomologists, many of whom
-have successfully wintered the caterpillars and eventually reared the
-moths.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 86.
- CREAM-SPOT TIGER MOTH.
- _Caterpillars, chrysalis and cocoon._
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 87.
- 1, 2. CREAM-SPOT TIGER MOTH, _males_; 3 _female_.
-
-{165} The principal variation is in the colour of the hind wings and the
-body, which usually are red, but in var. _lutescens_, Staud., are yellow;
-between the red and the yellow forms there are all kinds of orange and
-other intergrades. There is also variation in the black markings at the
-inner angle of the fore wings, some or all of which are sometimes absent. A
-specimen with the inner margin of the fore wings black instead of
-creamy-white has been recorded, and a specimen with whitish hind wings is
-stated to have been seen but not secured. The moth is shown on Plate 89,
-and the early stages on Plate 88.
-
-The eggs, which are laid in batches, are pale yellowish when deposited, but
-assume a deep violet tint before hatching. Mr. W. Hewett (_Entom._ xxviii.)
-states that in the case of seventeen female moths that he captured in
-August, 1895, the average number of eggs laid by each was 133, and as
-regards fourteen batches of eggs, the caterpillars hatched out in fifteen
-or sixteen days.
-
-When nearly full grown the caterpillar is blackish with an orange stripe
-along the back and a series of creamy white spots on the sides; the hairs,
-arising from shining light brown warts, are pale brown mixed with greyish
-ones; spiracles black ringed with white, under surface greyish. Head black
-and glossy. It hatches from the egg in the autumn and goes into hibernation
-while still very small; reappearing in the spring and feeding on until
-July, when it spins a flimsy silken web-like cocoon well down among moss
-and litter. The food plants are dandelion, white deadnettle (_Lamium
-album_), ground ivy (_Nepeta glechoma_), groundsel, plantain, nettle,
-borage (_Borago officinalis_), and lettuce.
-
-The moth emerges in July and August in a state of nature, but often as
-early as June in confinement. It sits by day among the herbage, and in the
-bushes of hedgerows, but readily quits its retreat when disturbed. The
-normal time of flight is at night; and that light has an attraction for the
-moths is evident from the fact that they have been known to fly into
-cottages at the rate of three or four in an evening.
-
-The species is distributed throughout Southern Europe, its {166} range
-extending to Holland, Belgium, and Livonia. It was known as an inhabitant
-of the Channel Islands long before it became established in England.
-
-THE SCARLET TIGER (_Callimorpha dominula_).
-
-Except in minor details this tropical-looking moth (Plate 89) seems little
-given to variation in England. In parts of Central and Southern Europe, and
-Asia Minor, striking forms occur, and some of these are very occasionally
-found with us. Among such rare aberrations in this country are var.
-_rossica_, Kol., with yellow hind wings; and var. _bithynica_, Staud., with
-the spots on the fore wings yellow, and the hind wings of the normal
-crimson colour. A South European form, var. _persona_, Hubn., has the hind
-wings and body black, with some yellow marks on the basal area; spots on
-the fore wings smaller than in the type. Specimens approaching this form
-have been reported from Kent, which county is also noted for "black
-_dominula_." In the latter variety the hind wings, body, and spots on fore
-wings are blackish; it is exceedingly rare. A specimen taken at St.
-Margaret's Bay, Kent, some years back has the spots on the fore wings
-blurred, due to a cloudy suffusion filling up the space between them; the
-spots on the hind wings are pale.
-
-Caterpillar, black, hairy, with bands of more or less connected spots,
-yellow or yellowish in colour, down the middle of the back, and along the
-sides; the hairs, arising from shining black warts, are grey with some
-black ones intermixed. Head, glossy black. It hatches from the egg in July
-or August, feeds for awhile, then hibernates, and completes its growth in
-April or May. A number of plants have been mentioned as suitable food for
-these caterpillars, but the favourites are, perhaps, nettle, groundsel,
-hound's-tongue (_Cynoglossum officinale_), bramble, sloe, and sallow (Plate
-88).
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 88.
- 1, 1a. JERSEY TIGER: _caterpillars and chrysalis_.
- 2, 2a, 2b. SCARLET TIGER: _eggs, caterpillar, chrysallis and cocoon_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 89.
- 1, 2. SCARLET TIGER MOTH.
- 3, 4. JERSEY TIGER MOTH.
-
-{167}
-
-The chrysalis is dark reddish, rather blacker above; enclosed in a silken
-cocoon spun up among leaves, etc., on the ground.
-
-The moth emerges in June, and seems partial to marshy ground. It is found
-in the district between Dover and Deal commonly, and in other parts of Kent
-more rarely. Also in Hampshire, Devon, Dorset, South Wales,
-Gloucestershire, Wiltshire, Berkshire (water meadows by the Kennet), and
-Hertfordshire (rare). Some years ago I found a few specimens in the Brandon
-district, but it is not plentiful in Suffolk, and is rare in or absent from
-Norfolk. It is found in Cambridgeshire, chiefly in Wicken fen.
-
-NOTE.--Although _Callimorpha_ is here left in its old position among
-Arctiidae, the genus has been referred by Hampson to Hypsidae, a family of
-moths belonging to the African, Oriental, and Australian regions. Our two
-species are the sole representatives of the family in Europe.
-
-THE FEATHERED FOOTMAN (_Coscinia striata_).
-
-Altogether there do not appear to have been more than six or seven
-specimens of this species (Plate 90) recorded as British. Stephens mentions
-three of these, two males taken in the autumn of 1815, near Windsor; and
-one specimen, without date, in the Isle of Anglesea. Of the others one
-appears to have been taken in Yorkshire (1832), one in Essex, and another
-in North Wales (1859). Barrett also refers to a specimen, which was
-captured but afterwards escaped, near Bettws-y-Coed, North Wales, June,
-1859, and gives some circumstantial details of the event. It appears,
-therefore, that of the very limited number of British _striata_ North Wales
-has furnished almost half. The species is widely distributed in Europe,
-except the most northern part; the range extending into Asia Minor, Syria,
-Armenia, and Amurland. Abroad, it occurs on heaths, and in warm dry places.
-The caterpillar is blackish-brown, {168} marked with orange on the back,
-and white on the sides; the warts are yellowish, and the hairs arising
-therefrom are reddish brown; the head is black. It feeds in spring, after
-hibernation, on grasses, heather, and low herbage, and becomes full grown
-in May.
-
-THE SPECKLED FOOTMAN (_Coscinia cribrum_).
-
-The fore wings are whitish, crossed by three rows of blackish grey dots,
-more or less connected, forming lines; and two streaks of the same colour
-through the length of the wings, but not always extending to the outer
-margin; a cross series of wedge-shaped marks or dots on the outer area;
-hind wings grey. Sometimes the fore wings are wholly suffused with the
-darker colour, and between such specimens and less frequent examples in
-which the wings are almost devoid of marking, there are many gradations
-(Plate 90, Figs. 1 [male], 2 [female]; 4, 5, 6 vars.).
-
-Eggs received from the New Forest, June 25, 1907, were laid around a
-slender, bare, twig of heather, the batch measuring about three-quarters of
-an inch in length. At first they were golden yellow, but afterwards became
-pale purplish brown and very glossy (Plate 91).
-
-Although the eggs appear to be more frequently laid on heather than on
-anything else, the caterpillars do not seem to be very partial to the plant
-as an article of food if others are available. At the present time (October
-13) I have about a score or so of young larvae feeding, and apparently
-thriving, on dandelion, lettuce, and grass, but they certainly seem to
-prefer the first named. They are now rather over half an inch in length,
-and yellowish brown in colour; there is a whitish grey stripe along the
-back; the warts are shining black, and the hairs arising from them are
-black, mixed with a few longer white ones; head blackish.
-
-Caterpillars after hibernation have been found on the grass, {169} _Aira
-caespitosa_, during March from about the 10th onwards; they are then about
-a quarter of an inch long, and according to the late Mr. Fowler, always
-found on the sunny side of the clumps of _Aira_ stretched out, and
-evidently enjoying the warmth of the sun. Some collected in that month were
-reared on groundsel, and produced moths from July 12 to August 20. The
-chrysalis is at first reddish, afterwards shining jet black; in a slight
-egg-shaped white silken cocoon, spun up in tufts of grass.
-
-In exceptional seasons the moth has emerged in late May, but June and July
-are the usual months, and it may occur as late as August. It rests among
-the heather, is easily disturbed on sunny days, and is very active on the
-wing, although it does not fly far before settling again. The species is
-very local in England, and only found on a heath near Bournemouth, in a
-heathy district between Ringwood and Verwood in Dorset, and in a not
-generally known part of the New Forest.
-
-THE CRIMSON SPECKLED (_Deiopeia pulchella_).
-
-This white moth, prettily speckled with black and red dots, is a native of
-warmer countries than ours. However, it not only visits us now and then in
-the course of its wanderings, but if the migrants arrive in England at a
-suitable time of the year, the females most probably deposit eggs from
-which caterpillars may hatch, and some of them feed up and produce moths
-later in the same year. Stephens, writing in 1829, mentions a specimen
-taken many years previously in Yorkshire. This was no doubt the earliest
-known British example of Haworth's Crimson Speckled. A second specimen
-captured in a field near Christchurch, Hants, in October, 1818, was figured
-by Samouelle in 1819. Between the year last mentioned and 1827, two other
-specimens occurred, both at Hove, Sussex. Stainton (1857) adds Epping,
-Manchester, Stowmarket, and Worthing. In 1869 {170} three specimens were
-taken in the autumn; and a specimen was found at Scarborough in June, 1870,
-and one in Sussex. In 1871 a record was established, when at least thirty
-specimens were obtained at various places on the east, south, and
-south-west coasts, and in the Isle of Wight; one specimen being also
-recorded from Manchester. Two specimens were taken in Cornwall, May, 1874,
-and in the autumn of that year three occurred on the south coast, and one
-in Derbyshire. The moth seems not to have been noticed in the springs of
-1875 or 1876, but twenty-four specimens were recorded later in the former
-year, and twenty-three in the latter. Between 1876 and 1892 less than
-twenty specimens were reported altogether, and the species was either
-entirely absent or overlooked in 1877, 1882, 1883, and from 1887 to 1891,
-inclusive. In 1892 several moths were captured in May and June on the
-coast; one at Brighton in July, two in the Hastings' district, and one at
-Folkestone in August. Since 1892 and up to 1907, a period of fifteen years,
-the species seems to have been rarely noted in England; the records showing
-in 1894 (2), 1895 (1), 1906 (1). In 1901 three specimens were reported as
-captured, and one seen at Earlsfield, Surrey, July 1 to 15. (Plate 92,
-Figs. 3, 4.)
-
-The caterpillar is greyish with black warts from which arise tufts of
-hairs, blackish on the back and pale greyish on the sides; a white line on
-the back, and one on the sides. Each ring is often barred with orange. Head
-reddish-ochreous marked with black. Feeds on forget-me-not (_Myosotis_),
-borage (_Borago_), etc. The chrysalis is reddish brown, enclosed in a white
-silken cocoon spun up among the food plant, or on the surface of the
-ground; in the latter case particles of earth adhere to the outside.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 90.
- 1, 2, 4, 5, 6. SPECKLED FOOTMAN MOTH.
- 3. FEATHERED FOOTMAN MOTH.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 91.
- SPECKLED FOOTMAN: _eggs and caterpillar_.
-
-{171} The caterpillar is said to feed only in the sunshine, so that in our
-islands the weather conditions would often be most unfavourable to the
-species in the larval state. On the other hand its sun-loving habit would
-expose it to the attacks of parasitical flies and other enemies. Anyway,
-the Crimson Speckled seems quite unable to increase and multiply to any
-extent even for a season in any part of England. Along the African and
-European borders of the Mediterranean there are evidently several
-generations of the moth in each year; the life cycle of the summer broods
-being short, but more protracted in the later brood. Brownlow states that
-eggs laid on October 20, hatched on the 22nd of the same month, and the
-caterpillar stage lasted until February of the following year.
-Distribution: Southern Europe, Africa, Canaries, Madeira; Asia Minor,
-Armenia, Central Asia; India, and Australia.
-
-Meyrick and others refer this species to _Utetheisa_, Hubn.
-
-THE CINNABAR (_Hipocrita jacobaeae_).
-
-This species was named the Cinnabar by Wilkes in 1773, such name of course
-referring to the more or less vermillion colour of the hind wings and the
-markings on the greyish black fore wings. The hind wings are often pinkish
-in tint, and probably it was to such specimens that Moses Harris gave the
-name "Pink Underwing." Very rarely the stripe on the front edge of the fore
-wings unites with the upper hind marginal spot; still less frequently there
-are some crimson scales in addition connecting the two hind marginal spots.
-Occasionally specimens have been recorded in which the usual red colour is
-replaced by bright yellow. The moth is shown on Plate 92, Figs. 1, 2, and
-the early stages on Plate 93, Fig. 1.
-
-The caterpillar is orange yellow and each ring is banded with purplish
-black; the scanty hairs are short and blackish in colour. Head black. Feeds
-in July and August on ragwort (_Senecio jacobaea_) and sometimes occurs in
-such numbers as to completely clear large patches of the plant of every
-particle of green, leaving nothing but the tougher portions of the bare
-stems. {172}
-
-The chrysalis is dark-brown tinged with reddish; in a slight silken cocoon
-just under the surface of the ground, or among any loose material on the
-ground.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 24.
-
-CINNABAR CATERPILLARS FEEDING.
-
-(Photo by W. J. Lucas.)]
-
-The moth is on the wing at the end of May and in June; odd specimens have
-occasionally been seen in April. It occurs on waste ground, sandy heaths,
-railway banks, downs, and hill-sides. Although fairly common generally, in
-some years it is not at all plentiful even when caterpillars may have
-abounded the previous season. When disturbed from among its food plant or
-herbage around, it is not very active on the wing, and is easily captured.
-Its usual time of flight is in the evening. Light seems to have an
-attraction for it, as it has been taken at gas lamps in towns, some
-distance from any place where the caterpillar could have fed.
-
-Occurs in all suitable places throughout the greater part of England and in
-Scotland up to Moray. Common in Ireland. Its range abroad includes all
-Europe, except the extreme north and extends into Asia.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 92.
- 1. CINNABAR MOTH, _male_; 2 _female_.
- 3. CRIMSON SPECKLED FOOTMAN, _male_; 4 _female_.
- 5. RED-NECKED FOOTMAN, _male_; 6 _female_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 93.
- 1, 1a. CINNABAR: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
- 2, 2a. REDNECKED FOOTMAN: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
-
-{173}
-
-FOOTMAN MOTHS (_Lithosiinae_).
-
-The members of this sub-family of Arctiidae occurring in the British Isles
-are not numerous; we can only muster some fifteen species, and although a
-few are not uncommon, several are exceedingly local.
-
-The moths of the genus _Lithosia_, when resting, fold their drab or
-buff-coloured wings down closely along the body, and they then have a very
-elongate and stiff appearance which probably gave rise to their English
-name "Footmen." Most of them are very inactive, or even torpid during the
-daytime. They repose on the branches and leaves of trees and bushes, or
-among heather and other low herbage, and often fall to the ground when
-disturbed. At dusk they become active and then fly pretty briskly.
-
-The caterpillars are very hairy, the hairs arising in tufts from warts
-(tubercles) are usually short, but in some species are of moderate length.
-The majority hatch from the egg in the late summer, and do not complete
-their growth until the following year, about May or June. Some of them are
-known to be more or less active through the winter. In a state of nature
-most of the caterpillars feed on lichens growing on trees, bushes, rocks,
-or on the ground, but many kinds in confinement will thrive on a diet of
-lettuce or even withered leaves.
-
-In all cases the chrysalids are enclosed in silken cocoons, and these are
-spun up among the lichens, in crevices of bark, or other suitable crannies.
-
-THE RED-NECKED FOOTMAN (_Atolmis rubricollis_).
-
-When newly emerged from the chrysalis this moth is black on all the wings,
-but it soon loses its early velvety sheen and {174} becomes sooty in
-appearance; the last rings are orange, but all the rest of the body is
-black; the thorax also is black, but the part nearest the head, termed the
-collar, is red, hence the common English name Red-neck moth given to it by
-Harris (1778). Haworth called it the "Black Footman."
-
-The caterpillar is greyish, more or less freckled with ochreous; three
-lines along the back, the central one whitish, the others black and
-interrupted; the hairs arising from reddish warts are brown or greyish
-brown. Head black. It feeds from July to October on lichens, chiefly those
-growing on fir and oak, but also on beech, and on old palings. Chrysalis,
-glossy dark red-brown in a tight-fitting cocoon of silk mixed with the
-hairs of the caterpillar; spun up among the lichen. The moth is shown on
-Plate 92, Figs. 5, 6, and the caterpillar and chrysalis on Plate 93.
-
-The moth is on the wing in June and July; in forward seasons as early as
-the end of May. On a sunny afternoon it may be seen careering around trees,
-generally pretty high up. When resting the moths sit about on the trees or
-on the herbage under them. In some years it occurs in large numbers, but it
-is not usually very abundant, and sometimes even in its best localities
-only a few specimens will be seen during the season. It frequents woods,
-especially the larger ones, throughout the southern half of England up to
-Norfolk on the east, and Hereford on the west. In the northern counties it
-is rare, and is not common in Scotland or Ireland.
-
-Abroad, its range is through Central and Northern Europe, except the
-extreme north, to Dalmatia, Altai, and Amurland.
-
-THE MUSLIN (_Nudaria mundana_).
-
-This delicate little moth has the semi-transparent fore wings pale greyish,
-faintly tinged with brown; crossed by irregular brownish lines; the hind
-wings are paler, shaded with a darker tint on the outer margins.
-Occasionally all the wings have a smoky tinge. The moth is shown on Plate
-95, Figs. 3, 6, and the caterpillar and chrysalis on Plate 94, Fig. 2.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 94.
- 1. CRIMSON SPECKLED FOOTMAN: _caterpillar_.
- 2, 2a. MUSLIN MOTH: _caterpillar and chrysalis in cocoon_.
- 3, 3a. FOUR-SPOTTED FOOTMAN: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 95.
- 1. ROUND-WINGED MUSLIN MOTH, _male_; 4 _female_.
- 2, 5. ROSY FOOTMAN.
- 3. MUSLIN FOOTMAN, _male_; 6 _female_.
- 7. DEW MOTH, _male_; 9 _female_.
- 8. FOUR-DOTTED FOOTMAN, _male_; 10 _female_.
- 11. FOUR-SPOTTED FOOTMAN, _male_; 12 _female_.
-
-{175} The caterpillar is greyish, with a broad whitish or yellowish stripe
-along the back, divided down the centre and edged by blackish lines; a
-velvety black mark on ring seven; raised warts and hairs dark greyish. Head
-black, shining; face yellowish. It may be found in April and May, after
-hibernation, on rocks, stone walls, especially those formed of loose
-cobbles or shale, trees, bushes, and even gate posts. I have beaten them
-from an old hawthorn hedge bordering a damp meadow in Middlesex, and
-collected them in numbers from the hollows of field boundary walls in North
-Devon. They feed on the tiny lichen that grows in such places as those
-indicated. The green, or yellowish-green chrysalis, is enclosed in a rather
-loose muslin-like silken cocoon, and is not difficult to obtain, especially
-from walls. It appears to be pretty generally distributed throughout
-England and Wales, except perhaps the midland and eastern counties; it
-occurs in the east and west of Scotland. In Ireland it is common, and often
-abundant, locally.
-
-Distribution: Northern and Central Europe.
-
-THE ROUND-WINGED MUSLIN (_Comacla senex_).
-
-As indicated by the English name given to it by Haworth, the wings of this
-moth are rounder in outline than those of the Muslin, also named by
-Haworth. In general colour it agrees with that species, but it differs in
-having a larger central dot, and the cross lines are represented by
-blackish dots which, however, are not always well defined (Plate 95, Figs.
-1, 4).
-
-The caterpillar, as described by Buckler, is deep reddish-grey, thickly
-covered with hairs which are of two kinds; the majority are pale brown with
-black points and slightly feathered, others are longer, black, and densely
-feathered with soft pale-brown {176} plumage. Head black and shining. It
-feeds in August and, after hibernation, in May on lichens and mosses
-growing on the ground in marshes and fens. It is known to eat _Peltigera
-canina_, and the mosses _Hypnum sericeum_, and _Weissia serrata_. Although
-occurring, in July and August, in marshy places in several parts of
-Southern England and Wales, it is especially common in fen land. In such
-localities as Wicken, for example, it flies at early dusk in hundreds all
-over the fen on favourable nights, but if there happens to be a breeze the
-moths will not leave their retreat among the herbage. Later on in the
-night, if on the wing, they readily assemble around a brightly burning
-lamp, and are satisfied to sit on the herbage illuminated by its rays. In
-Northern England it is known to be not uncommon in some districts of
-Yorkshire, and it probably occurs in other counties also. There appears to
-be only a single record each from Ireland and Scotland.
-
-THE ROSY FOOTMAN (_Miltochrista miniata_).
-
-The fore wings of this pretty little moth are ochreous yellow tinged with
-pink; the front and hind margins are bright pink, in some cases approaching
-vermillion; the markings are bluish black; hind wings rather paler. It
-varies in the amount of black markings, which are sometimes almost absent,
-and in colour ranges from yellow to orange. (Plate 95, Figs. 2, 5.)
-
-The caterpillar is dark drab covered above with blackish, mouse-coloured
-plumed hairs; on rings one and eleven the plumose hairs are replaced by
-short simple ones; the hairs of the side tufts are plain. Head brown, the
-cheeks outlined in black (adapted from Hellins). Lichens growing upon the
-stems and branches of trees supply this caterpillar with food, and it seems
-to nibble on all favourable opportunities throughout the winter. It hatches
-from the egg in August, and is full grown in May. Boden, writing in
-September, 1896 (_The Entomologist_) noted that some caterpillars had then
-attained the perfect state, while others were still feeding, and he adds
-that the caterpillars actually attacked and ate up the moths. Although
-there seems to be few records from the Midlands, this species appears to be
-widely distributed over England as far north as Yorkshire. In Ireland it
-has been recorded from Claring Bridge and East Galway. The moth is out in
-July. It is a wood-loving insect, but is also found on heaths, and even in
-lanes and the borders of fields when plenty of trees occur in such places.
-It may occasionally be beaten out of trees and bushes in the day time but
-it is on the wing at dusk, and although it is a high flier, specimens come
-within reach now and then. Light and sugar both attract it. The species
-ranges through Central and Northern Europe, and in Asia to Japan.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 96.
- 1, 1a, 1b. BUFF FOOTMAN: _caterpillar, chrysalis and cocoon_.
- 2. COMMON FOOTMAN: _caterpillar_.
- 3. SCARCE FOOTMAN: _caterpillar_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 97.
- 1. BUFF FOOTMAN, _male_; 2, 3 _females_.
- 4. DINGY FOOTMAN.
- 5. PALE FOOTMAN.
- 6. COMMON FOOTMAN.
- 7. SCARCE FOOTMAN.
- 8. NORTHERN FOOTMAN.
-
-{177}
-
-THE DEW MOTH (_Endrosa irrorella_).
-
-Varies in colour from yellowish buff to creamy white, the colour on the
-margins always deeper; the rows of black spots on the fore wings are
-usually well defined, but sometimes those of the two central series are
-very faint, or quite absent, whilst an unusual number appear in the outer
-marginal series, Occasionally black scales appear on the veins, connecting
-the spots, and forming the figures [sideways vee between horizontal bars]
-more or less distinctly; such forms are known as var. _signata_, Borkh. The
-moth appears in June and July. (Plate 95, Figs. 7, 9.)
-
-When resting, the moth hangs from a blade of grass, or leaf of some plant;
-it then has a very transparent appearance. Barrett suggests that this gave
-rise to the English name it now bears, and by which it was known to Haworth
-and entomologists of his time.
-
-Buckler and Hellins describe the caterpillar as blackish-brown above, and
-dark-reddish grey or purplish grey on the sides; a series of yellow spots
-along the middle of the back, then a white {178} and yellow interrupted
-line, followed by a light yellow stripe under the spiracles; raised spots
-blackish, some white; hairs blackish brown. Head black.
-
-It feeds, in the sunshine, on the black and yellow lichens growing in the
-haunts of the species, which are edges of cliffs and rough stony places
-near the sea, and also on hillsides. The species occurs, perhaps, more
-abundantly on the Kentish and Sussex coast than inland, but it is certainly
-not confined to the cliffs at Dover and Folkestone in Kent, or at Ventnor,
-Isle of Wight. Among inland localities for it are Box Hill, Ranmore,
-Reigate, and other places on the Surrey hills. It has also been recorded
-from the Cotswolds in Gloucestershire; the Isle of Man; St. Davids, South
-Wales; Aberdeenshire, Sutherlandshire, and the Tweed, Tay, Clyde, and
-Argyll districts in Scotland. For Ireland, Kane gives Mayo; "Ardrahan,
-County Galway, and west through the Burren of Clare, widely spread."
-
-THE FOUR-DOTTED FOOTMAN (_Cybosia mesomella_).
-
-Fore wings pale creamy white, the margins yellowish: a black dot near the
-costa, and another below near the inner margin; hind wings suffused with
-blackish grey. Rarely the fore wings are yellow with a whitish central
-shade, and the hind wings are yellowish. (Plate 95, Figs. 8, 10.)
-
-The caterpillar is velvety blackish grey; warts thickly set with densely
-feathered blackish hairs. Feeds in April and May, after hibernation, on
-lichens growing among heather. In confinement it will, according to
-Buckler, eat heather and fresh or withered leaves of sallow.
-
-Fairly well distributed over England. It appears to be absent from Ireland,
-but in Scotland it is known to occur in the Clyde, Solway, and Moray
-districts, and has been recorded from Aberdeenshire. In the South of
-England it affects heaths and the more open woods; sometimes not uncommon
-in {179} such places. The moth, in June, may be disturbed from bushes, or
-put up from the heather as one walks through. As the sun goes down it may
-often be seen on the wing, but later in the evening is its chief time of
-activity. In Lancashire and Cheshire it is found on the mosses, and Cannock
-Chase in Staffordshire is a noted locality for it. Still obtained in
-Chippenham fen, but Barrett states that it is now supposed to be extinct in
-the fens of Wicken, Yaxley, and Burwell, in all of which it used to abound.
-
-THE FOUR-SPOTTED FOOTMAN (_Oeonestis quadra_).
-
-The sexes of this species are very different in appearance. The fore wings
-of the male are grey tinged with yellowish, except on the outer fourth; the
-basal fourth is yellow. The female is larger and yellow in colour; each
-fore wing has two black spots, sometimes unusually large, sometimes mere
-dots, and more rarely absent altogether. (Plate 95, Figs. 11, 12.)
-
-Caterpillar blackish with four wavy yellow lines along the back, the spaces
-between the lines powdered and freckled with yellow giving a grey
-appearance; raised spots on the back red, those on the sides greyish; a
-black cross on rings three, seven, and eleven; hairs grey mixed with black.
-Head black and glossy. It feeds, after hibernation, in May and June, on
-lichens, preferring those upon oak trees. In the breeding cage it is apt to
-eat its companions, especially when many are crowded into a small
-receptacle. (Plate 94, Fig. 3.)
-
-The moth emerges in July, and during that month, and sometimes in August,
-it may be seen on tree trunks; but it more often reposes on the branches,
-from which it may be dislodged by jarring the boughs with a stick, when it
-drops rather than flies towards the ground, but generally manages to arrest
-its downward course by catching hold of a spray of bracken or some other
-plant and there awaits capture. Night is the usual {180} time of flight,
-but it is on the wing at dusk. It is partial to "sugar" and has been known
-to visit flowers.
-
-This species has been recorded from a large number of localities in England
-extending from the Scilly Isles to the Scottish border. From the
-circumstances connected with many of such captures one is led to suspect
-that the insect has migratory habits. In England the most favoured locality
-is the New Forest in Hampshire, where it abounds in some seasons, but is
-quite scarce in others. It occurs, more or less regularly, in the larger
-woods in Dorset, extending into Devon; also in Sussex ranging into Kent,
-but is only occasionally common in either of these counties. Generally
-considered to be uncommon in the eastern counties, but has been reported to
-occur in large numbers at Aldeburgh in Suffolk. The localities given in
-Kane's catalogue of the Lepidoptera of Ireland are Killarney, Timoleague,
-Co. Cork, Curraghmore (abundant), Lismore, Borris, Co. Carlow, and
-Clonbrock. To these may be added Dublin, and Nenagh, Co. Tipperary.
-
-Distribution: Central Europe, Southern Sweden, Livonia, Dalmatia, Armenia,
-Amurland, Corea, and Japan.
-
-THE BUFF FOOTMAN (_Lithosia deplana_).
-
-Fore wings, ochreous grey, tinged with yellow on the basal half of the
-front margins; hind wings paler, becoming greyer on the outer area; fringes
-of all the wings yellow. The male is fairly constant in colour, but the
-female sometimes has a distinct yellow stripe on the front margin of the
-fore wings extending to the fringes (var. _ochreola_, Hubn.); more rarely
-in the New Forest (?), and in the Isle of Purbeck a form occurs with the
-fore wings orange buff, and the hind wings only slightly tinged with grey
-(var. _unicolor_, Bankes). (Plate 97, Figs. 1-3.)
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 98.
- 1, 1a. HOARY FOOTMAN: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
- 2. DINGY FOOTMAN: _caterpillar_.
- 3. DOTTED FOOTMAN: _caterpillar_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 99.
- 1, 2. HOARY FOOTMAN.
- 3, 4. PIGMY FOOTMAN.
- 5. DOTTED FOOTMAN.
- 6, 7. ORANGE FOOTMAN.
-
-{181} Caterpillar, greyish, or greenish grey, freckled with darker, hairs
-grey inclining to brownish; a broad creamy or yellowish stripe, edged with
-black and traversed by a dark central line along the back. Head blackish
-and glossy. From August to June on lichens growing on stems and branches of
-yew, oak, and beech.
-
-A local species, and although recorded now and then from several other
-parts of the country, and once from Killarney in Ireland, seems to be
-pretty much confined to the counties of Surrey, Sussex, Hants, Dorset, and
-Devon. The moth, which is out in July, rests during the day upon the boughs
-and among the foliage of oak, beech, and yew, the latter especially in the
-Dorking district of Surrey.
-
-Distribution: Central Europe, Southern Scandinavia, Livonia, Northern
-Italy, Roumelia, and Russia.
-
-THE DINGY FOOTMAN (_Lithosia griseola_).
-
-Haworth's English name for this moth was the "Dun Footman." In its typical
-form the fore wings are pale greyish with a yellowish front edging; the
-latter most distinct towards the base; the hind wings are whitish ochreous
-more or less suffused with grey. The pale form, var. _flava_, Haw. =
-_stramineola_, Doubl. at one time considered a distinct species (the
-Straw-coloured Footman of Haworth), has pale straw-coloured fore wings and
-white ochreous hind wings. (Plate 97, Figs. 4, 5.)
-
-Caterpillar, sooty brown, with a darker line down the middle of the back
-and an interrupted yellow or orange line or stripe on each side of it; dark
-brown hairs arising from dark warts; head glossy black (described from a
-skin). It may be looked for in the spring months on the lichens affecting
-alders and sallows growing in fens and marshy places. (Plate 98, Fig. 2.)
-
-The moth is abundant in the Cambridge and Norfolk fens, and is common in
-boggy places in the New Forest, but it probably occurs in all suitable
-places throughout England and Wales. It does not seem to have been observed
-in Ireland, {182} but has been recorded from Moray in Scotland. The yellow
-variety, which by the way is not known to occur abroad, is found, with the
-ordinary form, chiefly in the Norfolk fens and in the New Forest; but it is
-also to be obtained, though less frequently, in Surrey (Weybridge
-district), Berkshire (Reading district), and still more rarely elsewhere.
-It is out in July.
-
-Distribution: Central Europe, South Russia, Ural, Altai, Amurland, Corea,
-Japan, and West Africa.
-
-THE COMMON FOOTMAN (_Lithosia lurideola_).
-
-Fore wings, leaden grey with a yellow stripe terminating in a point at the
-tip of the wing; the hind wings are pale ochreous yellow. It appears in
-July, sometimes at the end of June.
-
-Caterpillar, dark greyish covered with blackish hairs arising from black
-warts on the back, and yellowish hairs from similar coloured warts on the
-sides; three black or blackish lines on the back, and an orange stripe
-along the sides from the fourth to eleventh rings; head black. August to
-June. Generally supposed to feed, in a state of nature, on lichen growing
-on trees and bushes. It has been reared on the foliage of sallow, apple,
-and oak; also known to eat buckthorn, clematis, dogwood, etc. I have
-occasionally beaten it from old hedgerows, and have frequently seen it on
-trunks of poplar and ash upon which not much in the way of lichen could be
-seen. Such caterpillars, when taken, have almost invariably spun up soon
-afterwards. The moth is shown on Plate 97, Fig. 6, and the early stages on
-Plate 96, Fig. 2.
-
-This species is perhaps the commonest and most generally distributed member
-of the genus in England. It becomes much less frequent in northern pasts of
-Lancashire, and in Yorkshire it is local, but recorded as common in the
-south-east of that county. It occurs in Scotland, whence it has been
-recorded from Clydesdale, Aberdeenshire, and Moray. Kane {183} states that
-it is common near Galway, and also gives Castle Bellingham, Clogher Head
-(not rare), and Athlone as Irish localities.
-
-Distributed over Europe, except the extreme north, Andalusia and Southern
-Italy; the range extending to Asia Minor and Armenia. In Amurland, Corea,
-and Japan, it is represented by _coreana_, Leech.
-
-THE SCARCE FOOTMAN (_Lithosia complana_).
-
-Very similar in appearance to the last species, the yellow stripe along the
-front edge of the fore wings, however, does not terminate in a point, but
-is continued through to the fringes; the hind wings are sometimes
-distinctly yellow, and with but little, if any, greyish shading on the
-front area. (Plate 97, Fig. 7.)
-
-Caterpillar, brown or brownish grey above, and paler beneath; a white-edged
-black line along the middle of the back, and a row of orange spots,
-alternating with whitish ones, on each side of the line; the orange spots
-faint or absent on rings one to three; an interrupted yellow or orange
-stripe along the sides; the brownish warts are thickly studded with short
-greyish brown hairs. Head black and glossy (described from a skin). From
-August to June. The most usual food is probably lichens on trees, but it is
-said to eat moss, knot-grass, clover, and the flowers of bird's-foot
-trefoil, etc. (Plate 96, Fig. 3.)
-
-The moth is out in July and part of August, and may be disturbed in the
-daytime from its resting-place among heather and low herbage. It is on the
-wing in the dusk of the evening, and when the weather is favourable, flies
-freely. As it has a weakness for sweets, it should be looked for at night,
-by the aid of a lantern, on the flowers of knapweed and thistle. It chiefly
-affects heaths, but it is also found in woods, and on sandhills by the sea,
-as in Norfolk. A local species, but usually to be more or less frequently
-met with in all the eastern {184} and southern counties, and in some of the
-midland. Rare in Wales, Cheshire, Lancashire, and York. Only doubtfully
-recorded from Scotland. In Ireland it is widely distributed, and, according
-to Kane, not uncommon where it occurs.
-
-THE NORTHERN FOOTMAN (_Lithosia sericea_).
-
-Gregson named and described this insect in 1860, and in the following year
-Guenee described it as _L. molybdeola_. It seems to be peculiar to England;
-and only occurs on the mosses of Lancashire and Cheshire. The fore wings
-are somewhat narrower and darker in colour than those of the Scarce
-Footman; and the hind wings are suffused, to a greater or lesser extent,
-with dark grey. Some entomologists maintain that this is probably only a
-small form of _L. complana_. According to Mr. Pierce it cannot be
-specifically separated from that species or from _L. pygmaeola_ by the
-genitalia, the usual test in such matters. Prout, however, has stated that
-Speyer, in 1867, pointed out structural differences, not only in the shape
-of the wings, but also in the size of the costal tuft of scales on the
-underside of the fore wings. It should be added that there does not seem to
-be any material difference between the caterpillar of _complana_ and that
-of _sericea_. Anyway, the question of form or species may here be left
-open. The fact of the Northern, or Gregson's, Footman being an exclusive
-British production invests the insect with an importance greatly above that
-attaching to the majority of our moths. The moth is depicted on Plate 97,
-Fig. 8.
-
-THE PIGMY FOOTMAN (_Lithosia lutarella_).
-
-Ochreous white, sometimes tinged with greyish, or with yellowish; hind
-wings clouded with greyish on the front area. Female almost always smaller
-than the male. The fore wings {185} vary a good deal in the matter of
-colour, the extremes being yellow and dark grey. (Plate 99, Figs. 3, 4.)
-
-Buckler describes the caterpillar as brown on the back, with a central
-thick black line, and two dark brown lines; sides paler brown, with a dusty
-white line along the spiracles; the warts (tubercles) with short brown
-hairs, and the head black. August to June.
-
-This extremely local little moth was unknown as an inhabitant of Britain
-until 1847, when it was described as _L. pygmaeola_, by Doubleday in the
-_Zoologist_ for that year, and noted as having been found among rushes on
-the coast of Kent. Two years later the insect was again referred to, and it
-was then stated to be confined to a "space of about four hundred yards in
-extent, on the coast of Deal." It then became known as the "Deal Footman."
-During the past seventy years or so large numbers have no doubt been
-removed from this locality, which is the only British one it was known to
-occur in. It is still to be found there, although said to be less common
-than formerly. In the _Entomologist_ for September, 1912, this species was
-recorded as not uncommon on marram grass growing on the Norfolk coast.
-
-Some present-day entomologists still incline to the opinion that the moth
-is a distinct species, and not a local race of _lutarella_, which is found
-throughout Central and Eastern Europe; ranging to South Scandinavia,
-Finland, and eastward to Siberia and Amurland. The var. _pygmaeola_ has
-been obtained in Holland.
-
-THE HOARY FOOTMAN (_Lithosia caniola_).
-
-Fore wings silky whitish grey with a yellowish streak along the front edge;
-the hind wings are whitish with a faint yellowish tinge. Some of the
-specimens are entirely whitish (var. _lacteola_, Boisd.). July and August,
-sometimes earlier. (Plate 99, Figs. 1, 2.) {186}
-
-Caterpillar greyish brown, with a black line along the back, and a series
-of irregular orange marks, representing stripes, on each side of it; these
-orange marks are outwardly edged with black; an orange line low down along
-the sides; warts greyish or brownish, each bearing a tuft of short pale
-hairs. Head blackish, shining, notched on the crown, and studded with pale
-bristles in front. Fed on lettuce from April 30, the date they were
-received from Mr. Walker of Torquay. They were then quite small, the
-largest not more than half an inch in length. They pupated in June, and the
-moths emerged in July, all fine specimens. (Plate 98, Fig. 1.)
-
-In the open the caterpillar feeds upon the black lichens growing on rocks,
-etc., by the sea; also upon Dutch clover (_Trifolium repens_), kidney vetch
-(_Anthyllis vulneraria_), and bird's-foot trefoil (_Lotus corniculatus_).
-
-This species was not known to occur in any part of the British Isles until
-August, 1861, when the late Mr. C. G. Barrett took four specimens on the
-Hill of Howth in Ireland (_vide Ent. Annual_, 1862, p. 106). A large number
-were subsequently captured or reared from caterpillars obtained in the same
-locality by others. Kane ("Cat. Lep. Ireland") remarks that the colony
-flourished at Howth for many years, but that the species seemingly perished
-in the severe winters of 1878 or 1879, and unless a specimen taken in 1890
-was this species, has not since been seen there. The only other Irish
-locality from which it has been recorded (August, 1866) is on the coast
-near Waterford. Torquay, where the species was first observed in 1864 is
-now a noted locality, and it is said to occur in certain spots along the
-coast to Babbicombe. Other localities in Devon are Dartmouth, Torcross, and
-Bolt Head. Barrett found the species rarely in two places by the sea in
-South Pembrokeshire, and mentions Rye in Sussex, and Romney Marsh in Kent,
-as localities where specimens have occurred.
-
-Mr. J. Walker informs me that the moths fly at dusk, and {187} that they
-all seem to get active at almost the same moment, and settle again in the
-same way at the end of their first flight, which lasts about half an hour.
-After dark the rays of an acetylene lamp directed downwards into the bushes
-will attract them from their retreat. Occasionally they visit "sugar."
-
-Abroad this is a southern species, but its range extends to Western
-Germany, the Tyrol, Switzerland, and South Hungary, as well as to England;
-also to Asia Minor.
-
-THE ORANGE FOOTMAN (_Lithosia sororcula_).
-
-This moth is orange yellow on the fore wings, and a paler shade of the same
-colour on the hind wings. Except that the tint is brighter in some
-specimens and darker in others, there is nothing to mention in the way of
-aberration. (Plate 99, Figs. 6, 7.)
-
-The caterpillar is white on the back with five black stripes, the outer
-ones broader than the others; all these stripes are broken up by brownish
-patches, and they fail to show at all on the eighth ring, which, therefore,
-is conspicuously white; the sides are smoky grey marked with white on the
-second and third rings; the warts are reddish, bearing smoky grey hairs. It
-may be found from July to September on the lichens growing on the trunks of
-oak trees. The moth does not appear until the following May or June, when
-it may be beaten from branches. Not uncommon in the woods, chiefly oak, of
-Norfolk, Suffolk, Essex, Kent, Surrey, Hampshire, and Dorset; it also
-occurs in Cambridgeshire and Sussex. In Berkshire and Bucks it is fairly
-common, but seems to affect the beech woods in those counties. Recorded
-from Ireland by Birchall, who stated that it was abundant at Killarney.
-
-THE DOTTED FOOTMAN (_Pelosia muscerda_).
-
-The fore wings are pale grey suffused with pale reddish-brown except on the
-costal area: there are six black dots, two {188} before the middle of the
-wing and placed above the inner margin, and four beyond the middle in an
-oblique series from the costa; the hind wings are pale brownish-grey,
-becoming somewhat darker towards the apex. (Plate 99, Fig. 5.)
-
-Caterpillar velvety blackish-brown, marbled with reddish-grey; stripe along
-middle of the back, and a line on each side of it deep black; warts and
-hairs brown, the latter short but numerous; a pair of red spots on ring
-one, and another pair on ring twelve; beneath the spiracles is a fine
-reddish-grey line; under surface pinkish grey; head small and blackish
-(Buckler). So far it has escaped detection in its fenny home, but it has
-been reared from eggs laid by a captured female. Caterpillars obtained in
-this way seem to have thrived on a mixed diet of lichens, mosses, and
-withered leaves of bramble and sallow. August to May. Buckler states that
-the dark chestnut-brown pupa is enclosed in a double cocoon, the inner a
-webby one of greyish silk, and the outer one thinner and composed of white
-silk. The whole affair was formed in a curled-up bramble leaf. The
-caterpillar is figured on Plate 98, Fig. 5.
-
-The moth is out in late July and through August. It has been obtained in a
-certain marshy locality in the New Forest, Hants, and also in some marshes
-at Sandwich, Kent. Its chief haunts are, however, in the fens of Norfolk,
-such as those on the river Bure, and Brundall fen on the Yare, but Horning
-and Ranworth are, perhaps, the headquarters of the species. It may be
-mentioned that when Stephens wrote about this insect in 1829 only two
-specimens had then occurred in Britain, and these had been found in a marsh
-at Horning floating upon the water in a ditch.
-
-Distribution: Central Europe, Denmark, Sweden, Livonia, Dalmatia, Corsica
-and Sardinia, Amurland and Japan.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 100.
- 1. SCARCE MERVEILLE DU JOUR.
- 2. NUT-TREE TUSSOCK.
- 3, 4. MILLER MOTH.
- 5. SYCAMORE MOTH.
- 6. POPLAR GREY.
- 7. MARSH DAGGER.
- 8, 9. ALDER MOTH.
- 10. DARK DAGGER.
- 11. GRAY DAGGER.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 101.
- 1. POPLAR GREY: _caterpillar_.
- 2, 2a. SCARCE MERVEILLE DU JOUR: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
- 3, 3a, 3b. NUT-TREE TUSSOCK: _caterpillar, chrysalis and cocoon_.
- 4. DARK DAGGER: _caterpillar_.
- 5, 5a. GREY DAGGER: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
-
-{189}
-
-NOCTUIDAE.
-
-This extensive assemblage of moths, commonly known as noctuas, and locally
-as "millers," "owlets," and "buzzards," has been divided by Staudinger into
-five sub-families--Acronyctinae, Trifinae, Gonopterinae, Quadrifinae, and
-Hypeninae. These divisions are here adopted, and the arrangement of species
-is adhered to pretty closely, except in the Trifinae, where it has been
-considered necessary to make sundry alterations so as to fall more in line
-with later classification, at least so far as concerns genera.
-
-The eggs of species in this family are round and somewhat flattened in
-shape, and the shell is fluted or netted. Some few examples of these have
-been figured.
-
-Most of the larvae conceal themselves during the day, in the ground, among
-low herbage, or in spun-together leaves, and only leave their retreat at
-night to feed. Most kinds change to the chrysalis state underground, but
-some pupate among leaves or in chinks of tree bark, etc.
-
-With some few exceptions the moths fly only at night, by far the larger
-number will visit the sugar patch, and others come readily to flowers or to
-light.
-
-Distribution abroad will only be referred to where this is restricted in
-Europe, or extends far beyond European limits.
-
-ACRONYCTINAE.
-
-THE SCARCE MERVEILLE DU JOUR (_Diphtera orion_).
-
-This pretty moth has the fore wings green variegated with white stripes and
-black cross lines; the hind wings are greyish, marked with white at the
-anal angle. The spaces between the interrupted cross lines of the fore
-wings are often marked with {190} black, and this is the typical form of
-the species; the plainer specimens--those less spotted with black--being
-referable to var. _runica_, Stephens. Stephens in 1829 notes that the
-species was then little known in England. It is still very local,
-inhabiting oak woods in Sussex (Hailsham), Hampshire (New Forest, sometimes
-common), Devonshire (Plymouth district), Cornwall (East Looe), Essex
-(Colchester), and Suffolk (Ipswich). The moth is out in June; on September
-5, 1906, Mr. L. W. Newman bred a small specimen that had only been in the
-chrysalis seventeen days. Usually it rests by day on boughs, and sometimes
-on the trunks of trees (see Fig. 8, p. 9); it flies at night and then
-patronizes the sugar patch, but often is a late visitor. The caterpillar,
-which feeds upon oak in July and August, is black on the back with a yellow
-or whitish blotch on rings four, six, and nine; the reddish warts are
-crowned with tufts of brown or whitish hairs. Head black marked with yellow
-except on the top. It is also said to eat leaves of beech and birch.
-Staudinger gives _alpium_, Osbeck (1778), as an earlier name than _orion_,
-Esp. Hampson refers alpinum to _Daseochaeta_, Warren.
-
-Distribution: Central and Northern Europe, and represented by var.
-_murrhina_, Graes., in Amurland, China, and Japan.
-
-The moth is depicted on Plate 100, Fig. 1, and the caterpillar and
-chrysalis on Plate 101, Figs. 2, 2a.
-
-THE NUT-TREE TUSSOCK (_Demas coryli_).
-
-Usually the fore wings of this moth appear to be brownish, or reddish brown
-on the basal half, and whitish, more or less suffused with greyish, or
-sometimes reddish brown, on the outer half; the hind wings are pale
-brownish, or greyish, lighter towards the base. Not infrequently the fore
-wings are greyish white with some brownish clouding between the two
-blackish cross lines. The caterpillar is variable in colour, but generally
-of some shade of brown, ranging from dark chocolate brown to {191} pale
-ochreous, covered with soft hair; the pencils of long hairs on the first
-ring, and the tufts of hairs on rings four, five, and eleven, may be red,
-greyish, or blackish; the broken stripe along the back is greyish, and the
-stripe low down on each side may be red, brown, or greyish. It feeds in
-June and July, and as a second generation in September, on the foliage of
-beech, birch, hazel, hornbeam, etc.: bushes growing in exposed positions
-such as a hedge bank or hill side are chiefly fancied. The moth flies in
-May and June, and again in August and September. It probably occurs in most
-of the English counties, but is most frequent in Berkshire, Bucks, and
-Devon. Not uncommon in Clydesdale, but more plentiful in Aberdeenshire, and
-is also obtained in Perthshire, and in other parts of Scotland. Widely
-distributed in Ireland.
-
-The moth is shown on Plate 100, Fig. 2, and the early stages on Plate 101,
-Figs. 3, 3a, 3b.
-
-THE MILLER (_Acronycta leporina_).
-
-In its typical form the wings are quite white with but little in the way of
-marking. Most, if not all, the specimens occurring in Britain are the more
-or less greyish suffused and more marked, variety known as _bradyporina_,
-Treits. (Plate 100, Figs. 3 [male], 4 [female].) Sometimes the outer
-margins of the fore wings, beyond the second cross line, are shaded or
-dusted with blackish (var. _semivirga_, Tutt). In the Liverpool district a
-form is occasionally obtained in which the fore wings are darkly suffused,
-and the thorax is black (var. _melanocephala_, Mansbridge). A specimen with
-black fore wings and white fringes has been bred from a caterpillar found
-in Essex (_Entomologist_, xxxviii., 289, and xxxix., 97).
-
-The caterpillar is pale green clothed with long white, and a few black
-hairs; these fall downwards, and on the one side curve forwards, and on the
-other side backwards. Sometimes in the {192} south of England, more
-frequently in the north, the ground colour and hairs are yellow, and there
-are more or less distinct reddish brown bands on the back and sides. It may
-be found from July to September, or even later, on birch or alder, rarely
-on oak and poplar. The moth occurs in May and June, as a rule. In 1904 I
-took a freshly emerged specimen on July 23, at Byfleet in Surrey, and some
-half-grown caterpillars were obtained on the same day, and very near the
-same spot. The species is found in woods, and on heaths and mosses, where
-birch or alder flourishes, from Devonshire in England to Sutherlandshire in
-Scotland. It is not common anywhere in our islands, but is perhaps most
-frequently met with in the south and east of England. In Ireland it appears
-to have been found only in the southern counties.
-
-THE SYCAMORE (_Acronycta aceris_).
-
-The dark mottled grey moth on Plate 100, Fig. 5, is not much given to
-variation, but occasionally brownish suffused forms occur (var.
-_candelisequa_, Esp. = _infuscata_, Haworth).
-
-The caterpillar (Plate 102, Fig. 3) feeds in August and September upon
-sycamore, maple, and sometimes plum and chestnut. It has some black-edged
-white marks along the middle of the back; the pointed tufts of long hairs
-are yellow or reddish. When it is at rest on the underside of a leaf, or
-coils in a ring on being disturbed, the hair tufts gave the creature a
-somewhat prickly appearance. The moth is out in June and July.
-
-The species is more or less common pretty well through the southern and
-eastern counties, and fairly so in and around London. Its range extends to
-Warwickshire and Herefordshire; but it is scarce in both counties. The
-Irish localities for it are Claring Bridge and Ahascragh, Co. Galway;
-Glandore and Timologue, Co. Cork; Enniskillen, Co. Fermanagh.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 102.
- 1. KNOT GRASS: _caterpillar_.
- 2. SCARCE DAGGER: _caterpillars_.
- 3, 3a, 3b. SYCAMORE: _caterpillar, chrysalis and cocoon_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 103.
- 1, 2. LIGHT KNOT-GRASS.
- 3. SCARCE DAGGER.
- 4. SWEET GALE MOTH.
- 5. CORONET MOTH.
- 6, 7. KNOT-GRASS MOTH.
- 8. MARBLED GREEN, _male_; 11 _female_.
- 9. MARBLED BEAUTY, _male_; 12 _female_.
- 10. POWDERED WAINSCOT.
-
-{193}
-
-THE POPLAR GREY (_Acronycta megacephala_).
-
-This moth is somewhat like that last noticed, but the fore wings are darker
-grey; the whitish orbicular mark is margined with black, and has a dark
-central dot. Sometimes the fore wings are clouded with blackish, and
-occasionally entirely suffused with black. In several species of
-_Acronycta_ newly disclosed specimens have a faint pinky tinge, but this is
-especially noticeable in the present species. (Plate 100, Fig. 6.)
-
-The caterpillar is ochreous or grey brown, marked with blackish; a
-conspicuous character is a black-edged whitish or ochreous patch on ring
-ten; the hairs are whitish, those on the sides rather long. It feeds from
-July to September on the foliage of poplars. (Plate 101, Fig. 1).
-
-This well-known cockney species is on the wing from late May to mid-August.
-Has been bred in September from a caterpillar taken in July, also in
-October from August larvae. It is often abundant on poplars (especially the
-caterpillars) in London and suburbs. Common all over the southern parts of
-England, except perhaps in Devon and Cornwall; its range extends through
-Northern England to Ross in Scotland; and it is found in the south of
-Ireland.
-
-THE ALDER (_Acronycta alni_).
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 26.
-
-CATERPILLAR OF THE ALDER-MOTH.
-
-(Photo by W. J. Lucas.)]
-
-The sexes of this black-clouded grey moth are shown on Plate 100, Figs. 8
-and 9[female]. Except that the black clouding sometimes spreads over a
-greater area of the fore wings, there is little to note in aberration, at
-least in a general way. In 1906 a melanic specimen was bred from a
-chrysalis taken from alder in Delamere Forest, Cheshire; this is probably
-referable to var. _steinerti_, Caspari.
-
-The caterpillar (Fig. 26) is black, marked with yellow; the {194} curious
-clubbed hairs are its distinguishing feature. Although named after the
-alder, it feeds on the leaves of most trees and bushes in July and August,
-sometimes earlier or later. The moth is out in May and June, but although
-an occasional specimen has been taken at sugar or light, once resting on
-nettles, it is rarely met with. Caterpillars also are not by any means
-common, and any one who may obtain even a single example in a season may
-congratulate himself on a good find. They are perhaps most frequent in the
-Hampshire (New Forest) district and some of the Sussex woodlands, but have
-occurred now and then in almost every county of England up to Yorkshire;
-also in Glamorganshire, Carmarthenshire, and at Trefriw in Wales. The only
-Irish locality is Powerscourt, Co. Wicklow. The range abroad extends to
-Armenia, Amurland, and Japan.
-
-THE MARSH DAGGER (_Acronycta strigosa_).
-
-This little moth, known also as the "Grisette," seems confined, as a
-British species, to the country around Cambridge; but it has been twice
-recorded from Norfolk, two specimens have been reported from
-Worcestershire, and one from Gloucestershire; the latter at sugar in June,
-1897. The latest records that I have seen refer to a moth taken at sugar
-near Chatteris {195} in 1904, two caterpillars beaten out of hawthorn in
-August, 1905, and a moth on an ash tree, Wicken, July 31, 1907. (Plate 100,
-Fig. 7).
-
-The caterpillar is yellowish green, with a red brown stripe along the back;
-two small elevations on ring four, and one on ring eleven; the hairs are
-blackish on the back, one of each tuft longer than the others. It feeds on
-hawthorn in August and early September. The moth is out in July. This
-species is found abroad in Central Europe and Southern France; also in
-Amurland, Corea, and Japan.
-
-THE DARK DAGGER (_Acronycta tridens_).
-
-The English name of this moth is not very suitable, as in general colour it
-is often really paler than many examples of the next species. Specimens
-with a blackish cloud at the base, and a dark band-like suffusion on the
-outer margin of the fore wings are referable to var. _virga_, Tutt. It is
-widely distributed in England and Wales, but apparently not common; rare in
-Scotland and in Ireland. I am unable to indicate any character that will
-serve to distinguish this moth from the Grey Dagger. The moth flies in
-June; a second brood sometimes occurs in confinement in October. The
-caterpillars of the two species are very distinct. That of the present
-species is black, with a broad reddish stripe along the back, and one on
-each side; the first is interrupted with white, and the others with black;
-there is a black hump on the fourth ring, and a broader one on the eleventh
-ring. It feeds from August to October on hawthorn, sloe, plum, pear, and
-apple; also on birch and sallow.
-
-The moth is shown on Plate 100, Fig. 10; and the caterpillar on Plate 101,
-Fig. 4.
-
-THE GREY DAGGER (_Acronycta psi_).
-
-The ground colour varies from whitish to blackish grey, Var. _bivirgae_,
-Tutt, is similar to var. _virga_ of the last species. {196} In var.
-_bidens_, Chapman, the first cross line is double, enclosing a pale stripe;
-the upper part of second cross line is more angled, and the dagger mark at
-the anal angle is much shortened.
-
-The caterpillar has a taller and more slender hump on ring four, and the
-stripe along the back is clear yellow, with black edged red spots on each
-side of it. Generally distributed, and often common.
-
-The moth is shown on Plate 100, Fig. 11; and the caterpillar and chrysalis
-on Plate 101, Figs. 5 and 5a.
-
-THE LIGHT KNOT GRASS (_Acronycta menyanthidis_).
-
-Portraits of this moth will be found on Plate 103, Figs. 1[male],
-2[female]. Several modifications have been named, the most important of
-these are var. _scotica_, Tutt, which is larger and brighter than the type,
-with the markings clear and distinct; var. _suffusa_, Tutt, is much
-suffused with black. The former is chiefly found in Scotland, and the
-latter in Yorkshire.
-
-The caterpillar is black or sooty-brown, with a red stripe, or blotches,
-low down along the sides; hairs black or red-brown. In August and September
-feeding by day on sweet-gale or bog myrtle (_Myrica gale_), bilberry,
-heather, dwarf sallow, etc. The moth flies in June and July, and may be
-found on the mosses and moorlands of North England and Scotland. It rests
-by day on rocks, stones, and, where they are handy, on posts and rails. I
-found several on Danes Moss, Cheshire, sitting on a derelict tub. Also
-occurring in Ireland, but not common.
-
-THE SCARCE DAGGER (_Acronycta auricoma_).
-
-The pale grey, darker-mottled moth depicted on Plate 103, Fig. 3, is very
-local, and only occurs in some of the woods of {197} Kent and Sussex; the
-districts mentioned being those of Rochester, Canterbury, Hailsham, and
-Hastings.
-
-The caterpillar is figured on Plate 102, Fig. 2. It is slaty grey in colour
-with a black plate on the first ring; on the back of each ring is a broad
-black band, and four orange warts from which arise golden-yellow silky
-hairs; the hairs on the sides are pale drab (adapted from Buckler). It
-feeds in June and early July, sometimes in September, on oak, birch,
-various kinds of _Rubus_, such as blackberry and raspberry, and also on
-bilberry (_Vaccinium_). The moth is out in late April and in May;
-occasionally late July and in August. It is rarely seen in the day time,
-but has been found resting on tree trunks. The range abroad extends to
-Southern Russia and Siberia.
-
-THE SWEET-GALE MOTH (_Acronycta euphorbiae_ var. _myricae_).
-
-Our form of this species--var. _myricae_, Guenee (Plate 103, Fig. 4), is
-rather larger and much darker than the type; but although it is generally
-somewhat smaller than the Alpine var. _montivaga_, Guenee, it is not
-otherwise separable from that form. So far as concerns the British Isles,
-it is only found in Scotland and, rarely, in Ireland. It was first obtained
-in Perthshire, in 1846, by Weaver, and it is now known to occur more or
-less commonly through Scotland from Ayr to Sutherlandshire. In Ireland it
-occurs in Cork, Kerry, Galway, and Sligo, and Kane considers that specimens
-from Markrea, and Lough Gill in the latter county are referable rather to
-var. _montivaga_, than to var. _myricae_. The moth is out in April, May,
-and June.
-
-The dark greyish caterpillar has a deep black, broken, stripe along the
-middle of the back, and a series of pale yellow marks on each side of it;
-along the black-margined white spiracles there is a reddish orange line, or
-broken stripe; pale brownish hairs arising from yellowish warts on the
-back, and a cross-bar of reddish orange near the head. It feeds on sweet
-{198} gale, heather, birch, sallow, etc., and may be found from July to
-September. Two figures of it, from coloured drawings by Mr. Alfred Sich,
-will be found on Plate 102.
-
-THE KNOT GRASS (_Acronycta rumicis_).
-
-The ordinary form of this moth is shown on Plate 103, Figs. 6[male],
-7[female]. The species varies greatly in the amount of dark mottling and
-clouding on the fore wings; sometimes this is much reduced, and the pale
-grey ground colour is then clearly seen; more often these wings are
-entirely clouded over with blackish or sooty brown, leaving only the white
-bracket-like mark above the inner margin, and the submarginal cross line,
-distinctly visible (var. _salicis_, Curtis). The moth flies in June and
-July, and sometimes in August and September.
-
-The hairy caterpillar, which is somewhat humped on rings four and eleven,
-is figured in Plate 102, Fig. 1. It is dark brownish grey, marked on the
-back with a central series of black patches in which are reddish spots, and
-a row of white spots on each side; below the white spiracles is a yellowish
-wavy line with reddish warts upon it. Various low-growing plants, such as
-plantain, dock, sorrel, and also hawthorn, sallow, and bramble, afford it
-nourishment, and it is found in July, August, and September.
-
-Generally distributed throughout England and Wales, its range extending
-into Scotland as far north as Morayshire; also in Ireland. The var.
-_salicis_ occurs northwards from Shropshire through northern England into
-Scotland, but is perhaps most common in Ireland.
-
-THE CORONET (_Craniophora ligustri_).
-
-This is also the Crown Moth of Moses Harris, both English names referring
-to a fancied resemblance of the whitish or pale greyish mark, just beyond
-the reniform stigma, to a crown or coronet (Plate 103, Fig. 5). The
-greenish or brownish-olive fore wings are subject to modification in the
-depth of tint; sometimes they are blackish in tone--var. _nigra_, Tutt, or
-dark olive-green--var. _olivacea_, Tutt. In both of these named forms the
-whitish markings are obscured, and in this respect they seem to be about
-identical with var. _sundevalli_, Lampa.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 104.
- 1, 3. ARCHER'S DART.
- 4, 6. TURNIP MOTH.
- 2, 5. SHUTTLE-SHAPED DART.
- 7, 8. DARK SWORD GRASS.
- 9, 10. PEARLY UNDERWING.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 105.
- 1, 2. CRESCENT DART.
- 3, 4. HEART AND DART, _males_.
- 5, 6. HEART AND DART, _females_.
- 7, 8. HEART AND CLUB.
- 9, 10. LIGHT FEATHERED RUSTIC.
-
-{199} The caterpillar is bluish green above, and yellowish green below; a
-slender whitish line along the middle of the back, and a yellowish line on
-each side; the spiracles are reddish, and the raised spots, from each of
-which a single black hair arises, are black. It feeds in August and
-September on ash, and less frequently, perhaps, on privet. It is stated to
-eat hazel and alder, also.
-
-The moth flies in June and July, and its occurrence in any locality depends
-largely upon the presence of ash. Widely distributed throughout England,
-Wales, and Scotland to Ross-shire. In Ireland it has only been noted from a
-few localities in Co. Galway.
-
-POWDERED WAINSCOT (_Simyra_ (_Arsilonche_) _albovenosa_).
-
-In its typical form (Plate 103, Fig. 10), the fore wings are whitish
-ochreous with the veins showing up white more or less clearly. A form with
-reddish ochreous fore wings has been named var. _ochracea_, Tutt; and
-another with silvery-white wings var. _argentea_ by the same author. These
-seem to be identical with forms of this species named _flavida_ and
-_albida_ by Aurivillius some eight years earlier.
-
-The hairy caterpillar is blackish or dark grey brown freckled with black;
-two stripes along the back and one on each side are yellow, sometimes
-marked with orange; the warts are orange with pale, and a few black, hairs;
-head black, marked with yellowish. {200}
-
-It feeds from July to September on the leaves of reeds, at night; hiding by
-day under leaves low down. The moth is out in June, but an autumn brood is
-sometimes obtained. It only occurs in fenland, chiefly Norfolk and
-Cambridgeshire.
-
-THE MARBLED BEAUTY (_Bryophila perla_).
-
-Typically the fore wings of this species are white, marbled with slaty
-grey, and with the stigmata dark grey (Plate 103, Figs. 9[male],
-12[female]). There is less colour variation than in the last species, but
-in some localities greenish, ochreous, and ochreous brown forms have been
-obtained. The caterpillar is pale slaty grey, with an irregular yellowish
-stripe on the back, with black spots forming a central line; the raised
-spots are black and shiny, as also is the head. Feeds on lichens growing on
-old walls from August to May. The moth, which occurs throughout England,
-Wales, Ireland, and Scotland up to the Clyde, is to be found, commonly as a
-rule, on walls by day, and gas lamps at night, in July and August.
-Sometimes I have found specimens on tree trunks.
-
-MARBLED GREEN (_Bryophila muralis_ (_glandifera_)).
-
-Two forms of this very variable little moth are represented on Plate 103,
-Figs. 8[male] (typical), 11[female]. The ground colour of the fore wings
-ranges from almost white through pale green to bluish green or to a deep
-olive green, or through pale ochreous to orange brown. The markings, too,
-vary in intensity, and are sometimes very obscure. Several forms have been
-named, but only the Cambridge race, known as var. _impar_, Warren, can here
-be referred to. In this form the colour is more often greyish or brownish
-white, than green; the markings are cloudy and not clearly defined.
-
-The caterpillar is obscure greenish, with whitish and rather {201} shining
-raised spots; there is a black plate on the first ring, and from this three
-broken yellowish lines run along the back. Head black and glossy. It feeds
-from October to May on the lichens growing on walls and rocks; during the
-day it hides in a chamber formed of silk and lichen, which is not easy to
-detect in dry weather. The moth is out in July and August, and at
-Eastbourne I have found it in September. It may be found generally on
-walls, but sometimes on rocks at various places on the coast of Kent,
-Sussex, Dorset, Devon, and Cornwall; also in the Scilly Isles. Its range,
-according to Barrett, extends to Bath and Wells, Somersetshire, Marlborough
-and Chippenham in Wiltshire, and it has also occurred in Gloucestershire.
-
-THE TREE-LICHEN BEAUTY (_Bryophila algae_).
-
-The only record of this species in England that I am aware of is that by
-Mr. Edleston, in the _Intelligencer_ for 1860, p. 11, as follows: "Two
-specimens of this pretty species (_B. algae_) were taken in this district
-last July." The district referred to was Manchester, and the note was
-written on September 28, 1859.
-
-TRIFINAE.
-
-THE TURNIP MOTH (_Agrotis_ (_Euxoa_) _segetum_).
-
-The ordinary form of the male and the female is represented on Plate 104.
-The species is an exceedingly variable one, and Haworth (1803), believing
-them to be distinct species, gave Latin and English names to several of the
-different forms. The ground colour in the male ranges from pale whitish or
-brownish ochreous, with strong markings, to blackish brown, with the
-markings obscured. The female ranges in colour of {202} fore wings from
-greyish to blackish. Caterpillar, greyish brown, tinged with ochreous, or
-sometimes pinkish; a glossy plate on first ring, greyish or brownish; spots
-glossy, each with a tiny hair; lines rather darker, but often indistinct.
-It feeds from July to April on various plants, but only attacks the tender
-stems near the surface of the ground. In fields it is destructive to
-turnips and swedes, making large cavities in the bulb, which it enters from
-just above the tap-root. The moth flies in June, and occasionally as a
-second generation in the autumn. Generally distributed over the British
-Isles, and often very common. Its range extends throughout nearly the whole
-of Europe and the greater part of Asia.
-
-THE ARCHER'S DART (_Agrotis_ (_Euxoa_) _vestigialis_).
-
-The specimens shown on Plate 104 are typical of the sexes (Figs. 1[male],
-3[female]). The normal pale brown colour is sometimes replaced by greyish,
-reddish, or olive brown. A specimen with black fore and hind wings has been
-recorded from North Wales by Mr. Jager. The markings vary in intensity, and
-occasionally are almost or quite absent. Several of the varieties have been
-named. The caterpillar, which feeds on bed-straw and various grasses, etc.,
-is greenish grey, inclining to brownish above, with a dark-edged pale line
-along the middle of the back, and a similar line on each side; the raised
-spots are black, and the plate on first ring brownish; head ochreous,
-marked with darker. August to May. The moth is out in July and August, and
-is chiefly found on sandhills by the sea. It is most plentiful on the
-eastern and southern coasts, and in Cheshire, Lancashire, and Yorkshire: it
-is often not uncommon in the Brandon and Tuddenham districts, and others,
-in the "Breck Sand" area of Suffolk and Norfolk. The species has been
-recorded from Worcestershire, and I understand that a few specimens were
-taken in Surrey last August (1907). In Scotland it occurs on the east
-coast, and in the Orkney Isles; also in Ayr, on the south-west. In Ireland,
-also, it is found on suitable parts of the coast.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 106.
- 1, 2. SAND DART.
- 3, 4. COAST DART.
- 5, 6. GARDEN DART.
- 7, 8, 11. WHITE LINE DART.
- 9, 10. WHITE-LINE DART, _var. aquilina._
- 12. SQUARE-SPOT DART.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 107.
- 1. TRUE-LOVER'S KNOT.
- 2, 3. HEATH RUSTIC.
- 4. PORTLAND MOTH.
- 5, 6. STOUT DART.
- 7, 8. DOTTED RUSTIC.
- 9, 10. NORTHERN RUSTIC.
-
-{203} THE HEART AND CLUB (_Agrotis_ (_Euxoa_) _corticea_).
-
-The more usual form of the male and the female are shown on Plate 105
-(Figs. 7[male], 8[female]). The colour varies from pale brown to a whitish
-or greyish brown tint in one direction, and to reddish or blackish brown in
-another. The cross lines, generally well defined, are sometimes absent, or
-nearly so, in some of the pale forms, and much obscured in the dark forms.
-The black outlined reniform and orbicular stigmata are sometimes obscured
-by a blackish cloud; the pale-centred, club-like mark below them varies in
-length, and is occasionally reduced to a small spot. "_Noctua subfusca_,"
-Haworth, has been determined by Mr. E. R. Bankes, who possesses the type,
-to be an obscurely marked fuscous [male] example of this species. The
-greyish brown, rather rough-looking caterpillar, is freckled with a darker
-tint above, and inclined to greenish below; a fine, pale line along the
-middle of the back is edged with brownish, and on each side there is a pale
-line, edged above with brown, and below this a double pale line; head
-marked with blackish (Plate 109, Fig. 1). It feeds from March to April,
-after hibernation, on various low-growing plants, including goose-foot
-(_Chenopodium_), persicaria, knotgrass, dock, and clover. The moth is on
-the wing in June and July, and very occasionally in September. It is rather
-a common insect in eastern and southern counties bordering the sea, but
-extends into Surrey, and occasionally into Cambridgeshire, Oxfordshire, and
-Berkshire; and is also found more or less frequently in Herefordshire,
-Warwickshire, Staffordshire, Cheshire, Lancashire, and Yorkshire. In
-Scotland it occurs in Ayr, and on the eastern side to Moray. It has been
-taken in various {204} counties, on the coast, of Ireland from Cork to
-Sligo, and from Wicklow to Derry.
-
-THE LIGHT FEATHERED RUSTIC (_Agrotis_ (_Euxoa_) _cinerea_).
-
-Both sexes are shown in their typical forms on Plate 105. The fore wings of
-the male (Fig. 9) are generally pale greyish in colour, with blackish cross
-lines and central shade; the claviform mark is absent, and the orbicular
-stigma usually so, or represented by a dusky dot; sometimes the ground
-colour is brownish, occasionally purplish grey, and very rarely black. The
-female (Fig. 10) is smaller, and always much darker.
-
-The caterpillar is blackish green or dark greyish, with three fine pale
-lines, the central one edged on both sides, and the others edged above,
-with a darker tint; a pale stripe along the black spiracles; head, and
-plate on first ring black. It feeds on wild thyme, and is said to eat dock.
-It hatches from the egg in late June or early July, and presumably
-hibernates when full grown, as it does not seem to feed again when it
-reappears in early spring.
-
-The moth flies in May and June, and is only to be found on hills and downs
-in chalk or limestone districts. It occurs in Surrey, Dorset, Isle of
-Wight, Devon, Gloucestershire, Herefordshire, North Wales, Berkshire,
-Oxfordshire, Cambridge, and Suffolk; it seems to have been most frequently
-met with in Kent and Sussex. The small form, with narrow and distinctly
-marked fore wings, and whitish hind wings, occurring in the south of
-England, has been named var. _tephrina_, Staud.
-
-THE SHUTTLE-SHAPED DART (_Agrotis_ (_Euxoa_) _puta_).
-
-As will be seen by the figures on Plate 104, the sexes of this species also
-differ greatly in colour. Usually the cross lines on the fore wings of the
-male do not show up so distinctly as in {205} Fig. 2, which closely
-approaches a form figured and described as _radiola_ by Stephens in 1829.
-Fig. 5 represents the typical blackish-brown female. Gynandrous specimens,
-one side [male] the other [female], have been recorded. The caterpillar
-feeds on dandelion, lettuce, knotgrass, and other low-growing plants, from
-September to April; probably full grown before hibernation. The moth, which
-is out in July and August, sometimes in May, is partial to low-lying,
-marshy ground and meadows, and is widely distributed over the whole of the
-south of England, but it is seemingly rare in the north, and still more so
-in Scotland and Ireland. Barrett states that it has been found commonly in
-Carmarthenshire, Wales.
-
-THE CRESCENT DART (_Agrotis_ (_Euxoa_) _lunigera_).
-
-Although its position in classification is that of a local form of _A.
-trux_, Hubn., this moth, which is figured on Plate 105, Figs. 1[male],
-2[female], may here retain the name that was given to it by Stephens in
-1829. Except that it has been reported to occur in the north of France, it
-seems to be peculiar to the British Isles. The earliest known specimens
-were captured near Cork in Ireland, June, 1826, and it is now found not
-only on the coasts of Cork and Kerry, but also on the Hill of Howth, near
-Dublin. In England it occurs in the Isle of Wight, Dorsetshire (Portland),
-Devonshire (Torquay), Cornwall, and the Scilly Isles. Reported from Sussex
-in 1918. In Wales it is to be found above Barmouth, and in various parts of
-South Wales; and in Scotland around Edinburgh and on the Moray coast. The
-moth is out in July and August. Mr. A. E. Gibbs, writing of this species in
-Cornwall, remarks, "It is generally stated that _A. lunigera_ is only to be
-taken on steep and dangerous cliffs, in places where sugaring is by no
-means a safe occupation; but its abundance at Polzeath showed that this is
-not invariably the case. Here it was found on posts and flower heads in the
-valley at some {206} distance from the seashore, and so abundantly did it
-occur that one evening's work yielded upwards of fifty specimens."
-
-The caterpillar is greyish or greenish grey, inclining to brownish above,
-and with darker brown marks on the back; lines paler, edged sometimes with
-darker grey; raised spots blackish, rather glossy; head brownish, marked
-with black, and the plate on first ring is black with a central yellow
-line. It feeds from August to May on various low plants growing in rocky
-places by the sea. Will eat dandelion, plantain, and knotgrass in
-confinement, also sliced carrot.
-
-THE COAST DART (_Agrotis_ (_Euxoa_) _cursoria_).
-
-The specimens whose portraits will be found on Plate 106 are more or less
-typical of the sexes of this most variable species. The ground colour of
-the fore wings ranges from whitish ochreous through all shades of brown up
-to dark reddish, and from whitish grey through leaden grey to brown grey.
-The markings, too, are exceedingly variable; the cross lines are often
-faint, sometimes entirely absent; the stigmata are frequently obscure, and
-occasionally the blackish lower part of the reniform is the only indication
-of these marks. There is often a white streak along the costa, and in some
-specimens this is very conspicuous (Figs. 3[male], 4[female]).
-
-The caterpillar feeds from September to June on various grasses growing on
-sandhills, and is said to eat wormwood and violet. It is ochreous in
-colour, more or less tinged with green; the lines are pale grey, edged with
-darker grey; spots brown, and head ochreous brown.
-
-The moth is on the wing from late July to early September, and is to be
-found on all the larger tracts of sandhills on the east coast from Suffolk
-northwards, and on the coasts of Cheshire and Lancashire. It is not common
-on our southern coasts, but occurs in Dorsetshire and Devon. In Scotland it
-is obtained {207} on the Firth of Forth, Kincardine, and Aberdeen coasts,
-and also in the Hebrides, Orkney, and Shetland Isles; and on very many
-parts of the coast of Ireland.
-
-THE GARDEN DART (_Agrotis_ (_Euxoa_) _nigricans_).
-
-This moth is typically sooty or blackish brown in both sexes (Plates 106,
-Figs. 5[male], 6[female]), but varies to pale brown, or through various
-shades of red brown. The markings, usually obscure, occasionally are well
-defined, and sometimes there are additional black spots and pale streaks.
-The caterpillar is pale or dark ochreous brown on the back, inclining to
-greenish on the sides; lines greenish grey, edged with black, and a double
-whitish one low down on the sides. It feeds from September to June, on
-clover, plantain, dock, and various other low plants; and also cow-parsnip
-and other umbelliferae. The moth flies in July and August, and is to be
-found in most English counties, but perhaps most commonly in the eastern.
-In Scotland it ranges to Moray, and seems to be generally distributed in
-Ireland.
-
-THE WHITE-LINE DART (_Agrotis_ (_Euxoa_) _tritici_).
-
-This is another exceedingly variable species. The ground colour of the fore
-wings ranges from pale whitish or ochreous brown, through various tints of
-greyish and red brown, up to black or sooty brown; variation in markings is
-somewhat similar to that referred to in _A. cursoria_. Three forms are
-shown on Plate 106, Figs. 7, 8, and 11; the latter represents a specimen
-closely approaching _A. obelisca_. Var. _aquilina_ (Figs. 9 and 10), the
-English name of which is the Streaked Dart, is larger than the type, and
-the wings, consequently, are broader; by some entomologists it is
-considered to be a distinct species.
-
-The caterpillar is obscure greyish or brownish, with a dark-edged pale line
-along the middle of the back, and a dusky line {208} on each side of it;
-low down on the sides is another dusky line. It feeds from September to May
-on mouse-ear chickweed, bedstraw, plantain, and other low-growing plants
-growing on sandy soils.
-
-The moth is out in July and August, and is widely distributed throughout
-the British Isles, including the Orkneys and Shetlands, but especially
-common on coast sandhills.
-
-THE SQUARE-SPOT DART (_Agrotis_ (_Euxoa_) _obelisca_).
-
-The fore wings of this moth (Plate 106, Fig. 12) are pale greyish brown,
-purplish brown, or sometimes slaty brown, with fairly distinct black cross
-lines, and a pale streak along the front edge; the first line is straight
-and less angled, and the second line less curved towards the front margin
-than in _A. tritici_. The caterpillar, which feeds from about October to
-July on rock rose, bedstraw, and other low plants growing in rocky places
-by the sea or on hillsides, is very similar to that of the last species.
-The moth is out in August and September in its special haunts. A well-known
-locality for it is Freshwater in the Isle of Wight, but it may be obtained
-at Torquay, Devonshire; Padstow, Cornwall; and the Scilly Isles. Also
-recorded from Sussex, Gloucestershire, Herefordshire, South Wales,
-Derbyshire, Cheshire, Lancashire, and Yorkshire. In Scotland on the
-south-west and east coasts; and in Ireland at Howth, Dublin; Dungarvan, Co.
-Waterford; and Mt. Charles, Donegal.
-
-THE HEART AND DART (_Agrotis_ (_Feltia_) _exclamationis_).
-
-On Plate 105 are figured two examples of the male (Figs. 3, 4) and two
-female specimens (Figs. 5, 6). The colour of the fore wings ranges from
-pale whitish brown through various shades of brown and grey to a sooty
-brown or black. The cross lines are rarely very distinct, the reniform,
-orbicular, and claviform marks are, however, generally much in evidence;
-but either of the two last, sometimes both, may occasionally disappear. Not
-infrequently the reniform is connected with the orbicular by a black streak
-from the former; more rarely the claviform is much widened and lengthened,
-and almost united with a dusky cloud above it (var. _plaga_, Steph.). This
-species is sometimes mistaken for _A. corticea_, but apart from the shorter
-teeth of the male antennae, the present species has a distinct, and often
-conspicuous, black mark on the front of the thorax.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 108.
- 1, 2, 4, 5. NORTHERN DART.
- 3. ROSY MARSH MOTH.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 109.
- 1. HEART AND CLUB: _caterpillar_.
- 2. HEATH RUSTIC: _caterpillar_.
- 3. NEGLECTED RUSTIC: _caterpillar_.
- 4. TRUE-LOVER'S KNOT: _caterpillar_.
-
-{209} The caterpillar is brownish with darker pear-shaped marks on the
-back; lines dark edged; spiracles black and of large size. Head pale marked
-with brown. It feeds from July to May on various low herbage, including
-lettuce, chickweed, plantain, and goose-foot; also turnips.
-
-The moth flies in June and July (sometimes in September), and is generally
-common; but in Scotland it does not appear to extend north of Moray and
-Argyle.
-
-THE DARK SWORD GRASS (_Agrotis ypsilon_).
-
-The sexes of this moth are represented on Plate 104, Figs. 7 [male] and 8
-[female]. In occasional specimens of the male the ground colour of the fore
-wings is rather pale brown; otherwise there is little variation to note.
-The caterpillar feeds from April to July on roots and leaves of cabbage,
-lettuce, goose-foot, and many low plants; also on swedes, mangold wurzel,
-etc. It is purplish or bronzy brown above and somewhat greener on the
-sides; the usual spots are blackish and the lines greyish edged with
-darker. Head black with two white spots. The moth is on the wing from July
-to September, and as it is sometimes seen in April and May and earlier, it
-is said to have probably hibernated. Possibly, however, such early
-specimens, found at least once in February, are immigrants. Sometimes the
-species is common and at others rare. It has occurred at one time or other
-almost everywhere in the British Isles, but it seems to be most regularly
-obtained in England and in Ireland. {210} Abroad its range extends through
-Europe, Asia, and North America, and also to Australia, and Honolulu.
-
-THE SAND DART (_Agrotis_ (_Lycophotia_) _ripae_).
-
-This species varies a good deal in the ground colour of the fore wings.
-According to Barrett it ranges from pure white through pale reddish, rich
-reddish (var. _desillii_, Pierret) reddish drab, yellowish drab, and
-various shades of pale brown to brownish grey, and the markings to all
-degrees of distinctness or obliteration, especially the latter. The two
-specimens on Plate 106 have the markings fairly well defined (Fig. 1 is a
-male, and Fig. 2 a female).
-
-The caterpillar is ochreous grey, whitish tinged with pink, or greenish;
-the lines and spots are greyish, and the spiracles large and black; head
-and plate on first ring ochreous brown. It feeds on saltwort (_Salsola_),
-sea rocket (_Cakile_), seablite (_Suaeda_), sea holly (_Eryngium_), and
-various other plants that flourish on sandy shores. It is usually full
-grown in late autumn, when it goes down some depth into the sand, but does
-not pupate until the spring. If the caterpillars are not full fed when
-obtained they must be furnished with plenty of sand to burrow in, and kept
-supplied with slices of carrot until it is seen that the last put in
-remains untouched.
-
-The moth flies in June and July, and may be found on the coasts of
-Lincolnshire, Norfolk, Suffolk, Essex, Kent (Deal), Isle of Wight, Dorset,
-Devon (Dawlish and Torquay), Somersetshire, South Wales, Cheshire,
-Lancashire, and the Isle of Man. Rare in Scotland and in Ireland.
-
-THE TRUE LOVER'S KNOT (_Agrotis_ (_Lycophotia_) _strigula_).
-
-The white marked reddish moth (Plate 107, Fig. 1) frequents most of the
-moorlands and heath and ling-clad heaths and {211} commons throughout the
-British Isles. It varies in the tint of the reddish colour, and in the
-greater and lesser prominence of the white markings. Specimens from
-Scotland, especially from the Shetland Isles, are generally larger than
-English examples, and are often clouded with darker tints. The caterpillar,
-which is figured on Plate 109, Fig. 4, is reddish brown with a pale line
-along the middle of the back edged with dark brown or blackish marks on
-each side; a whitish or pinkish white stripe along the sides with a brown
-edging above. Head ochreous brown, marked with darker. It feeds on heath
-and heather, and hides by day in the moss or among dead leaves, etc., below
-the food plant, August to May. The moth flies, sometimes by day, but
-usually at night, in June, July, and in late seasons in August.
-
-THE PORTLAND MOTH (_Agrotis_ (_Lycophotia_) _praecox_).
-
-The pretty greenish moth with black cross lines, white spots, and
-reddish-brown clouding on the outer area (Plate 107, Fig. 4), is said to
-have been first reared in this country by the Duchess of Portland, early in
-the nineteenth century, hence the English name. Although occasionally found
-several miles from the sea, it is essentially a coast species, and may be
-obtained on the sandhills of Dorsetshire, Devon, Suffolk, Norfolk,
-Cheshire, Lancashire, Yorkshire, and the Isle of Man. Odd specimens
-occasionally occur inland, as for example at Kendal (1899), and in
-Worcestershire (1901 and 1903). In Scotland it is found in suitable places
-along the west coast, from the Firth of Clyde to Sutherland, and on the
-east to Moray; and it is widely spread on the coasts of Ireland. The
-caterpillar is slaty grey; central line on the back whitish or pale
-greyish, expanding on each ring and so forming a series of connected spots,
-edged with darker tint; then a whitish stripe, edged above by a slender
-black line; a whitish or bluish grey stripe along the black spiracles. Head
-pale {212} brown, obscurely marked with darker. It feeds from September to
-June on dwarf sallow, grasses, chickweed, wormwood, etc. The moth flies in
-August.
-
-THE PEARLY UNDERWING (_Agrotis_ (_Lycophotia_) _saucia_).
-
-Two specimens, both males, are represented on Plate 104. Fig. 10 is more or
-less typical and Fig. 9 is referable to var. _margaritosa_, Haworth; both
-occur together wherever the species is found, but the typical form is
-generally the most frequent.
-
-The caterpillar, which tapers slightly towards the head, is reddish grey or
-brown above and paler on the sides; a line along the middle of the back is
-yellowish and edged with dark brown dashes; the line along the greyish
-ringed black spiracles is pale and edged above with black; a yellowish
-blotch on the last ring and a black bar on ring eleven; head pale brown or
-greyish brown marked with black. It feeds on most low plants; also on
-cabbage and rape. It occurs in June and July, and in a second generation in
-September, October, and sometimes November. From eggs laid in September the
-caterpillar hatched in from five days to a fortnight and moths resulted
-from these about six weeks later.
-
-Although it certainly does occur in May and June sometimes, the moth is
-very much more frequently seen in autumn. On the south coast, extending to
-Cornwall and the Scilly Isles, the species is possibly a resident. In other
-parts of the British Isles its occurrence is more or less casual, and,
-although common in some years in other southern, and also eastern and
-northern counties, it does not seem to be permanently established therein.
-No doubt its more general distribution, and abundance here and there, in
-certain years, is due to the arrival of immigrants, either in small numbers
-in the spring, or in swarms later on in the year. {213}
-
-The distribution abroad includes Central, Western, and Southern Europe;
-Asia Minor; Northern Africa, Canaries, and Madeira; North America.
-
-THE NORTHERN RUSTIC (_Agrotis_ (_Episilia_) _lucernea_).
-
-The specimens of this locally variable species shown on Plate 107 are from
-Scotland (Fig. 9 [male]), var. _renigera_, Stephens, and North Wales (Fig.
-10 [female]). Barrett (_Brit. Lep._, vol. 3), discussing the variation,
-remarks, "On the south coast of England, and especially at Portland, the
-general tint is pale smoky grey, much darker towards the hind margin, and
-with the markings moderately distinct; inland mountainous districts,
-especially in North Wales, produce a still paler form; coast districts in
-the west and north a decidedly darker; and in the far west, as in Kerry,
-some specimens are actually slate-black, without more than the faintest
-trace of markings. The Isle of Wight produces deep slate-coloured
-specimens, darker than those from the Isle of Man, which are grey brown.
-Shetland specimens are large and dark, even to glossy blue-black." The
-caterpillar is dusky olive green, mottled all over with small black streaks
-and dapplings; each segment of the body having a faintly indicated pale
-olive-green spot on each subdorsal region, below which, on each side, is an
-oblique shading of blackish green. Head shining black-brown, rather lighter
-brown at the sides (Barrett). It feeds on harebell (_Campanula_), stonecrop
-(_Sedum acre_), saxifrage, cowslip, chickweed, and grasses, from August to
-May. The moth flies in July and August, and in the north and west in
-September. It occurs in rough stony places, on rocky places on the coast,
-and on hills inland, in Kent (Folkestone district), Isle of Wight, Dorset,
-Devon, Cornwall, Gloucestershire (rare), Sussex, Shropshire, Wales,
-Lancashire (rare), Yorkshire, and Westmoreland. It is widely distributed in
-Scotland and Ireland. {214}
-
-THE DOTTED RUSTIC (_Agrotis_ (_Episilia_) _simulans_).
-
-The sexes of this local moth are figured on Plate 107. Fig. 7 represents a
-male from Aberdeen, and Fig. 8 a female from Dorsetshire. The latter is of
-a pale brown colour on the fore wings, and this is somewhat unusual, as the
-prevailing colour of specimens from the Dorset coast is greyish brown.
-
-The caterpillar is ochreous brown, dotted with brown, and marked with dark
-brown, sometimes greenish tinged, on the back; a white stripe below the
-spiracles; head brown and rather glossy. It feeds on grasses and low
-plants, such as dock, dandelion, groundsel, etc. September to May. The moth
-flies in July, August, and September. It occurs at various places on the
-Dorsetshire coast; on the Cotswolds in Gloucestershire; in North Wales, and
-the Isle of Man; also from Cheshire to Cumberland. Widely distributed in
-Scotland, extending to the Hebrides and the Orkneys. In Ireland only
-recorded from Sligo.
-
-THE HEATH RUSTIC (_Agrotis_ (_Eueretagrotis_) _agathina_).
-
-The moth, shown on Plate 107, varies in colour and in marking. Fig. 2
-depicts a specimen from Perthshire, and Fig. 3 one from North Devonshire.
-In Southern England the general tint is pinkish brown, and in the north and
-in Scotland it is dark reddish brown or blackish. A pale greyish form from
-Ireland has been named var. _hebridicola_, Staud. Sometimes specimens are
-distinctly rosy in tint, and these are referable to var. _rosea_, Tutt. The
-caterpillar (Plate 109, Fig. 2) is reddish brown, or green, with whitish
-lines on the back, the central one edged on each sides with blackish, and
-the others inwardly marked with black; a yellowish stripe low down along
-the sides, sometimes marked with reddish; usual dots black; spiracles
-white, dark ringed; head greenish yellow marked with darker in the green
-form, and yellowish brown marked with darker in the brown form. It feeds
-from September to June on heath and heather. The above brief description
-was made from apparently full-grown caterpillars received from the New
-Forest on May 28, 1907, but not one of them attained the chrysalis stage.
-The moth is out in August and September, and occurs on most of the larger
-heaths, and on moorlands throughout the British Isles, including the
-Hebrides and Orkneys.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 110.
- 1. ASHWORTH'S RUSTIC.
- 2, 3. NEGLECTED RUSTIC.
- 4. AUTUMNAL RUSTIC.
- 5. PLAIN CLAY.
- 6. DOUBLE DART.
- 7. FLAME SHOULDER.
- 8. SETACEOUS HEBREW CHARACTER.
- 9. TRIPLE-SPOTTED CLAY.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 111.
- 1. FLAME SHOULDER: _caterpillar_.
- 2. TRIPLE-SPOTTED CLAY: _caterpillar_.
- 3. DOUBLE DART: _caterpillar_.
-
-{215} THE STOUT DART (_Agrotis ravida_ (_obscura_)).
-
-The somewhat dingy brown, or greyish brown moth (Plate 107, Figs. 5 [male],
-6 [female]) is sometimes tinged with reddish, and this tint is generally
-present on the front or costal area.
-
-The caterpillar is ochreous brown with a paler line along the back, and a
-series of dark edged, oblique and more or less curved, yellowish marks on
-each side; head greyish freckled with brownish; plate on first ring brown
-marked with pale lines. It feeds on low-growing plants such as dock,
-dandelion, chickweed, etc.; September to May. The moth flies in July and
-August, but its occurrence in Britain is somewhat irregular. It is found,
-sometimes commonly, in most of the southern and eastern counties of
-England, and also in Durham; and has been occasionally recorded from other
-parts of the country, as well as from Scotland. For several years it may
-seem to quite disappear and then suddenly become common in various
-districts. Its range abroad extends to Amurland, North China, Corea, and
-Japan.
-
-THE NORTHERN DART (_Agrotis_ (_Episilia_) _hyperborea_).
-
-Of this pretty Scottish species (_alpina_, Westw. and Humph.) four examples
-are figured in Plate 108. Figs. 1 and 2 represent specimens from Shetland,
-and Figs. 4 and 5 are from Rannoch specimens. These will show something of
-the variation in this {216} moth, which was not known to occur in the
-British Isles until 1839, when a single specimen was taken on Cairn Gowr in
-Perthshire. No other example seems to have been noted up to 1854, when one
-was found on a rock in the same part of Perthshire. Up to the year 1876,
-only a few specimens had been obtained, but in that year, which was a hot
-and dry one in the Highlands, quite a number were secured. A female was
-also detected laying her yellowish white eggs on crowberry (_Empetrum
-nigrum_) and thus gave a clue which led to the subsequent discovery of
-caterpillars and chrysalids; and these have been obtained in some quantity.
-The caterpillar is reddish, inclining to pinkish brown, freckled with
-darker; three whitish lines on the back, the central one irregularly black
-dotted, edged on both sides with black, and the others with black bars
-along their inside edge; head pale brown freckled and lined with darker
-brown. It feeds from August to June (of the second year following hatching
-from the egg, it is said), on crowberry, bilberry (_Vaccinium_), and
-bearberry (_Arctostaphylos uva-ursi_).
-
-The moth is out from late June until about the middle of August. It only
-occurs with us on the higher mountains in Perthshire, notably those to the
-south of Loch Rannoch; and at lower elevations in Unst, the most northern
-isle of the Shetland group. It has also been recorded from the Orkneys.
-Kane mentions a specimen bred at the end of February, 1893, at Clonbrock,
-Co. Galway, from a caterpillar found at a bog in the vicinity, where
-crowberry grows abundantly. Abroad the species in its typical form is found
-on mountains in Central and Southern Scandinavia, and in modified form in
-Silesia, Hungary, and Switzerland.
-
-ASHWORTH'S RUSTIC (_Agrotis_ (_Episilia_) _ashworthii_).
-
-This moth, which is figured in Plate 110, is considered by some
-entomologists to be a form of _A. candelarum_ peculiar {217} to the hills
-and mountains of North Wales, and found chiefly at Llangollen, Penmaenmawr,
-and Snowdon. The colour of the fore wings varies from pale dove colour to
-dark slaty grey. The caterpillar is blackish, or dark slate colour, with
-two series of velvety black spots, or dashes along the back; head reddish
-brown. It feeds on various low-growing plants, among which are rock-rose,
-wild thyme, sheep's sorrel, bedstraw, etc. Towards the end of April, in
-Flint, they feed freely and crawl about their food plants in the day time
-as well as at night (E. W. H. Blagg). The moth has been reared in November
-and December from eggs found in July, about the second week; the
-caterpillars having been supplied mainly with sallow, with the addition of
-dock, groundsel, plantain, and knot grass (R. Tait). On another occasion
-moths were bred in October from eggs laid by a female reared from
-caterpillars taken in North Wales in the spring (A. Harrison). The moth is
-out in July and August and in its rugged haunts, may be disturbed from
-among the loose rubble, and from chinks in the rocks; but as they come
-freely to sugared herbage, captives in this way would probably be more
-numerous. Discovered at Llangollen in 1853, by Mr. Joseph Ashworth after
-whom it was named by Doubleday in 1855.
-
-NOTE.--Barrett mentions the following Agrotids as having occurred in the
-British Isles.
-
-_A. crassa_, Hubn., "one specimen in the cabinet of Mr. S. Stevens." _A.
-spinifera_, Hubn., a specimen taken in the Isle of Man, August, 1869. _A.
-fennica_, Tauscher, a specimen recorded in the _Zoologist_ for 1850, as
-captured in Derbyshire.
-
-THE ROSY MARSH MOTH (_Noctua_ (_Coenophila_) _subrosea_).
-
-The last two moths were respectively productions of Scotland and Wales; the
-present one is exclusively English, at least it was, because now and for
-perhaps the last fifty years it has been extinct in its old fenny haunts at
-Whittlesea, in Cambridgeshire, {218} and Yaxley, Huntingdonshire. In the
-latter fen it was first noted by Weaver about the year 1837. In 1846 and
-onwards it was plentiful, and the caterpillars were common. All was well
-with the species until about 1851 when the fens were drained, and the moth
-then ceased to appear. (Plate 108, Fig. 3.) In Sweden, Southern Russia, and
-in Amurland the species is represented by a bluish form, var.
-_subcoerulea_, Staud.
-
-THE DOUBLE DART (_Noctua_ (_Exarnis_) _augur_).
-
-The dull brownish moth (Plate 110, Fig. 6), is generally distributed
-throughout the British Isles, including the Orkneys. The fore wings of
-southern specimens are usually suffused with reddish, but this is less
-obvious in northern examples. The markings are sometimes bold and striking
-or, on the other hand, only faintly defined, or largely absent. A
-pinkish-tinged brown form without markings was formerly confused with the
-Continental _A. helvetina_. The moth is on the wing in June and July,
-sometimes in August, especially in the north; and the caterpillar is to be
-found from July to May. When young it feeds on various low-growing plants,
-but later it crawls up at night to devour the leaves of hawthorn, sloe,
-sallow, birch, etc. It is brownish, tinged with pink, and marked on the
-back with a series of V-shaped dashes, and white points; on ring eleven
-there is a yellowish-edged black mark; above the white spiracles is a
-black-edged red-brown stripe. Head pale brown, freckled with darker brown.
-
-THE AUTUMNAL RUSTIC (_Noctua glareosa_).
-
-In its typical form as depicted on Plate 110, Fig. 4, this species is slaty
-grey with black markings. In Devonshire and other parts of the west of
-England, and also in Ireland, it assumes a decided pinkish tinge (var.
-_rosea_, Tutt). Through Scotland the colour becomes darker grey, and in
-Perthshire it merges into blackish grey. In the Shetlands a blackish, or
-sooty-brown form (var. _edda_, Staud.), occurs.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 112.
- 1. INGRAILED CLAY: _caterpillar_.
- 2. PURPLE CLAY: _caterpillar_.
- 3, 3a. SQUARE-SPOT RUSTIC: _caterpillar_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 113.
- 1. DOUBLE SQUARE-SPOT.
- 2. SQUARE-SPOTTED CLAY.
- 3, 4. PURPLE CLAY.
- 5, 6, 7. INGRAILED CLAY.
- 8, 9. INGRAILED CLAY, _var. conflua_.
- 10, 11. INGRAILED CLAY, _var. thulei_.
-
-{219} The caterpillar feeds on grasses and various low plants, also on
-ling, heath, sallow, and has been found on wild hyacinth. It is
-yellowish-brown with dark shaded pale lines on the back, and a dark brown
-stripe on the sides; spiracles and dots blackish. October to June. The moth
-flies in August and September, and affects heathy places, borders of woods,
-etc., throughout the British Isles, including the Hebrides, Orkneys, and
-Shetlands. Except in the New Forest, Hampshire, it does not seem to be
-common in the southern counties of England; it occurs in Epping Forest, and
-in other parts of the eastern counties; northwards it becomes more
-generally distributed and more plentiful.
-
-THE NEGLECTED, OR GREY RUSTIC (_Noctua castanea_).
-
-The reddish typical form of this species is shown on Plate 110, Fig. 3.
-Fig. 2 represents the greyish form, var. _neglecta_, which is most
-frequently met with in southern England. Between these extremes
-intermediate forms occur connecting one with the other. Specimens of a pale
-ochreous colour have been obtained in the vicinity of Market Drayton,
-Shropshire. The caterpillar, which feeds on heather and sallow at night, is
-pale reddish-brown, finely powdered with greyish; below the pale ochreous
-stripe on the sides, the ground colour is greenish; head marked with darker
-brown. September to May. The moth flies in August, and occurs on the larger
-tracts of heathery ground throughout the British Isles, but it is commoner
-in some parts than in others, and appears to be scarce in Ireland. The red
-form, and intermediates, occasionally occur in the New Forest, and also in
-other parts of Southern England, but in Scotland it is not uncommon. The
-distribution abroad is, like that of the last species, pretty much confined
-to Western Europe. {220}
-
-THE DOTTED CLAY (_Noctua baja_).
-
-This species, a male and female of which are shown on Plate 114, Figs. 7
-[male] and 8 [female] is common in wooded districts throughout the British
-Isles, except the Orkneys and the Shetlands. The colour of the fore wings
-ranges from pale greyish brown, or reddish grey, to reddish brown or
-purplish brown. Sometimes the first and second cross lines are bordered, or
-represented, by pale bands.
-
-The caterpillar is dingy ochreous brown, or reddish brown; three yellowish
-lines along the back, the central one edged with blackish; the others have
-blackish bordered yellow triangular marks between them, on each ring from
-three to eleven; spiracles and dots black; head pale brown, shining. It
-feeds in the autumn on various low plants, and in the spring on hawthorn,
-sloe, sallow, bramble, etc. September to May. The moth flies in July and
-August. Its range abroad extends to Amurland and to North America.
-
-THE PLAIN CLAY (_Noctua depuncta_).
-
-This species is represented on Plate 110, Fig. 5, by a female specimen.
-Sometimes the fore wings are more reddish brown in colour, and the markings
-are occasionally bolder. The caterpillar is pale or dark reddish brown
-above, and rather greyish below; the back is marked with dark outlined
-diamonds, and the dark edged white spiracles have a dark shade above them,
-and an ochreous stripe below; head pale brown marked with darker. Feeds on
-primrose, dock, sorrel, nettle, etc. from September to May. The moth flies
-in July, August, and the early part of September. It seems to be more
-frequently and regularly obtained in Scotland, especially in the woods of
-Perthshire, Aberdeen and Moray. In England the species is, or has been,
-found in Oxfordshire (rare in beech woods), {221} Berkshire, Wiltshire
-(Savernake Forest), Devonshire (Dartmoor), South Wales (near Swansea),
-North Wales (Mold), Cheshire (one specimen, Staley-brushes), Yorkshire
-(Scarborough), Durham (one at Bishop Auckland), Cumberland (Barrow Wood).
-The range abroad includes Central Europe (except Holland and Belgium),
-Southern Sweden, Lavonia, and South-east Russia, Armenia, and Northern Asia
-Minor. It may be noted that Stephens, writing in 1829, considered this to
-be a doubtful British species.
-
-THE SETACEOUS HEBREW CHARACTER (_Noctua c-nigrum_).
-
-A male specimen of this often common and generally distributed species is
-shown on Plate 110, Fig. 8. The fore wings vary in colour, from pale
-reddish grey through bright reddish or pinkish brown to purplish brown; the
-costal mark may be whitish, ochreous, or pinkish tinged. The moth is most
-frequently obtained in the autumn, but it is sometimes met with from May to
-July.
-
-The caterpillar is pale brownish or greenish grey, with two series of black
-streaks, and a dark-edged pale central line, on the back; below the black
-outlined white spiracles is a black-edged yellow ochreous, or whitish
-stripe; head ochreous brown streaked with darker brown. It feeds on dock,
-chickweed, groundsel, and other low plants. It is said to feed from
-September to April or May. Possibly, however, in favourable seasons, some
-may pupate either in the autumn or in the early months of the year, and so
-attain the moth state greatly in advance of the majority. The range of this
-species' distribution extends to India, Corea, Japan, and North America.
-
-THE BLACK COLLAR (_Noctua flammatra_).
-
-Fore wings pale greyish brown, with dark-edged pale cross lines; a pale
-whitish brown pink-tinged streak along the front {222} margin to the second
-line; below this is a short black dot; the reniform and orbicular marks are
-pale, the centre sometimes darker, and the claviform has a dark edge but is
-not distinct; the front of the thorax is broadly marked with black, hence
-the English name.
-
-Only three British examples seem to be known; two of these were captured in
-the Isle of Wight, 1859 and 1876, and the third occurred in the lighthouse
-at Cromer in 1875. The range abroad is Central and Southern Europe, Western
-and Central Asia and India.
-
-THE TRIPLE-SPOTTED CLAY (_Noctua ditrapezium_).
-
-The ground colour of the fore wings of this moth ranges from pinkish brown
-through pale reddish brown to a purplish grey brown. The specimen shown on
-Plate 110, Fig. 9 [male] is of the pinkish brown form from Tilgate Forest
-in Sussex. In a series bred from caterpillars obtained at Hampstead,
-North-west London, the bulk of the males are pale reddish brown, and the
-females purplish brown; one male, however, is as dark as the females.
-Caterpillar, purplish brown, mottled above with dark brown; a thin white
-line, interrupted with black, along the middle of the back, and a row of
-black marks on each side; on the sides are oblique blackish marks, with the
-white spiracles showing distinct at their lower ends. Head pale shining
-brown, the cheeks marked with darker brown. Feeds on dandelion, dock,
-chickweed, primrose, and other low plants; also on bramble and sallow, and
-in the spring on the young leaves of birch. September to May (Plate 111,
-Fig. 2).
-
-The moth flies, in and around woods, in July. It is local and not always
-common, but has been found in the north-west and south-west districts of
-London, Kent, Surrey, Sussex, Hampshire, Dorsetshire, Devon, Wales (Swansea
-and Barmouth), and Norfolk (Cromer). It occurs in Scotland (Perthshire),
-and {223} two specimens have been recorded from Ireland. Its range extends
-to Siberia and Amurland.
-
-THE DOUBLE SQUARE-SPOT (_Noctua triangulum_).
-
-This species (Plate 113, Fig. 1) is usually pale brown, more or less tinged
-with reddish, but some specimens are of a rather darker hue, and others
-inclined to greyish. The conspicuous marks in the discal cell, usually
-black or blackish, are sometimes pale or dark reddish brown. The moth flies
-in June and July, and occurs in woods or well-timbered districts throughout
-England (except in Somerset, Dorset, and westward), Wales, Scotland
-(mainland), and Ireland.
-
-THE SQUARE-SPOTTED CLAY (_Noctua stigmatica_).
-
-As will be seen from its portrait (Plate 113, Fig. 2), this moth, although
-darker in colour, is marked somewhat similarly to the last referred to. It
-should be noted, however, that the basal line is less distinct; the
-submarginal line is inwardly shaded with blackish, and there is no blackish
-spot at its costal extremity. The fore wings are sometimes pale reddish
-brown, and sometimes almost blackish.
-
-The caterpillar, which is ochreous, or brownish, is somewhat similar in
-marking to that of _A. ditrapezium_, and feeds on dandelion, dock,
-chickweed, plantain, sallow, etc. In confinement it is said to eat sliced
-carrot or potato, and, if kept warm, may be induced to feed up and attain
-the moth state early in the year.
-
-The moth flies in July and August and seems to be partial to woods. It is
-very local, but occurs not uncommonly in the New Forest, Hampshire, and in
-Oxfordshire and Berkshire beech woods; also found in Buckinghamshire, the
-Eastern Counties, Kent, Sussex, Dorsetshire, Devon, Lancashire (once),
-Yorkshire (very local), and North Wales (once). In Scotland {224} it
-appears to be more widely spread, but has not been noted in Ireland.
-
-THE PURPLE CLAY (_Noctua brunnea_).
-
-The fore wings of this moth (Plate 113, Figs. 3, 4) range in colour from
-purplish brown to reddish brown, or pale reddish brown; some of the darker
-forms are suffused with greyish, and the central area is occasionally
-ochreous tinged. There is also variation in the markings, especially the
-reniform stigma which is usually more or less filled in with ochreous or
-whitish tint, but not infrequently it is merely outlined in one of these
-colours, and the centre is then dark grey brown, sometimes enclosing a
-whitish or ochreous crescent. These remarks are of general application, but
-refer to a long series I obtained in North Devon.
-
-The caterpillar (Plate 112, Fig. 2) is reddish brown with a yellowish tinge
-and with black dots and ochreous markings. It feeds on bilberry, wood-rush
-(_Luzula_), various low plants, bramble, sallow, and in the spring it
-attacks the buds and young leaves of the birch saplings, etc. August to
-May. The moth flies in June and July, and is often common in woods over
-almost the whole of the British Isles, including the Hebrides and the
-Orkneys. The range abroad extends to Amurland.
-
-THE INGRAILED CLAY (_Noctua primulae_).
-
-This species, long known as _festiva_, but for which Esper's earlier name
-_primulae_ will have to be adopted, is exceedingly variable. Specimens of
-the more or less typical form and also of the forms known as _conflua_ and
-_thulei_ are portrayed on Plate 113. The fore wings range in colour from
-pale ochreous to chestnut brown, and from grey to smoky grey brown. The
-cross lines are distinct in some specimens, but in others are hardly
-visible; the discal cell is often no darker than the {225} general colour,
-but sometimes there is a reddish square spot in place of the usual black
-one; the reniform and orbicular marks may be only faintly outlined, and the
-latter sometimes cannot be traced; the brownish band-like shade between the
-outer and submarginal lines is frequently only indicated by a short dash
-from the front margin, and even this is occasionally absent.
-
-The smaller moorland and mountain form, var. _conflua_, Treitschke, and in
-the vulgar tongue The Lesser Ingrailed, varies on somewhat similar lines.
-(Plate 113, Figs. 8, 9.) Var. _thulei_, Staudinger, also varies greatly in
-colour and in marking. Some specimens are dark reddish brown, or
-occasionally smoky brown; others are pale reddish brown, grey brown,
-reddish grey, or grey; the pale cross lines are generally distinct, in the
-darker specimens especially. This form, which is peculiar to the Shetland
-Isles, is shown on Plate 113, Figs. 10, 11. In the foregoing remarks
-reference has been made only to the general trend of variation; many other
-forms of aberration in this species might be mentioned if space permitted.
-
-The caterpillar is pale or dark reddish or olive brown inclining to pinkish
-between the rings; the lines are yellowish, the central paler edged with
-brown, and the outer ones edged with blackish marks; oblique darker dashes
-on the sides; spiracles black, ochreous ringed, with a pale stripe below
-them; head pale brown marked with darker. It feeds on primrose, bilberry,
-dock, sallow, hawthorn, bramble, etc. August to May. (Plate 112, Fig. 1.)
-The moth flies in June, but specimens of a second generation have been
-obtained, in confinement, from August to October. The species in one form
-or another occurs in woods, on moorlands, etc., over the whole of the
-British Isles.
-
-THE BARRED CHESTNUT (_Noctua dahlii_).
-
-The sexes of this species are depicted on Plate 114. It will be noted that
-the female (Fig. 2) is darker in colour than the {226} male (Fig. 1). The
-sexual colour difference holds good generally, but there are exceptions and
-the male may sometimes be dark, like the female; or the latter sex may
-occasionally assume a reddish coloration. As a rule the reniform mark is
-most distinct in the female. A form occurring in Ireland with the fore
-wings dark sepia colour and the reniform mark clear whitish has been named
-var. _perfusca_, Kane. The caterpillar varies in the colour of the back
-through various shades of ochreous and brown to dark reddish brown, and
-this is always in strong contrast with the colour of the lower parts; the
-lines are pale, and the outer ones on the back are edged with black dashes;
-spots and spiracles black; head pale brown. It feeds on dock, plantain,
-etc., and in the spring on young sallow leaves. In confinement will become
-full grown before Christmas, but normally it feeds from September to May.
-The moth is out in late July and in August. It is found on heaths,
-moorlands, and in woods; it is not uncommon in some parts of the Midlands,
-and is found in Cheshire and northwards to Cumberland. It also occurs in
-Herefordshire, Pembrokeshire; in the south and east of England it is not
-frequent, but has been taken in South Oxfordshire, Berkshire (Newbury),
-Suffolk, Hants (Winchester and New Forest), etc. Widely distributed in
-Scotland, and locally abundant in Ireland. The distribution abroad extends
-to Amurland and Japan.
-
-THE SMALL SQUARE SPOT (_Noctua rubi_).
-
-There are two generations of this species. The first is on the wing in
-June, and the second in August, September, and sometimes even in October.
-An example of each brood is shown on Plate 114, Fig. 3, 1st gen., Fig. 4,
-2nd gen. The early moths are larger in size than the later ones, but are
-fewer in number. Moths of the second generation often abound at the sugar
-patches, and on ragwort blossom. The colour of {227} the fore wings varies
-from pale to dark reddish brown in both broods.
-
-The caterpillar is greyish ochreous or brown, with dark-edged paler lines,
-and the brown head is marked with darker. It feeds on dandelion, dock,
-grass, etc. Those of the first generation feed from autumn to spring, and
-those of the second during the summer. The moth is found in almost every
-part of the British Isles, except, perhaps, the Hebrides and Shetlands.
-
-THE SIX-STRIPED RUSTIC (_Noctua umbrosa_).
-
-This species (Plate 114, Fig. 5), is also generally distributed over our
-islands as far north as Moray, but it is rather partial to marshy
-situations. The caterpillar, which feeds from August to May on dock,
-plantain, bramble, bedstraw, etc., is pale ochreous or brownish, freckled
-with darker, and with dark-edged, pale ochreous lines on the back, the
-outer ones with a series of black wedges along them; a dark brown stripe
-low down along the sides; head pale brown marked with darker. The moth
-flies in July and August. It seems to prefer the flowers of the ragwort and
-the honey-dew on foliage to sugar, but the latter has attractions for it
-nevertheless.
-
-COUSIN GERMAN (_Noctua_ (_Mythimna_) _sobrina_).
-
-On Plate 114, Fig. 6, is a portrait of this greyish suffused purple-brown
-species, which in the British Isles is seemingly confined to certain
-localities in Perthshire and Aberdeen, and was first met with in the former
-county by Weaver in 1853. According to Barrett it is found chiefly in
-mountain districts from 700 feet above sea-level upwards.
-
-The caterpillar is reddish or red brown, slightly mottled with grey; the
-marking on the back almost linear, widening a little, but narrowly
-lozenge-shaped near the end of each ring, and {228} having on the widest
-part a round pale spot of dirty ochreous; sides much mottled with grey;
-dots and spiracles black, and under the latter a pale pinkish, ochreous,
-brown stripe; head shining brownish ochreous, with two black dots in front
-of each lobe. (Adapted from Buckler.) It feeds on heather, bilberry, birch,
-grass, etc. September to June. The moth flies in July and August.
-
-THE SQUARE-SPOT RUSTIC (_Noctua_ (_Segetia_) _xanthographa_).
-
-Four examples of this very common and most variable species are shown on
-Plate 114, Figs. 9-12. The colour of the fore wings ranges from whity
-brown, or drab, through various shades of grey-brown and red-brown to
-blackish. The more or less square reniform, and the orbicular, marks are
-subject to a good deal of modification; in some specimens they are whitish
-or ochreous and very conspicuous, and in others exceedingly faint or
-entirely missing; or the reniform may be well defined and prominent, and
-the orbicular absent; the cross lines are frequently obscure, except the
-dark-edged, pale submarginal, and this, too, may be wanting; occasionally
-there is a blackish shade between the stigmata and extending from the front
-to inner margins. The hind wings of the males are whitish, with a dark
-marginal border of variable width, but rarely, so far as I have noted,
-entirely absent; those of the females are uniformly darker.
-
-The full-grown caterpillar (Plate 112, Fig. 3) is hardly separable from
-that of _N. umbrosa_, and feeds at the same date on low-growing plants,
-etc. The moth flies in August and early September. It is generally
-distributed throughout the British Isles, and is abundant pretty well
-everywhere.
-
-THE FLAME SHOULDER (_Noctua_ (_Ochropleura_) _plecta_).
-
-This moth (Plate 110, Fig. 7) is also common, and generally distributed
-throughout England, Ireland, Scotland (mainland), and Wales. The fore wings
-are usually purplish brown, but sometimes they are palish red brown; the
-creamy stripe on the front margin is more or less sprinkled with scales of
-the ground colour, occasionally so thickly that these marks appear reddish
-in tint; there is often a pale, wavy submarginal line, and in some
-specimens a dusky second line can be detected; not infrequently there are
-traces of the claviform mark, but I do not remember ever seeing any
-indication of a first line. The hind wings are white, and frequently the
-fringes are pale pinky brown.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 114.
- 1, 2. BARRED CHESTNUT.
- 3, 4. SMALL SQUARE-SPOT.
- 5. SIX-STRIPED RUSTIC.
- 6. COUSIN GERMAN.
- 7, 8. DOTTED CLAY.
- 9, 10, 11, 12. SQUARE SPOT RUSTIC.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 115.
- 1, 2. LUNAR YELLOW UNDERWING.
- 4, 5, 7, 8. LESSER YELLOW UNDERWING.
- 3, 6. LARGE YELLOW UNDERWING.
-
-{229} The caterpillar is brownish, varying from ochreous to reddish,
-freckled with darker; the broken lines on the back are pale, with dark
-edges, and there is a brown freckled, pale ochreous stripe along the sides;
-the usual spots are black, and the spiracles whitish, edged with brownish;
-head brown marked with darker. It feeds on various low plants, and also on
-lettuce, beet, etc., in gardens; there are certainly two broods in most
-years, one in the summer and the other in the autumn. The moth is out in
-May and June, and again in August and September. Specimens have also been
-taken in July, and occasionally in April. The species has a very extensive
-range abroad, extending to India, Corea, Japan, and North America.
-
-THE FLAME (_Axylia putris_).
-
-This species, which is depicted on Plate 132, Fig. 13, is pretty constant
-in its pale coloration and darker markings. It is often common, and is
-widely spread throughout England, Wales, Ireland, and in Scotland up to
-Ross.
-
-The caterpillar is greyish brown, mottled and dusted with blackish, chiefly
-so on the sides; the central line is darker but indistinct, and there is a
-yellow spot on each ring; a whitish line on each side of the central one is
-edged above with curved black dashes, and these are most distinct on rings
-four to ten; {230} the eleventh ring is edged behind with ochreous; head
-dark brown; spiracles and raised dots blackish. (Adapted from Fenn.) It
-feeds on hedge bedstraw (_Galium mollugo_), dock, plantain, nettle, and
-many other low plants; also on lettuce. July to October. Generally the
-winter is passed in the chrysalis stage, and the moth comes out in the
-following June or July. Sometimes the moth has emerged in September.
-
-THE LESSER YELLOW UNDERWING (_Triphaena_ (_Agrotis_) _comes_ = _orbona_).
-
-This very variable species, of which the typical forms and two varieties
-are represented on Plate 115, is to be found, often abundantly, almost
-everywhere in the British Isles, except the Shetlands.
-
-Apart from a form peculiar to Scotland, which will be separately referred
-to, the colour range of the fore wings is from pale ochreous-brown to a
-deep brown; in all shades there may be a tinge of reddish, or a suffusion
-of greyish. In Ireland and Scotland, and less frequently in England, a
-distinctly red form occurs. (Plate 115, Fig. 7.) Then there is variation in
-the markings, and more particularly in the reniform and orbicular marks;
-both stigmata are, perhaps, rarely absent, but they are frequently very
-faint, and of the orbicular there is often not a trace. On the other hand,
-both may be filled up with dark brown, or blackish, and very conspicuous.
-The cross lines, and more especially the shaded submarginal, are usually
-pretty much in evidence, but these are apt to disappear entirely. The
-yellow hind wings are occasionally smudged with blackish towards the base;
-the central crescents vary in size, and somewhat in shape, and although
-sometimes greatly reduced, they are only rarely quite missing; the black
-band before the outer margin is also subject to modification in width and
-the regularity of its edges. {231}
-
-Var. _curtisii_, Newman, was discovered in the Isle of Bute by Curtis in
-1825, but until 1871, when Newman gave it the name it now bears, it had
-been known as _consequa_, the name assigned to it by Curtis when figured by
-him in 1831. The form is generally rather smaller than the type; the fore
-wings are rich reddish brown, clouded to a greater or lesser extent with
-blackish, and sometimes entirely suffused with that colour. The yellow
-ground of the hind wings is rarely quite free of black scales, but in some
-specimens they are so thick that the yellow is hidden. A specimen of this
-form is shown on Plate 115, Fig. 8. It is found in the Orkneys,
-Sutherlandshire, Elgin, Inverness, Aberdeenshire; also in the Hebrides, and
-in the Isles of Bute and Arran.
-
-The caterpillar (Plate 118, Fig. 2), is greenish ochreous varying to
-greenish brown; three yellowish lines on the back, the central edged with
-blackish and the others with dark oblong marks; spiracles white, edged with
-blackish, and below them an ochreous stripe; head grey brown marked with
-darker. It feeds on grass and most low plants from September to April. The
-moth is out in July and August.
-
-Abroad it occurs chiefly in Central and Southern Europe, but its range
-extends to Southern Scandinavia and eastward to Asia Minor and Armenia.
-
-THE LUNAR YELLOW UNDERWING (_Triphaena_ (_Agrotis_) _orbona_ = _subsequa_).
-
-Two specimens of this species are shown on Plate 115. Fig. 1 represents a
-specimen from Forres, in Scotland, and Fig. 2 an example from the New
-Forest, Hants.
-
-Although there is some variation in the colour of the fore wings (which
-ranges from pale greyish brown to dark reddish brown), and also in the
-intensity and clearness of the markings, this species is far less aberrant
-than that last referred to, and {232} from which it is at once separated by
-the black mark on the front margin, placed on the inner edge of the
-submarginal line. The caterpillar is distinguished from that of _comes_ by
-the black-edged broader ochreous central line, and a series of black oblong
-spots on each side of it; the stripe under the spiracles is broad, and
-ochreous. It feeds from September to April on grasses and various low
-plants. The moth flies in July and August. The species is widely
-distributed in Scotland, and occurs in Unst, the most northern of the
-Shetland Isles. In England it occurs, or has been found, in Durham,
-Yorkshire, Worcestershire (Malvern), Herefordshire, Gloucestershire,
-Oxfordshire, Norfolk, Suffolk (not uncommon in the "Breck" district),
-Surrey, Sussex, Wilts, Hants (rather commonly in the New Forest), and the
-Isle of Wight. For Wales, Barrett states that it is rare in Pembrokeshire;
-and Kane mentions Co. Galway (four specimens), Killarney, and Lisbellaw for
-Ireland. The range abroad is somewhat similar to that of _comes_, but it
-extends further north in Scandinavia.
-
-THE LARGE YELLOW UNDERWING (_Triphaena_ (_Agrotis_) _pronuba_).
-
-The colour of the fore wings of this common, and often abundant, species
-ranges through various shades of brown to dark purplish. In the typical
-form (Plate 115, Fig. 3), the wings are of the paler shades, mottled with
-darker, and the thorax, except the pale front, agrees in colour with the
-darker mottling of the wings. Fig. 6 shows the plain form (var. _innuba_,
-Treitschke), and it is in this form that the darkest colours appear; the
-thorax is always of the wing colour, and without the pale front. The black
-mark at upper end of the submarginal line is rarely absent, but I have a
-pale reddish-brown example of the _innuba_ form without the mark. In the
-black-bordered yellow hind wings a central crescent is very {233}
-exceptional, but specimens in which it is more or less evident are not
-unknown.
-
-The eggs figured on Plate 118 were found in August, 1906, on a leaf of
-gladiolus in the garden. When first noticed they were of a pale
-creamy-white colour, but two days afterwards the upper half of the batch
-became purplish grey, and the caterpillars hatched out the following
-morning, when the other half had also changed colour, and the larvae
-hatched next day.
-
-The caterpillar (Plate 118, Fig. 1), is obscure brownish, sometimes
-ochreous or green tinged; with ochreous lines on the back, the outer ones
-edged with blackish bars on rings four to eleven; head pale brown marked
-with darker. It feeds from August to May on grasses and low plants, and is
-often a pest in the flower or vegetable garden. When eggs are obtained
-early, the caterpillars from them will sometimes attain the moth state in
-the same year. The moth flies in June and July, and has occurred in April,
-September, and October.
-
-THE BROAD-BORDERED YELLOW UNDERWING (_Triphaena fimbria_).
-
-This is another species with variable coloured fore wings, and four
-examples of it are shown on Plate 116. Pale ochreous brown and greyish
-brown is the most frequent colour, but various shades of greenish or olive
-brown are not uncommon. A dark reddish-brown form, known to collectors as
-the "mahogany form," seems to be somewhat rare. In the majority of
-specimens the basal third, and more or less of the central area adjacent to
-the second line seems to be the darkest coloured; but occasionally these
-parts are pretty much of the same tint as the rest of the wings.
-
-The caterpillar (Plate 118, Fig. 4) is of a soft ochreous brown, sometimes
-red tinted, minutely dotted with blackish; the central line on the back is
-pale, and on each side are darkly-edged pale {234} oblique streaks; the
-white spiracles are followed by blackish marks; head brown freckled with
-darker. It feeds in the autumn on primrose, violet, dock, etc., and in the
-spring it seems to prefer the buds and young leaves of birch, sallow,
-bramble, hawthorn, sloe, chestnut, etc. The chrysalis, which also is
-figured, is dark reddish-brown, with two short anal spikes.
-
-This species occurs in June and July, and frequents woodland localities
-throughout England, Ireland, Scotland (up to Moray), and Wales.
-
-THE LESSER BROAD-BORDER (_Triphaena ianthina_).
-
-Fore wings violet or purplish grey with blackish cross bands and brownish
-suffusion, the latter more especially on the basal area; reniform and
-orbicular stigma outlined in whitish. (Plate 116, Fig. 3.) In another form
-the bands and suffusion are reddish-brown. The black clouding on basal area
-of hind wings sometimes extends further towards the marginal band. The
-caterpillar (Plate 118, Fig. 3) is of a greenish tinged ochreous brown
-colour, with a pale central line and series of dusky dashes along the back,
-these dashes becoming blackish on the hind rings; the white spiracles are
-set in a blackish mark, and under them is a pale ochreous stripe. It feeds
-in the autumn on primrose, bramble, dock, etc., and in the spring on the
-young growth of sallow, elm, hawthorn, etc. The moth flies in July and
-August, frequenting lanes, hedgerows, and woods. It is pretty generally
-distributed throughout England, Wales, Ireland, and Scotland as far north
-as Moray.
-
-THE LEAST YELLOW UNDERWING (_Triphaena interjecta_).
-
-Fore wings, dull reddish brown with darker cross lines and shades, often
-faint. On the inner margin of the yellow hind wings, two dusky shades run
-from the border to the base; these {235} are not infrequently as black as
-the border, which is often broader than in the specimen shown on Plate 116
-(Fig. 4). The caterpillar is ochreous brown dotted with black; on the
-middle of the back is a brown stripe enclosing a whitish central line. A
-brown stripe along the sides is edged above with whitish; the head is pale
-ochreous brown lined with darker. Stated by Barrett to feed on grasses and
-low plants, or, in the spring, on young shoots of sallow; said also to eat
-primrose and dock. September to May. The moth is out in July and August,
-and affects lanes and hedgerows. I have found it more frequently on flowers
-of ragwort, and on "honey-dew," than on the sugar patch; but have met with
-it occasionally darting along some particular bit of hedgerow, in the late
-afternoon. Although apparently uncommon in the Midlands, it occurs more or
-less freely throughout England to Durham. In Ireland it has been found in
-counties Dublin, Wicklow, Waterford, Cork, Louth, Westmeath, Galway (Kane),
-and, Barrett adds, Antrim.
-
-THE GREEN ARCHES (_Eurois prasina_).
-
-This moth is shown on Plate 117. When quite fresh the ground colour of the
-fore wings is a beautiful green, but this often fades after a time, and the
-wings then assume an ochreous hue. The cross lines are black relieved with
-whitish, and there is a whitish blotch on the second line touching the
-outer edges of the reniform stigma. The green colour varies in tint even
-when the insects are alive; and the black markings differ in intensity,
-being much stronger in some specimens than in others. The caterpillar is
-greyish brown, more or less tinged with violet; there are three fine
-whitish lines, and a series of blackish diamond-shaped marks on the back;
-the spiracles are white, and there is an ochreous stripe below them. It
-feeds on dock and other low plants, bramble, and in the spring on sallow
-shoots and the young growth of bilberry. July to April, or May. {236} The
-moth, which frequents woods; flies in June, but has been reared, as a
-second generation, late in the year. The species seems to be pretty
-generally distributed over England and Ireland, and is often common,
-especially in the south and east of the former country. From the Midlands
-northwards it appears to be less common, and its range more restricted. In
-Scotland it has been recorded from Roxburghshire (common at sugar in 1898),
-the Clyde district, and, Barrett adds, Perthshire.
-
-THE GREAT BROCADE (_Eurois occulta_).
-
-On Plate 117, Fig. 3 represents the typical grey form of this species, and
-Fig. 4 the black var. _passetii_, Thierry-Mieg. Intermediates occur
-connecting the melanic form with the type, and sometimes specimens are
-found of a paler hue than the type. Bred specimens occasionally have a rosy
-tinge, and this is then usually most in evidence between the first and
-second cross lines. The caterpillar is brown, with three ochreous lines on
-the back, the outer with dark oblique dashes on each ring; a whitish stripe
-along the spiracles is blotched with reddish, and edged above with black.
-It feeds in the autumn on dock, plantain, primrose, dandelion, etc., and in
-the spring on bramble, bilberry, sallow, heather, and birch, among other
-things. Usually it hibernates when small, but when kept indoors, and fairly
-warm, it can be induced to complete growth, and attain the moth state in
-October or later, sometimes even earlier. In the open the moth flies from
-the end of June to August.
-
-Scotland appears to be the British home of the species, and it is found in
-most woods throughout that country, including the isles, but it is rare in
-the Shetlands. It occurs in Durham (rare), and in Yorkshire was not
-uncommon at Everingham in 1897, and several were obtained at Middlesbrough
-in 1900. Further south its occurrence is even more casual, and the most
-recent captures I have any note of are, two specimens in Lincolnshire,
-August, 1896, and one each in Norfolk and North East London, August, 1900.
-Also recorded from Essex. Only two specimens are known from Ireland.
-
-The range abroad extends to Amurland, Corea, and to North America.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 116.
- 1, 2, 5, 6. BROAD-BORDERED YELLOW UNDERWING.
- 3. LESSER BROAD-BORDERED YELLOW UNDERWING.
- 4. LEAST YELLOW UNDERWING.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 117.
- 1, 2. GREEN ARCHES.
- 3, 4. GREAT BROCADE.
- 5. SILVERY ARCHES.
- 6. PALE SHINING BROWN.
-
-{237} THE SILVERY ARCHES (_Aplecta_ (_Mamestra_) _tincta_).
-
-The moth represented on Plate 117, Fig. 5, has the fore wings silvery grey
-clouded with brownish on the central area; or occasionally spreading over a
-larger portion of the wings, and sometimes purplish in tint. The
-caterpillar is brownish inclining to reddish, clouded on the back with
-paler and darker brown. The central line, which has a broken blackish
-edging, is only distinct on the front rings. Spiracles black; head pale
-brown marked with darker brown. In the autumn it feeds on low plants such
-as dock, plantain, etc.; but in the spring it is found at night on the
-young growth of birch and sallow bushes, and more rarely on hawthorn, and I
-believe, on bilberry. The moth which occurs in birch woods in June and
-July, is not uncommon in the south of England from Essex to Hampshire, and
-has been found in Dorset and Devonshire. It has also been obtained more or
-less frequently in Berkshire, Oxfordshire, Cambridgeshire (once),
-Huntingdon, Worcestershire (Wyre Forest and Malvern), Staffordshire
-(north), Lancashire (Witherslack), Yorkshire (Huddersfield, once), and
-Westmoreland. In Scotland it ranges on the west from Ayr to Argyllshire,
-but although local is more frequent in Perthshire, Moray, and Sutherland.
-Var. _obscurata_, Staud., is a form of this species occurring in Amurland
-and Southern Siberia.
-
-THE PALE SHINING BROWN (_Aplecta_ (_Mamestra_) _advena_).
-
-This moth (Plate 117, Fig. 6) is pale reddish brown and glossy, especially
-on the outer area, on the fore wings. The caterpillar {238} is pale
-ochreous brown above, and inclining to greenish below; three dark-edged
-pale lines, and a series of dark diamond-shaped marks on the back. The
-usual dots are whitish encircled with blackish, and the blackish edged
-spiracles are reddish brown; head olive brown, and plate on first ring
-blackish with the three lines showing distinct. From July to September it
-feeds on various low plants, including rest-harrow, dandelion, and
-knotgrass, also on broom, bilberry (Barrett); and Newman mentions
-sowthistle (_Sonchus_) and lettuce. In confinement the moth sometimes
-emerges in the autumn, but in the open it flies in June and July. Flowers
-seem to have more attraction for it than sugar. I have taken it at the
-blossoms of wood sage, white campion, and woundwort (_Stachys_), and
-Barrett notes, bladder campion, viper's bugloss, and the martagon lily. The
-species is chiefly found, as regards England, in the southern and eastern
-counties; and in the Solway, Clyde, Forth, and Tay districts of Scotland.
-Louth is the only Irish county from which it has been reported. The range
-abroad extends to Amurland. In North America the species is represented by
-var. _purpurissata_, Grote.
-
-THE GREY ARCHES (_Aplecta_ (_Mamestra_) _nebulosa_).
-
-Grey of some shade is the more general hue of this species, but it varies
-in the West of England and in Ireland to white (var. _pallida_, Tutt), and
-this form is shown on Plate 119, Fig. 3. In Cheshire (Delamere), Lancashire
-(Warrington), and South Yorkshire black or blackish forms occur, and two
-examples of this melanic race are portrayed on the plate, Fig. 4 being var.
-_robsoni_, Collins, and Fig. 5 var. _thompsoni_, Arkle. Over the greater
-part of England, and in Scotland, the greyish form is most frequently met
-with, but the white form has been found in Argyllshire and in Sutherland.
-The caterpillar is ochreous brown or brownish grey, with a series of
-diamond-shaped blackish marks, and a pale central line, on the back; {239}
-the dots and the spiracles are black, each of the latter with a blackish
-streak in front of it. In the autumn it feeds upon dock and other low
-plants; but in the spring, when it is more easily found, the caterpillar
-eats the buds and young leaves of birch, oak, sallow, bramble, etc. The
-moth is out in June and July, and is not uncommon in woods. The black form
-seems to be peculiar to north England. In Amurland the species is
-represented by var. _askolda_, Oberthur, and in North America by var.
-_nimbosa_, Guenee.
-
-THE CABBAGE MOTH (_Barathra brassicae_).
-
-The darker markings of this very common greyish moth are often very
-obscure, but the white outline of the reniform stigma, and the white
-submarginal line are usually distinct. The caterpillar varies in colour,
-but generally is some shade of dull brown or greenish, with the usual dots
-greyish or green tinged. The central line on the back is dusky, speckled
-with white, and the stripe low down on the sides is yellowish, greenish, or
-dingy brown; head ochreous brown marked with darker or greenish. Although
-it is exceedingly partial to the cabbage and other plants of the kind, it
-will feed upon almost every sort of low herbage, wild or cultivated.
-Barrett states that it has been found feeding on oak. I have taken it from
-birch in the garden, and it is known to eat leaves of almost any tree or
-shrub that may be offered to it in confinement. July to October. The moth
-is out in June and July, and sometimes there is an emergence in September.
-The species occurs over the whole of the British Isles, and abroad its
-range extends to India, Amurland, and Japan. (Plate 120, Figs. 3[male],
-6[female].)
-
-THE DOT (_Mamestra persicariae_).
-
-The striking feature of the bluish-black moth shown on Plate 120, Figs. 1,
-2, is the brownish centred white reniform {240} stigma. Except that the
-yellowish submarginal line is sometimes obscured, the species is very
-constant in the British Isles. Abroad, a form without the white mark is
-known as _unicolor_, Staud., and one or two examples have been recorded as
-occurring in England, two in 1895 said to have been reared by a northern
-collector from caterpillars obtained in the London district. The
-caterpillar figured on Plate 129, Fig. 2, was pale green with darker green
-markings. In another form the colour is pale brown with the markings darker
-brown. It is found from August to October on all sorts of low plants, and
-in the garden, where it is often common in the suburbs of London, is very
-fond of the foliage of _Anemone japonica_ and lupin, among other plants.
-The moth is out in July and August, but is not often common north of the
-Midlands, though it occurs, or has been found in almost all the counties of
-England. Its occurrence in Scotland seems to be doubtful, and Kane states
-that it is rare in Ireland, and almost absent from the northern counties.
-Its range abroad extends to China and Japan.
-
-THE WHITE COLON (_Mamestra albicolon_).
-
-Two specimens of this species are shown on Plate 120, Figs. 7, 8. It will
-be noted that, except for the two white dots at the lower outer edge, the
-outline of the reniform mark is very obscure; these dots are placed one
-below the other, thus forming a :, hence the English name of the moth.
-Blackish specimens have been obtained on the east coast of Scotland.
-
-The caterpillar is green or bluish grey, with a dark-edged pale central
-line; spiracles white, margined with black. Barrett states that it feeds in
-June and July, and probably as a partial second generation in September, on
-plantain, dandelion, and other low plants growing in sand; probably also on
-_Atriplex_, _Chenopodium_, and Cruciferae; but it is a larva of secret
-habits and is very little known.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 118.
- 1, 1a. LARGE YELLOW UNDERWING: _eggs and caterpillar_.
- 2. LESSER YELLOW UNDERWING: _caterpillar_.
- 3, 3a. LESSER BROAD-BORDER: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
- 4, 4a. BROAD-BORDERED YELLOW UNDERWING: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 119.
- GREY ARCHES MOTH _and varieties_.
-
-{241}
-
-The moth, which flies in May and June, and again in July and August,
-frequents sandhills on the west, especially those of Yorkshire, Lancashire,
-Cheshire, and Wales. In Norfolk and Suffolk it is found in the Breck Sand
-district as well as on the coast, and it also occurs on the coasts of
-Dorset, Somerset, Devon, and Cornwall, but seems to be uncommon in most of
-these counties. In Scotland it occurs in suitable parts of the east coast
-to Aberdeen, and on the west coast to the Clyde; and in Ireland on the
-coasts of Kerry, Louth, and Derry.
-
-THE BRIGHT-LINE BROWN-EYE (_Mamestra oleracea_).
-
-The English name of this very common moth (Plate 120, Figs. 4, 5), applies
-to the majority of specimens, but now and then the ochreous, or yellow
-reniform stigma, referred to as the brown eye, is blurred and indistinct,
-and the white submarginal line may almost disappear. The ground colour of
-the fore wings ranges from reddish or purple brown to dark brown. The
-caterpillar (Plate 129, Fig. 1), varies from green to light brown,
-sometimes the brownish forms are tinged with pink; the body is minutely
-dotted with white, and the usual dots are black; the spiracles are white,
-margined with black, and placed on the blackish edge of a yellow stripe;
-there are three greyish, but frequently indistinct, lines on the back. It
-feeds from July to September on most low plants, and is often found in
-abundance under spreading clumps of goose-foot (_Chenopodium_), and has
-been noted in profusion upon tamarisk growing by the sea. The moth flies in
-June and July, sometimes in the autumn. Except, perhaps, in the Hebrides,
-it has been found throughout the British Isles.
-
-THE LIGHT BROCADE (_Mamestra genistae_).
-
-The moth portrayed on Plate 121, Fig. 1, is not given to much variation.
-The central area enclosed by the cross lines is {242} more or less clouded
-with reddish or purplish brown, not extending, as a rule, below the black
-bar between the lines, but sometimes the inner area is clouded with
-purplish from the second cross line to the base of the wing. The
-caterpillar is pale olive greenish above, with brownish and blackish
-diamonds or V-shaped markings; three lines on the back are dark-edged but
-indistinct; a cloudy line along the white spiracles. The colour varies from
-greenish to brownish grey or purplish brown, and all shades may occur in
-the same brood. It feeds in July and August on broom, dyer's greenweed
-(_Genista tinctoria_), persicaria, and other low plants. The moth is out in
-May and June, and may be seen in the daytime on palings and other kinds of
-fencing, and also on tree trunks. It occurs in England from Worcestershire
-and Northampton southwards, but seems to be rarely met with northwards.
-Four or five specimens were taken at electric light near Tarporley,
-Cheshire, about 1900 (Day's List). It has been recorded from Ayr, Argyll,
-and Paisley in Scotland, but its occurrence in Ireland is doubtful. The
-distribution abroad ranges to Eastern Siberia.
-
-THE DOG'S TOOTH (_Mamestra dissimilis_).
-
-The example of this species shown on Plate 121, Fig. 2, is of the
-reddish-tinged pale brown form from Essex; but in that county, and also in
-other parts of England, the fore wings are sometimes clouded with
-sooty-brown. In other forms the fore wings are purplish or reddish brown,
-and the markings may be very distinct, or much obscured. The caterpillar is
-greenish or brown, minutely dotted with white, and freckled with dark
-greyish; the usual dots are black; there are indications of darker lines on
-the back, but these are not always clearly defined; the white spiracles are
-set in the black interrupted edge of a yellowish stripe. It feeds in July
-and August, on dock, plantain, etc. The moth flies in June and July, and
-occasionally in the autumn. Its haunts are marshy places, especially on the
-coast, and mosses; and it is found in most of the seaboard southern and
-eastern counties, and more rarely inland. Recorded from Ayr and
-Kirkcudbright in Scotland; is widely distributed in Ireland, and not rare
-in Louth and Kerry.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 120.
- 1, 2. DOT MOTH.
- 4, 5. BRIGHT-LINE BROWN-EYE.
- 3, 6. CABBAGE MOTH.
- 7, 8. WHITE COLON.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 121.
- 1. LIGHT BROCADE.
- 2. DOG'S TOOTH.
- 3, 4. DARK BROCADE.
- 5. BEAUTIFUL ARCHES.
- 6. BEAUTIFUL BROCADE.
- 7. PALE SHOULDERED BROCADE.
-
-{243} THE PALE-SHOULDERED BROCADE (_Mamestra thalassina_).
-
-The whitish or creamy-white patch at the base of the reddish-brown fore
-wings is a noticeable feature of this moth (Plate 121, Fig. 7), and is
-almost always present, even when the wings are darkened and the other
-markings more or less obscured. The W-like angles of the white submarginal
-line run through to the fringes. In some specimens the general colour is
-purplish brown, and in others greyish brown. The caterpillar is
-greyish-brown with a slight reddish tinge, and freckled with darker brown;
-the usual dots are black; central line dusky, a series of darker oblique
-dashes on each side of it; the line along the spiracles is rather broad and
-sometimes edged above with blackish. It feeds in August and September on
-dock, groundsel, honeysuckle, broom, sallow, hawthorn, apple, etc. The moth
-is out in June, earlier or later according to the season; sometimes it
-appears again in August or September. It may be found, commonly as a rule,
-in most woods over the greater part of the British Isles.
-
-THE BEAUTIFUL BROCADE (_Mamestra contigua_).
-
-The moth (Plate 121, Fig. 6) has a pale patch at the base of the fore wing,
-but this is not so conspicuous as is the pale orbicular stigma, which is
-often united with a pale mark at its lower edge; another pale patch lies at
-the inner angle, and the whole area between the second cross line and the
-clouding on {244} the outer margin may be pale. Sometimes these pale
-markings are tinged with pink, and more rarely the whole surface is pinkish
-suffused. The caterpillar is yellowish-green with reddish V-shaped marks on
-the back; a yellowish line along the black-margined white spiracles.
-Buckler figures a reddish-brown form, with a yellowish stripe below the
-spiracles. It feeds in August and September on birch, oak, golden rod, bog
-myrtle (_Myrica gale_), dock, brake-fern (_Pteris aquilina_), etc. The moth
-appears in June, and may sometimes be seen in the daytime on tree trunks or
-palings. It is a woodland species, but although it occurs in most southern
-and eastern counties, it is not common in any of them; it becomes commoner
-in the Midlands, but is scarce in, or absent from, the northern counties of
-England, and in Wales. In Scotland it is more frequent in some localities
-from Argyll to Ross. Kane notes it as local, and sometimes abundant, but
-from the localities given it would seem to be widely distributed in
-Ireland. The range abroad extends through Northern Asia to Japan.
-
-THE BROOM MOTH (_Mamestra pisi_).
-
-The moth shown on Plate 122, Figs. 1, 2 varies considerably, in the colour
-of the forewings ranging from purplish red to dingy ochreous brown or
-greyish brown. The cross lines and occasionally the stigmata and shades may
-disappear, but the yellow submarginal line always remains, at least in
-part. The caterpillar (Plate 129, Fig. 3) feeds on the foliage of a variety
-of plants including brake fern or braken, sweet gale, broom, bramble, wild
-rose, and sallow, and may be found, often in the daytime, in August and
-September. It is usually of some shade of green or brown, occasionally
-blackish, with yellow stripes. The moth is out in June and July and is more
-or less common almost throughout the British Isles. The range abroad
-extends to Amurland.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 122.
- 1, 2. BROOM MOTH.
- 3, 4. NUTMEG MOTH.
- 5, 6. GLAUCOUS SHEARS.
- 7, 8, 9. SHEARS MOTH.
- 10. THE STRANGER.
- 11, 12. BRINDLED GREEN.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 123.
- 1, 4. NORTHERN ARCHES MOTH.
- 3. NORTHERN ARCHES MOTH, _var. assimilis_.
- 2. BARRETT'S MARBLED CORONET.
- 5. GREY MOTH.
- 6. MARBLED CORONET.
- 7, 8. MARBLED CORONET _vars._
-
-{245}
-
-THE NUTMEG (_Mamestra trifolii_).
-
-The fore wings of this species (Plate 122, Figs. 3, 4) are usually greyish
-brown variegated with darker; cross lines pale with black edging. Sometimes
-the general colour is tinged with ochreous. The caterpillar is green with a
-darker central and two whitish lines on the back, the outer lines with
-black marks on them; a white edged pinkish stripe along the black-margined
-white spiracles. It feeds from July to September, sometimes earlier or
-later, on goose-foot, orach, beet, and other Chenopodiacae, and has also
-been found on young leaves of onion. The moth is out in May and June, and
-as a second generation in late July and August. In 1903 a specimen was
-taken, at Boscombe, on March 21. The species is more especially attached to
-the coast, but is plentiful in the Breck Sand district of Norfolk and
-Suffolk, in market gardens and waste places around London, and is found
-more or less frequently up to Staffordshire. In Cheshire and Yorkshire it
-is scarce. Barrett states that in Scotland it is found rarely in
-Roxburghshire and Aberdeenshire; and not very uncommonly in the Clyde
-Valley; it is, however, not mentioned in the list of the lepidoptera of the
-Clyde area published in 1901. Only two specimens have been recorded from
-Ireland. The range abroad includes Northern Asia, Canada, and the United
-States of America.
-
-THE GLAUCOUS SHEARS (_Mamestra glauca_).
-
-Noticeable features of this dark-clouded whitish grey species (Plate 122,
-Figs. 5[male], 6[female]) are the whitish, or whitish outlined, stigmata;
-and the conspicuous black wedges on the inner edge of the pale submarginal
-line. The ground colour is sometimes purplish tinged; the dark clouding may
-spread over the greater part of the fore wings. The caterpillar is dark red
-brown with darker freckles, a whitish central line, and two {246} series of
-dusky dashes; a paler line along the black-edged white spiracles; head pale
-brown freckled with darker. Feeds in July and August on heather, sallow,
-bog myrtle, etc., and will thrive on lettuce. The moth is out in May and
-June, and may be found resting by day on tree trunks, fences, or rocks.
-This species in England occurs chiefly in hilly districts of the northern
-counties from Staffordshire to Cumberland; recorded from Glamorgan. In
-Scotland it is widely distributed from Ayr to Ross, and is also found in
-the Hebrides and the Orkneys; and in Ireland is obtained in several of the
-northern counties, and on the Hill of Howth. The range abroad extends to
-Amurland.
-
-THE SHEARS (_Mamestra dentina_).
-
-The ground colour of this species, three specimens of which are shown on
-Plate 122, Figs. 7, 8[male], 9[female], ranges from the normal pale grey
-through various shades of brownish grey. The markings, usually well in
-evidence, are sometimes obscured in the darker specimens. The caterpillar
-is brownish with three white lines and a series of grey-brown
-diamond-pattern blotches on the back; the outer lines with blackish spots
-upon them; the stripe along the black spiracles greyish; head pale brown
-marked with blackish; plates on first and last rings of the body glossy.
-Feeds in July and August on dandelion, knotgrass, chickweed, hawk's-beard
-(_Crepis_), hawkweed (_Hieracium_), etc. The moth flies in May and June and
-appears to be found throughout the British Isles. Represented in Siberia by
-the dark form _latenai_, Pierret.
-
-THE STRANGER (_Mamestra peregrina_).
-
-This species, which is an inhabitant of Asia Minor, Southern Russia,
-Turkey, Dalmatia and Northern Italy, occurs in Southern, Western, and
-Northern France; and three specimens {247} have been recorded as taken in
-England--all at Freshwater in the Isle of Wight--the first in 1858, the
-second in 1859, and the third about 1876. The specimen depicted on Plate
-122, Fig. 10, was received from abroad.
-
-BARRETT'S MARBLED CORONET (_Dianthoecia luteago_, var. _barrettii_).
-
-The type, which is of ochreous coloration, does not occur in the British
-Isles, although in one example of var. _barrettii_, reared by Mr. Kane, a
-faint ochreous tinge was apparent, but this faded out in a few weeks. Fig.
-2, Plate 123, represents a specimen, kindly lent by Mr. R. Adkin, of var.
-_barrettii_, Doubleday, a form discovered in Ireland, at Howth, by the late
-Mr. C. G. Barrett, in June, 1861. In 1879 a specimen was taken on the coast
-at Ilfracombe, North Devon; one example was reared from a caterpillar found
-at Tenby, South Wales, in 1884, and one was captured in Carnarvonshire,
-North Wales, in 1897. In the last mentioned year specimens were taken by
-the late Major Ficklin on the coast of Cornwall, and as the Cornish form
-differs from the Irish form in being grey instead of brown, it has been
-named var. _ficklini_, Tutt. A second specimen was obtained in North Wales
-in 1899. Since its first detection at Howth the insect has been taken in
-limited numbers almost every year; and in 1906 Major C. Donovan recorded it
-as widely distributed along the coast of Co. Cork, the specimens being
-large, of a dark slate colour with distinct light whitish grey markings.
-
-The caterpillar is pale ochreous with a pinkish tinge; the central line is
-greyish brown and the spiracles black; head reddish brown marked with
-darker. It feeds on the roots of seaside campion (_Silene maritima_), July
-to September. The moth flies from June to August. Like most of the species
-in this genus, it does not care for the collector's sugar, and except {248}
-that an occasional specimen may be found resting on the rocks, the moths
-must be netted as they fly at dusk to the flowers of _Silene_. Staudinger
-considers that var. _barrettii_ is identical with var. _argillacea_, Hubn.
-
-THE GREY (_Dianthoecia caesia_).
-
-The obscurely marked slate grey insect shown on Plate 124, Fig. 5, was
-first found at Tramore, Ireland, and in the Isle of Man about the same year
-(1866 or 1867). Kane mentions that he has found the insect at Tramore, and
-also in eleven other localities on the rocky coast line of the South of
-Ireland, from Hook Point to Dingle Bay. Our form of the species, var.
-_manani_, Gregson, differs from the greyish blue continental type in its
-darker coloration, and this is intensified in the south-west corner of
-Ireland where specimens of a uniform bluish black occur.
-
-The caterpillar is pale ochreous brown minutely freckled with darker; the
-lines on the back are blackish, but indistinct; usual dots margined with
-black; head pale brown, marked with darker. It feeds on the buds, flowers,
-and seeds of campions (_Silene maritima_ and _S. inflata_) from June to
-August. The moth flies in June, July, and early August, and may be taken,
-like the last species, at the flowers of the campions growing on the rocks
-in its seaside haunts.
-
-THE MARBLED CORONET (_Dianthoecia conspersa_).
-
-Three forms of this locally variable species are shown on Plate 123. Fig. 6
-represents the typical form occurring generally in England, but in North
-Devonshire, on the coast, specimens are found closely approaching the Isle
-of Lewis form (Fig. 7), whilst others from that district agree in the
-blackish ground colour with specimens from Ireland. A still darker {249}
-race occurs in the Shetland Isles, and chiefly on the east coasts, whence
-came the specimen depicted (Fig. 8). On the western sides of the Shetlands,
-Mr. McArthur found the species to be rather more typical as a whole,
-although some specimens approached the darker eastern form. The dark
-Shetland race has been named var. _hethlandica_ by Staudinger, and the form
-with the white markings yellowish tinged is var. _ochrea_, Gregson.
-
-The caterpillar is pale ochreous brown; the back sprinkled with darker, and
-forming still darker V-shaped marks, central line pale; spiracles ochreous
-with black outlines, set in the upper edge of a pale stripe; head shining
-pale yellowish-brown freckled and lined with darker. It feeds on the seeds
-of catchfly, campion, and will eat those of sweet-william and garden pinks.
-July to September. The moth is out in June and July, and at dusk visits the
-flowers of its food plants, and occasionally comes to sugar. It is chiefly
-found in the seaboard counties, but as regards England is commoner in the
-south than in the north. Although generally rare in the inland counties, it
-is sometimes not uncommon in some Surrey localities, such as the Croydon
-district, and Mr. Scollick has reared moths from caterpillars found in seed
-capsules of white campion at Horsley.
-
-The distribution of this species extends to Amurland.
-
-THE WHITE SPOT (_Dianthoecia albimacula_).
-
-The moth shown on Plate 124, Fig. 1, is "The Beautiful Coronet" of some
-writers. Although a specimen was taken in Kent in 1816, nothing further was
-heard of the species in England until 1865, when one example was captured
-in the Portsmouth district. Then in 1873 caterpillars were found in the
-Birchwood locality where the first moth was secured. The next year the
-species was found to occur at Folkestone, and subsequently at other places
-along the Kentish coast. Since {250} 1889 it has been obtained, not
-uncommonly, at Seaton on the South Devon coast. The caterpillar, which is
-somewhat similar to that of the last species, feeds in July and August on
-the seeds of the Nottingham catchfly (_Silene nutans_), but will thrive on
-those of other kinds of catchfly, campion, or even sweet-william and garden
-pinks. The moth flies in May and June.
-
-THE VARIED CORONET (_Dianthoecia compta_).
-
-In Europe this species has a less northerly range than _D. conspersa_, and
-its eastward range extends to Japan. The caterpillar feeds on the seeds of
-_Dianthus_.
-
-In his list of the lepidoptera of Ireland (_Ent. Mo. Mag._, 1866), Birchall
-remarks: "A pair of this well-known species, taken in Ireland by Mr. Tardy,
-are in the collection of Trinity College, but I am unable to indicate the
-exact locality of their capture." This is probably all the evidence we have
-of the occurrence of this species in the British Isles. The specimen
-represented on Plate 124, Fig. 2, is from the Continent.
-
-THE LYCHNIS (_Dianthoecia capsincola_).
-
-Except that the brown ground colour is sometimes of a reddish shade, or
-greyish in tone, there is not much to notice in the variation of this
-species. Occasionally the outlines of the reniform and orbicular marks are
-usually white and distinct, and now and then the black markings are
-intensified. Two specimens are shown on Plate 124, Figs. 3 [male], 4
-[female]. The caterpillar is brownish ochreous freckled with darker, and
-with a pale central line and a series of dusky V-shaped marks on the back;
-a paler stripe along the whitish spiracles; head pale reddish brown, marked
-with darker brown. It feeds in July, sometimes in September, on campion,
-ragged robin, catchfly, and sweet-william and pinks. Fig. 3, Plate 130, is
-from a coloured drawing {251} by Mr. A. Sich, and represents the
-caterpillar, as seen when making the sketch, holding a seed between its
-front pair of legs and up to its mouth. The moth is out in May and June,
-and in some years there is a second flight in the autumn. The species is
-more or less common over the greater part of the British Isles.
-
-THE CAMPION (_Dianthoecia cucubali_).
-
-This moth (Plate 124, Figs. 5 [male], 6 [female]) is very similar to the
-last, but it has a distinct violet tinge, the orbicular mark is lengthened,
-and its lower edge touches, or almost touches, the reniform; the second
-line is distinct and straighter above the inner margin. The caterpillar is
-greenish, tinged with orange-brown on the front rings; the central line is
-greyish-brown, and the V-marks on the back and oblique stripes low down on
-the sides are orange-brown. It feeds on the leaves as well as the unripe
-seeds of campion, ragged robin, and catchfly in July, August, and
-September. The moth is out in June, and examples of a second generation in
-August. Like the rest of the species of the genus, it is most partial to
-flowers, but it occasionally puts in an appearance at the sugar patch.
-Pretty generally distributed over the British Isles. The range abroad
-extends to Amurland, China, and Japan.
-
-THE TAWNY SHEARS (_Dianthoecia carpophaga_).
-
-This species ranges in the colour of the fore wings from almost white,
-through various shades of ochreous brown.
-
-The white and ochreous-tinted specimens are found in Kent and Sussex
-chiefly, whilst the ochreous-brown forms are more generally distributed in
-England. Barrett states that in the south of Scotland a form occurs in
-which the ground colour is very pale dull brown with all the darker
-markings and cloudings deep umberous, the cloudings more extended. Var.
-_capsophila_ {252} (The Pod Lover), which represents the species in Ireland
-and the Isle of Man, is of a greyish coloration and lacks the ochreous
-tint; the dark markings, especially on the area between the first and
-second cross lines, are blackish or black, and the outlines of the stigmata
-are very distinct. Kane mentions dull black specimens, from the Blasket
-Islands, in which only vestiges of the stigmata and submarginal line
-remained clear. Pembrokeshire specimens have a colour range intermediate
-between _carpophaga_ (Plate 124, Fig. 9) and var. _capsophila_ (Figs. 7,
-8), and serve to connect one with the other. The caterpillar, which is
-purplish brown with rather broad ochreous-brown lines on the back, feeds in
-June and July and again in September, on seeds of catchfly, campion, and
-sweet-william. The moth flies in May and June, sometimes in late July and
-August.
-
-THE VIPER'S BUGLOSS (_Dianthoecia_ (_Epia_) _irregularis_).
-
-The earliest British specimen of this moth (Plate 125, Fig. 1) of which
-there is any clear record is that found by the late Rev. A. H. Wratislaw,
-in July, 1868, resting on viper's bugloss (_Echium vulgare_), in a locality
-about ten miles from Bury St. Edmunds. Subsequently Tuddenham was indicated
-as the locality, and there, as well as in other parts of the Breck Sand
-district of Suffolk and Norfolk the species continues to flourish. _Echium_
-was at first supposed to be the food plant, but it was soon ascertained the
-larval pabulum was the flowers and seeds of the local catchfly (_Silene
-otites_). In September, 1870, Mr. Porritt described the caterpillar, and he
-found that in confinement it did not object to Ragged Robin (_Lychnis
-flos-cuculi_) in place of the _Silene_.
-
-In colour the caterpillar is pale yellowish brown, tinged with green; three
-more or less distinct pale lines, and a series of smoke-coloured V-shaped
-marks on the back. Spiracles black with a yellowish white stripe below
-them, and a smoke-coloured one above; head wainscot brown dotted with
-black. It may be found on its food plant from late July to early September.
-The moth flies in June and July, but seems to have been very rarely met
-with in the open, although large numbers of the caterpillars, which are
-frequently "ichneumoned," are collected almost every year. A specimen,
-recently presented to the Lincoln Museum, is said to have been reared from
-a caterpillar found on viper's bugloss in the neighbourhood of East Ferry
-in North Lincolnshire.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 124.
- 1. WHITE SPOT MOTH.
- 2. VARIED CORONET.
- 3, 4. LYCHNIS.
- 5, 6. CAMPION.
- 7, 8. POD LOVER.
- 9, 10. TAWNY SHEARS.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 125.
- 1. VIPER'S BUGLOSS.
- 2. SMALL RANUNCULUS.
- 3, 4. BROAD-BARRED WHITE.
- 5, 6. MINOR SHOULDER-KNOT.
- 7, 8. MINOR SHOULDER-KNOT _varieties_.
-
-{253} THE SMALL RANUNCULUS (_Hecatera chrysozona_).
-
-Except that the general grey coloration of the fore wings of this moth
-(Plate 125, Fig. 2) may be whiter or of a darker grey tint, there is little
-in the way of variation to refer to. Usually the area between the cross
-lines is dark grey, sometimes marked with yellow on the reniform and
-towards the inner margin. A series of yellow dots on the submarginal line
-is almost always present, but may be absent. The caterpillar is pale
-reddish brown; three fine double blackish lines and two rows of black dots
-on the back; a fine blackish line along the black spiracles. Head pale
-brown and glossy. In another form the general colour is some shade of
-green; yellowish to olive. It feeds in July and August on the flowers and
-seeds of the wild lettuce (_Lactuca saligna_, and _L. virosa_),
-hawk's-beard (_Crepis_), and also on those of the garden lettuce. The moth
-is out late in June and July, and at dusk may be seen at the blossoms of
-various plants in gardens and elsewhere, but seems to be most partial to
-those of spur-valerian (_Centranthus ruber_). It is found in the eastern
-counties, especially in Cambridgeshire; Surrey, and (rarely) in Sussex and
-Dorsetshire. Other English counties in which it has been noted are
-Hertford, Huntingdon, Northampton, Oxford, Berks, Somerset, and Hereford.
-{254}
-
-THE BROAD-BARRED WHITE (_Hecatera serena_).
-
-Most of the British examples of this species have the thorax and fore wings
-almost pure white, the latter with a central blackish grey band (var.
-_leuconota_, Ev., Plate 125, Figs. 3[male], 4[female]). The white, however,
-especially on the outer margin, is sometimes clouded with greyish, and
-occasionally the ground colour has a greyish tinge, thus approaching var.
-_obscura_, Staudinger. The caterpillar is ochreous brown, more or less
-tinged with green, minutely dotted with dark grey, forming indistinct
-blotches; the stripe along the black spiracles is yellow tinged with green
-below. Head brownish, glossy. It feeds in July and August on hawk's-beard
-(_Crepis_). The smaller caterpillars may be found by day resting on the
-yellow flowers. In confinement they will eat the flowers and seeds of
-garden lettuce; and Prout mentions dandelion blossoms, and also those of
-almost any of the Compositae. The moth is out from June to August, and in
-the daytime may be seen sitting on fences, tree trunks, rocks and walls. It
-is pretty generally distributed in the southern portion of England, but
-becomes scarce northwards. In Scotland it seems to be little known, but
-Renton records it as common in Roxburghshire, and in 1898 Mr. Kirkaldy
-kindly gave me three greyish-shaded specimens that he picked up casually at
-Pitlochry, Perthshire, in July of that year. It has been found in North
-Wales, but is more frequent in the southern parts of that country. Rather
-local and usually scarce in Ireland; but has been found in counties
-Waterford, Dublin, Wicklow, Louth, Antrim, Westmeath, Galway, Cork, and
-Kerry. The range abroad extends to Siberia and Amurland.
-
-THE BORDERED GOTHIC (_Neuria reticulata_).
-
-The cross lines and the veins are pale brown, sometimes tinged with pink.
-These markings give the moth (Plate 126, Figs. 1[male], 2[female]) a netted
-appearance, which, apart from the different ground colour and clouding,
-distinguishes it from the Gothic, with which it is sometimes confused. The
-antennae, too, of the male are only fringed with minute hairs, whilst those
-of the male Gothic are broadly pectinated. The caterpillar is greenish or
-pinkish ochreous, mottled with darker, and with slightly paler lines on the
-back and sides; head light brown. It will feed in July and August on
-knot-grass; and soapwort (_Saponaria_), _Silene inflata_, and _Dianthus_,
-have been mentioned as food plants. The moth is out in June and July. The
-species occurs in nearly all the counties of England to Yorkshire, but
-except in Cambridgeshire, and perhaps Oxfordshire, it is not common in any
-of the southern or eastern counties, although more frequently found in them
-than northwards. It has not been recorded from Scotland, and seems to be
-rare in Ireland, as it has only been noted from Co. Dublin and Co. Cork.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 126.
- 1, 2. BORDERED GOTHIC.
- 3, 4. DUSKY SALLOW.
- 5. ORACHE MOTH.
- 6, 7. SAXON MOTH.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 127.
- 1, 2. FIGURE OF EIGHT MOTH.
- 3, 4. FEATHERED GOTHIC.
- 5. GREEN BRINDLED DOT.
- 6, 7. BEAUTIFUL GOTHIC.
- 8, 9. ANTLER MOTH.
-
-{255} FEATHERED GOTHIC (_Tholera_ (_Epineuronia_) _popularis_).
-
-The male of this species (Plate 127, Fig. 3) is strongly attracted by
-light, and frequently seen in houses, and is no doubt a familiar object to
-most residents in the country, and even in the suburbs of London. The
-female (Fig. 4) does not visit light, but this sex, and the males also, may
-be found sitting after dark upon the upper erect leaves of the hard
-grasses, such as the matweed (_Nardus stricta_). Of course a lantern will
-be required to throw a light on the business of collecting them, and it is
-curious to note that even the brilliant glare of the acetylene lamp does
-not seem to disturb the moths very much, if at all.
-
-The caterpillar is dark greenish brown and rather glossy, with a dusky
-plate on the first ring upon which are traces of the five dark-edged pale
-brownish stripes which traverse the body and meet on the last ring; the
-latter has a black plate. The spiracles are black, and the head is
-brownish, marked with {256} darker. The caterpillars hatch in the spring
-from eggs laid the previous autumn, and may be found until July. They feed
-at night on the leaves of grasses, especially _Nardus_ and such kinds,
-growing in parks and open places. The moth is out in August and September,
-and occurs more or less commonly throughout England and Wales. In Scotland
-it is found in Ayrshire, and in other localities in the Clyde area; thence
-eastward to Aberdeen. Kane states that in Ireland it is generally
-distributed, and in some localities very abundant, as at Clonbrock, and on
-the Wicklow coast.
-
-THE HEDGE RUSTIC (_Tholera cespitis_).
-
-The sexes of this moth are depicted on Plate 128, Figs. 8[male], 9[female].
-In habits, and also in the kind of places it frequents, this species has
-much in common with that last mentioned. It is certainly more local, but
-its range in the British Isles is somewhat similar to that of the Gothic.
-The life history also is very like that of the last species, and the
-caterpillar feeds on the same kinds of grass.
-
-ANTLER MOTH (_Cerapteryx_ (_Charaeas_) _graminis_).
-
-This moth (Plate 127, Figs. 8[male], 9[female]) has the fore wings greyish
-brown or reddish brown, sometimes tinged with ochreous in the paler forms,
-or with olive in the darker forms. There is also variation in the markings,
-and chiefly of the central forked streak which has been likened to the
-antler of the stag. In most British specimens of the greyish form this is
-white throughout its length, and it has three branches; the stigmata are
-whitish, and there is often a whitish bar below the central streak. A
-number of aberrations have been named, and of these the following seem to
-be the most important: var. _tricuspis_, Esp., reddish brown; branched
-streak, stigmata, and bar ochreous; var. _rufa_, Tutt = _tricuspis_, Hubn.,
-as above, but the markings white; var. _ruficosta_, Tutt = _graminis_,
-Hubn., greyish brown, with reddish front margin, and ochreous markings;
-var. _hibernicus_, Curt., yellowish brown with the markings ochreous, and
-the stigmata more or less united with the central streak. In some specimens
-most of the markings are obscured or absent, and only the reniform stigma
-and the forked extremity of the central line remain distinct.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 128.
- 1. FEATHERED EAR MOTH.
- 2, 3. STRAW UNDERWING.
- 4. SILVER CLOUD.
- 5, 6. FLOUNCED RUSTIC.
- 7. HAWORTH'S MINOR.
- 8, 9. HEDGE RUSTIC.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 129.
- 1, 1a. BRIGHT-LINE BROWN EYE: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
- 2. DOT MOTH: _caterpillar_.
- 3, 3a. BROOM MOTH: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
- 4. BRINDLED GREEN MOTH: _egg, natural size and enlarged_.
-
-{257} The caterpillar, which is glossy, and the skin much wrinkled, is of a
-bronzy-brown colour, with black-edged pale lines; there is a brownish plate
-on the first ring and a blackish one on the last; the spiracles are black
-and the head is brownish, marked with darker. It feeds from March to June
-on grasses, and in some years and localities occurs in enormous numbers,
-denuding considerable areas of grass land. Rooks and other birds devour
-them readily, and where their feeding places are on hillsides, they are apt
-to be washed off by heavy rain, so that the drains and ditches become
-filled up in places by masses of these caterpillars. Even after such
-wholesale destruction, the moths may still appear in the autumn in
-countless numbers. The male moths are sometimes seen flying in the sunshine
-and visiting the flowers of thistles, ragwort, etc. Such flight usually
-takes place between eight a.m. and noon, but both sexes have been seen
-flying over grass and heather continuously from just before midday to four
-p.m. The moths are also on the wing at night, and the male is very
-susceptible to the attraction of light. The species has occurred in all
-parts of the British Islands, but its presence in the south of England
-would appear to be more casual than elsewhere. The range abroad extends
-through Northern Asia to Siberia.
-
-THE FEATHERED EAR (_Pachetra leucophaea_).
-
-Stephens, in 1829, figured one of two specimens of this species said to
-have been taken near Bristol in 1816, a part of England {258} from which no
-other specimen has ever been recorded so far as I am aware. In June, 1855,
-the late Mr. S. Stevens obtained a few specimens at sugar, at Mickleham,
-Surrey. Between the year last mentioned and 1894 five other specimens have
-been recorded from the same county, these are Redhill (W. R. Jeffrey),
-Boxhill (G. Elisha, a pair, and B. A. Bower), Reigate (R. Adkin). In Kent,
-specimens have been found in the Folkestone and Tunbridge districts, but
-the chalk downs between Ashford and Wye appear to be the headquarters of
-the insect in Britain.
-
-A portrait of a male specimen will be found on Plate 128, Fig. 1, but the
-ground colour is much whiter in the majority of British specimens.
-
-According to Dr. Chapman, the caterpillar varies from a nearly uniform
-nankeen-yellow with the markings only indicated, to a handsome larva with
-distinct black stripes. There is a pale dorsal line, quite narrow; thence
-to the black spiracles is divided into three longitudinal stripes, a dark
-dorsal, a dark (but less dark) lower one and a pale intermediate. In all
-these the ground colour is the same, nankeen-yellow, and the darker areas
-depend on the greater or less darkness of fine black mottlings, generally
-in fine wavy streaks running more or less longitudinally. The head is
-rather brown than yellow, mottled in a honey-comb pattern, with some black
-marking about the mouth parts. It feeds at night from July to March on
-various grasses, but seems to prefer _Poa annua_, and _P. nemoralis_. Dr.
-Chapman reared some of these caterpillars by keeping each individual in a
-separate glass jar and supplying it at frequent intervals with a fresh tuft
-of _Poa annua_. The moth is out from May to July, and hides during the day
-among the tufts of grass on chalk hills. It comes freely to sugar, and has
-been taken at privet blossom.
-
-THE SILVER CLOUD (_Xylomania conspicillaris_).
-
-Three forms of this species occur with us. In that represented on Plate
-128, Fig. 4, the fore wings are almost entirely {259} blackish. Another has
-a larger portion of the inner marginal area ochreous brown, or whitish, ab.
-_melaleuca_, Vieweg; a third form, and the least frequent, may be described
-as pale ochreous brown with darker mottling on the basal half, and black
-central markings representing a broken streak from the base of the wing to
-the outer margin, in this form the pale outlined stigmata are fairly
-distinct, and there is a blackish shade between them extending from the
-front to the inner margin. From chrysalids obtained by digging under oak
-and elm trees in a private park several miles from Taunton, Somerset, Mr.
-H. Doidge (1901) reared moths and obtained eggs which were laid in a batch
-on the covering of the cage in which the female was placed with a growing
-plant of bird's-foot trefoil. The eggs hatched on May 31, ten days after
-they were laid. The young caterpillars were purplish grey, but after
-feeding on the yellow flowers they assumed the same colour. "After
-finishing the flowers they commenced on the leaves, by which time they were
-a pale green colour, with a yellow spiracular stripe, and were fond of
-resting by day on the stems of the plant. As they approached the final
-stage, the green became shaded with brown and black," and then resembled
-the ripening seed pods. They were afterwards supplied with blackthorn, and
-did not object to the change of food. They also ate dock (sparingly), and
-_Trifolium minus_. "About July 8 they began to go under ground to pupate.
-The pupae, which were of a dark reddish-brown colour, and somewhat obese
-and blunt, being enclosed in a very compact and brittle earthy cocoon"
-(Doidge).
-
-The moth is out in April and May, but is very local in England. It has
-occasionally been found at rest on isolated tree trunks or on posts, but
-very rarely captured in any other way. Specimens have been obtained from
-chrysalids dug up now and then from about the roots of trees, but perhaps
-most of the specimens in collections, not numerous altogether, have been
-reared from eggs. In England the species is only known {260} to occur in
-Kent, Surrey, Suffolk, Gloucester, Somersetshire, Worcestershire, and
-Herefordshire. Barrett also mentions one specimen at Gower, South Wales.
-
-THE BEAUTIFUL ARCHES (_Eumichtis_ (_Hadena_) _satura_).
-
-Of this species (Plate 121, Fig. 5) probably less than a dozen specimens
-have been taken in England, and apparently none in any other part of the
-British Isles. It is very similar to some of the darker forms of _E.
-adusta_, specimens of which have often been mistaken for examples of the
-present species and recorded as such. The wings are rather more ample; the
-reniform and orbicular stigmata are reddish, with a blackish cloud under
-them, and the space between the second and submarginal lines towards the
-inner margin is also reddish. The hind wings are dark in both sexes. The
-caterpillar, which is said to feed in July and August on hop, honey-suckle,
-and cherry, among other plants, is pinkish brown, darker above; the
-dusky-pink central line on the back is interrupted and indistinct, and on
-each side of it is a series of oblique greyish but not clearly defined
-streaks; the line low down on the sides is yellow-green. The moths flies in
-June, July, and August.
-
-Abroad the species occurs in Central and Northern Europe (except the most
-northern parts, and perhaps Western France); eastward the range extends to
-Amurland.
-
-THE DARK BROCADE (_Eumichtis_ (_Hadena_) _adusta_).
-
-The sexes of this moth are figured on Plate 121, Figs. 3[male], 4[female].
-The ground colour is grey-brown in some examples of this species, whilst in
-others, especially in the north of England and in Scotland, the colour
-ranges through rich reddish brown, blackish brown to almost black. In the
-lighter coloured forms the markings are usually clear and distinct, but in
-the darker forms are often much obscured. The caterpillar is somewhat
-variable in colour and markings. Barrett describes one form as pale sage
-green strongly tinged with ochreous and dusted with greyish brown; the line
-along the middle of the back is white, interrupted, and edged with greyish
-brown; a series of outlines of greyish-brown diamonds spread over to the
-brown margin of the pale ochreous stripe along the whitish spiracles, and
-form a network on the back and sides. Another form, described by Buckler,
-has the general colour brilliant yellow, suffused on the upper surface with
-deep rose pink; a stripe on the middle of the back composed of two darker
-pink lines, united and forming a spot at the beginning of each segment, and
-an interrupted yellow stripe on each side. It feeds from July to September
-on grass and various low plants, including knot-grass, bladder campion
-(_Silene cucubalus_); also sweet gale, sallow, etc. The moth flies in June
-and July, sometimes in May. The species occurs in woods and on heaths and
-moors, and is generally distributed, and more or less common throughout the
-British Isles. The range abroad extends to Amurland.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 130.
- 1. SLENDER BRINDLE: _caterpillar_.
- 2, 2a. CLOUDED BRINDLE: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
- 3. LYCHNIS: _caterpillar_.
- 4. CLOUDED BORDERED BRINDLE: _caterpillar_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 131.
- 1, 2. LARGE NUTMEG MOTH.
- 3, 4. CONFUSED MOTH.
- 5, 6. CRESCENT STRIPED MOTH.
- 7, 8. DUSKY BROCADE MOTH.
-
-{261} THE BRINDLED GREEN (_Eumichtis_ (_Hadena_) _protea_).
-
-Green of some shade is often the prevailing colour in the much ornamented
-moth portrayed on Plate 122, Figs. 11, 12; but in some specimens the
-general colour is pinkish white. The variegation consists of reddish brown
-or pinkish, and white clouds and black streaks, chiefly as edging to the
-pale cross lines, or between the stigmata; these latter are as often
-obscure as distinct, but sometimes the orbicular is white with a white mark
-below it extending to the black bar connecting the first and second cross
-lines.
-
-The caterpillar is green freckled with yellow, with a yellow central line
-on the back; head brownish. It feeds from March to June, and when it leaves
-the egg it bores into an oak bud to {262} feed; later on it spins the young
-leaves together, and finally it dispenses with a retreat altogether and
-feeds openly on the leaves. The moth is out in the autumn, rather earlier
-in Scotland. It is widely distributed in England, and in some seasons and
-localities very abundant. In Scotland it is found from Roxburgh to Moray,
-and in the latter county as well as in Perthshire and Argyll it is often
-plentiful. Single specimens have been recorded from Ireland, and these from
-Co. Galway and Co. Westmeath.
-
-THE NORTHERN ARCHES (_Crymodes exulis_).
-
-The specimens of this species shown on Plate 123, Figs. 1, 4, are from
-Shetland, and more or less of the typical form, but rather more variegated,
-perhaps, than the actual type. In other specimens from the same locality
-the yellowish submarginal line is band-like; or the ground colour is
-browner, and sometimes blackish. These blackish examples approach var.
-_assimilis_, Doubleday (Fig. 3), from Perthshire, where it was first met
-with, at Rannoch, by Weaver, over sixty years ago. _Exulis_ (The Exile) was
-discovered by Mr. H. McArthur in the Shetlands in 1883. In 1896 Mr. P. M.
-Bright captured a specimen in the Shetlands which Barrett considered
-referable to _maillardi_, Hubn. (Geyer, Fig. 833.) "Its ground colour is
-drab-brown, abundantly marked with umberous and dusted with black, and its
-only conspicuous marking is the reniform stigma, which is distinctly edged
-with white in such a manner as to give it a singular resemblance to
-_Mamestra_ [_Barathra_] _brassicae_." Staudinger, it may be added, adopts
-_maillardi_ as the earlier name for this species, and it may have to be
-generally accepted. The caterpillar is ochreous whitish, shaded with grey,
-and with yellowish plates on the first and last rings; spiracles black,
-head reddish brown. It feeds on grasses from August to May, but is
-sometimes two, or even three, years in completing its {263} growth. When
-young, and also later, it eats the lower part of the stem and partly into
-the root of the grass. The moth is out in July and August. Very few
-examples of the _assimilis_ form have been obtained, and these only in
-Perthshire, Aberdeenshire, Inverness, and the Isle of Arran. Mr. W. M.
-Christy captured one specimen in Ross-shire in August, 1902. The
-geographical range of this species extends from the Alps and Pyrenees
-through Norway and Lapland to Iceland, Greenland, and Labrador.
-
-THE MINOR SHOULDER-KNOT (_Bombycia viminalis_).
-
-Figs. 5 and 6 on Plate 125 represent the typical form of this species. Fig.
-8 shows the blackish var. _obscura_, Staud., and Fig. 7 an intermediate
-form. The pale form is most frequent in southern England, and dark forms
-are commoner in the north. Both forms occur in Scotland, but in some parts
-the pale form only is found. The caterpillar is green with three whitish
-lines on the back; the raised spots are also whitish; the line along the
-black spiracles is yellowish. It feeds from April to June on sallow and
-willow; at first on the terminal shoots, the leaves of which are spun
-together with silk. Later on the caterpillar folds down or rolls a leaf so
-as to form a shelter. The moth is on the wing in June and July, sometimes
-later, and is pretty widely distributed throughout the British Isles, but
-is rather local in Scotland, northern England, and Ireland. The dark form,
-it may be mentioned, does not seem to be found abroad. The range of the
-species extends to Amurland.
-
-THE DUSKY SALLOW (_Eremobia ochroleuca_).
-
-This brownish tinged ochreous moth (Plate 126, Figs. 3, 4) has the fore
-wings crossed by whitish lines, the first and second of which approach or
-unite below the middle, dividing into two blotches the dark central
-band-like shade. {264}
-
-The caterpillar, which feeds on the seeds of cock's-foot (_Dactylis_) and
-other kinds of grass from May to early July, is whitish green and glossy;
-three whitish stripes on the back, the central one broadest; a stripe below
-the black spiracles is whitish, edged above with green. Mullein
-(_Verbascum_) has also been mentioned as eaten by this caterpillar. The
-moth is out in July and in August, and may often be seen resting on the
-flowers of knapweed (_Centaurea_) in the daytime. It flies at night, and
-has been taken at the flowers of centaurea, ragwort, etc., and at light. In
-some districts it is said to visit the sugar patch, but not to do so in
-other localities. Occurs in the chalk districts of most southern English
-counties, and especially those of Kent and Sussex; also, but only rarely,
-in Warwickshire and Yorkshire. One specimen has been recorded from
-Pembrokeshire in Wales.
-
-THE ORACHE MOTH (_Trachea atriplicis_).
-
-In the past this greenish-mottled brownish moth (Plate 126, Fig. 5) appears
-to have been commoner, and more widely distributed in England than it now
-is. Wilkes, in 1773, referring to it as "The Wild Arrach," states that it
-was taken occasionally near London. At the present time the species seems
-to occur only in the eastern counties, and chiefly in Cambridgeshire. In
-June, 1904 and 1905, specimens (three in all) were obtained at sugar in
-Huntingdonshire. The caterpillar is ochreous or reddish brown, dotted with
-white; three dark lines on the back, the central one only distinct. A
-yellowish stripe along the black-edged white spiracles; head light reddish
-brown, glossy. It feeds in July and August on orach (_Atriplex_),
-persicaria, knot-grass, and will also eat dock. The range abroad extends to
-Amurland, Corea, and Japan.
-
-NOTE.--It may be mentioned here that _Prodenia littoralis_, Boisd., an
-inhabitant of tropical and sub-tropical regions, has {265} been
-occasionally reared in this country from caterpillars found in imported
-tomatoes.
-
-THE SAXON (_Lithomoea_ (_Hyppa_) _rectilinea_).
-
-The brownish clouding, and reddish-brown central band, of this species
-(Plate 126, Figs. 6, 7) varies in tone; sometimes the band is olive grey
-and the clouding rather grey than brown. The caterpillar, according to
-Buckler, varies from dark brown to chestnut, ochreous, and orange browns;
-the spiracular stripe pale ochreous or cream colour, shading off in the
-middle to grey brown. It feeds from July to September, or later, on sallow,
-bramble, bearberry (_Arctostaphylos uva-ursi_), and will eat knot-grass. It
-hibernates when full grown, and pupates in the following spring. The moth
-is out in May, June, or July, and is taken at sugar, chiefly in woods. At
-one time it was found in Yorkshire, but Cumberland seems to be the only
-English county in which it now occurs. In Scotland it has been taken in the
-south. Renton states that near Hawick, Roxburghshire, he finds a few at
-raspberry blossom every year. It is more plentiful, however, from
-Perthshire to Sutherland. Kane notes it from Torc Wood, Killarney, near
-Galway, and Clonbrock; and that the form is identical with that from
-Aberdeen named _semivirgata_, Tutt. The range abroad extends to Siberia and
-Amurland; and the North American, _xylinoides_, Guen, seems to be a form of
-the present species.
-
-THE FIGURE OF EIGHT MOTH (_Diloba caeruleocephala_).
-
-The greyish-centred white marks are the chief features on the brownish fore
-wings of this moth (Plate 127, Figs. 1, 2). The first one, or both when
-quite apart, is very like the figure 8; sometimes these marks are united,
-and form an irregular blotch. Rarely the area between the black lines is
-dark and the marks {266} obscured or absent. The caterpillar (Plate 133,
-Fig. 1) is bluish grey, with a number of bristle-bearing black spots and
-minute black dots; a stripe along the back is yellow and interrupted; a
-yellow stripe low down along the sides. It feeds, from April to June, on
-hawthorn, sloe, and wild crab; also on the leaves of apple, plum, and other
-fruit trees. Sometimes these caterpillars are to be seen on the hedges in
-numbers, and usually seem to prefer the outer extremities of the longer
-shoots. The pale purplish brown chrysalis is enclosed in a strong somewhat
-oval cocoon, which is covered with fragments of litter, and often attached
-to some object, such as a bit of stick, leaves, etc., on the ground. The
-moth is out in October and November, but is rarely seen, except
-occasionally at gas lamps, etc. Generally common in the south and east of
-England, and widely distributed throughout the rest of the country to
-Cumberland. It has occurred in a few Clydesdale localities, and has been
-recorded by Renton as sometimes common in Roxburghshire. Widely distributed
-in Ireland, but not often plentiful.
-
-THE GREEN BRINDLED DOT (_Valeria oleagina_).
-
-Nearly eighty years ago Stephens summed up all that was known of this
-species in Britain. As there is nothing to add in the way of later records,
-his remarks may be quoted. "Very rare; specimens have been found in
-Richmond Park, and one was taken in the pupa state by Mr. Plastead some
-twenty or thirty years ago in Battersea Fields; others have occurred near
-Bristol, and Mr. Donovan, I believe, captured one in South Wales; it has
-also been taken in Scotland. My specimens were from the former locality,
-and I have been fortunate enough to have had nearly a dozen examples at
-various periods." Most of the later authors mention only the Welsh
-specimen, taken at Fishguard in Pembrokeshire, July, 1800. A continental
-specimen is shown on Plate 127, Fig. 5. {267}
-
-THE BEAUTIFUL GOTHIC (_Heliophobus hispidus_).
-
-This species (Plate 127, Figs. 6, 7) varies in the brown colour of the fore
-wings, which is sometimes of a greyish tint; not infrequently the pale
-cross lines are tinged with brownish, or they may be rather broad, and, the
-submarginal especially, white and very distinct; the reniform and orbicular
-marks are sometimes tinged with pink. The caterpillar (Plate 133, Fig. 3)
-is pale rusty brown, with blackish markings, and three pale lines on the
-back; head glossy and rather paler than the body, and marked with two
-blackish lines. It feeds on grasses from September to March. The specimen
-figured (slightly enlarged) was received from Mr. Walker of Torquay on
-January 11, 1907. The chrysalis (Fig. 3A) is dull reddish, ring divisions
-and wing-cases paler and brighter; two hooks on last ring. The moth is out
-from the latter part of August to early October, and in its haunts, which
-are cliffs by the sea, it may be found at night sitting on grass stems. It
-is not known to visit flowers or the sugar patch, but has been taken at
-light. Although previously taken in the Isle of Portland, the earliest
-published record was that in the _Zoologist_ for 1849 of a specimen taken
-on the sandhills at Exmouth, late in September. It still occurs at Portland
-and at Swanage in Dorset; also in the Isle of Wight and along the Devon
-coast to Cornwall. The range abroad is restricted, the species only being
-noted from Southern France, North-east and Southern Spain, Sicily,
-Palestine, and North-west Africa.
-
-THE FLOUNCED RUSTIC (_Luperina testacea_).
-
-Portraits of this moth will be found on Plate 128, Figs. 5, 6. The ground
-colour of the fore wings ranges from very pale brown through greyish brown
-to blackish. In some specimens the markings are very faint, and, excepting
-the whitish submarginal line, are hardly visible. Usually there is a black
-or {268} dark brown bar connecting the first and second cross lines; not
-infrequently there is a black mark on the inner margin below the bar, and a
-black mark or two in the cell above. These marks are sometimes supplemented
-by others, and so form a more or less complete black central band. The
-reniform and orbicular stigmata are often only outlined in paler brown, but
-they may be whitish and very distinct. Var. _gueneei_, Doubleday, is pale
-ochreous brown, with the first line pale, interrupted, and terminating in a
-black dot on inner margin; and the second line made up of white-edged black
-crescents; the reniform distinctly edged with white, and there is a slender
-black line above the inner margin between the first line and the base of
-the wing. Hind wings pure white, with black marginal lunules.
-
-The caterpillar is pinkish ochreous; usual dots not in evidence; skin much
-wrinkled and glossy; spiracles pink margined with black; head and plate on
-first ring pale brownish yellow. Robson (Cat. Lep. of Durham, etc.) states
-that the caterpillar feeds on grass roots, and adds, "I have known it
-abound in the grass tufts at the foot of palings around a large mill." The
-moth is out in August and September. At night it flies freely to light, but
-is not known to visit any of the usual floral attractions or the
-collector's sugar. Generally distributed and often common.
-
-DUMERIL'S LUPERINA (_Luperina dumerilii_).
-
-Fore wings ochreous grey or brown, two brownish streaks represent the basal
-line; the space between the first and second cross lines darker, and there
-is a darker band on the outer margin; the stigmata are pale inclining to
-yellowish, and the veins below them are white. Hind wings whitish tinged
-with darker on outer margin. Ab. _desyllesi_, Boisd., has almost
-unicolorous fore wings, and this form, according to Staudinger, has been
-found in Northern France and England. I have only seen a continental
-specimen of this species, which is very local and somewhat rare abroad.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 132.
- 1, 2. RUSTIC SHOULDER-KNOT.
- 3, 4. SMALL CLOUDED BRINDLE.
- 5. DOUBLE-LOBED MOTH.
- 6-11. COMMON RUSTIC.
- 12. UNION RUSTIC.
- 13. FLAME MOTH.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 133.
- 1. FIGURE OF EIGHT: _caterpillar_.
- 2. FEATHERED RANUNCULUS: _caterpillar_.
- 3, 3a. BEAUTIFUL GOTHIC: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
-
-{269} In his _Manual_, vol. i. (1857), Stainton states, "one specimen has
-occurred in the Isle of Arran." Reference is made in 1885 (_Entom._ xviii.
-73) to two specimens taken in the Isle of Portland in 1858, and three
-others in 1859. Then, in the _Entomologist_ for 1902, Mr. Stockwell
-records, from Dover, the capture of "a fine female of this rare Noctua, on
-a gas lamp in this town, during the latter part of September."
-
-THE STRAW UNDERWING (_Cerigo matura_).
-
-This moth, both sexes of which are shown on Plate 128, Figs. 2, 3, is
-readily recognized by the yellowish hind wings. The caterpillar is ochreous
-or dull reddish brown; series of greyish brown marks along the middle of
-the back, and a brown edged line on each side; a pale ochreous line edged
-above with brown low down along the sides; head pale brown, with darker
-streaks. It feeds from September to April, sometimes later, on grasses,
-chiefly in dry situations. The moth is out in July and August. Generally
-distributed throughout the British Isles, but in Scotland not recorded
-north of Moray. In suitable localities it is common, and sometimes is the
-only visitor to the sugar patch.
-
-HAWORTH'S MINOR (_Celaena haworthii_).
-
-In this reddish brown moth (Plate 128, Fig. 7) the reniform and orbicular
-stigmata are white or broadly outlined in white, and the vein below as well
-as the branches also white. The wings of the female are smaller than those
-of the male, and the body is distinctly stouter. The white markings
-referred to are sometimes obscured or absent, and such specimens are
-referable {270} to var. _hibernica_, Haworth. The caterpillar is purplish
-brown, with the usual raised dots darker brown; three pale lines along the
-back, the central one least distinct; head and plates on first and last
-rings reddish brown; spiracles black. From April to July on cotton grass
-(_Eriophorum vaginatum_), feeding in the stems down towards the root. The
-moth flies in August and September. It was first noted as British in 1819,
-and Stephens in 1829 mentions it as common in Whittlesea Mere. Although
-still occurring in the fens, the species is far more common on the moors
-and mosses of Northern England, Scotland to the Shetlands, and in Ireland.
-
-THE CRESCENT STRIPED (_Hama oblonga_ (_abjecta_)).
-
-In its most frequent form this species (Plate 131, Figs. 5, 6) has the fore
-wings greyish brown and somewhat shining; the markings, especially the
-cross lines, indistinctly paler; the reniform is outwardly dotted with
-white. Sometimes the ground colour is paler grey with black markings
-arranged very similar to such marks in _A. gemina_, var. _remissa_ (Fig.
-8).
-
-The caterpillar is greenish grey, with the raised dots rather greyer; a
-pinkish line along the back; head and plate on first and last rings shining
-reddish brown. It feeds on grasses growing in salt marshes, edges of tidal
-rivers, and ditches of brackish water: in the spring and until June;
-perhaps from September. The moth is out from June to August, and may be
-obtained at the flowers of marram grass as well as at sugar. The species is
-found in most of the eastern and southern seaboard counties of England; at
-Sandown and Freshwater in the Isle of Wight; in the fens of Huntingdon and
-Cambridge; also occasionally in Herefordshire, Gloucestershire, Lancs,
-Yorks, and Durham. In Scotland it has been obtained in Moray and in the
-Shetlands. Local in Ireland. The range abroad extends to Amurland. {271}
-
-THE LARGE NUTMEG (_Hama sordida_).
-
-The fore wings of this moth (Plate 131, Figs. 1, 2) are pale ochreous
-brown, much marbled with darker brown, and sometimes slightly tinged with
-reddish; the pale stigmata and submarginal line are the most distinct of
-the usual markings. The caterpillar is said to be very like that of _Apamea
-basilinea_. The moth flies in June, and is not uncommon in most parts of
-Southern England. It occurs in Lancashire and Cheshire, but is more
-frequent in Yorkshire and Durham; also found in South Wales, and although
-it has been obtained in the Shetlands, it seems to be very local and
-infrequent in Scotland. Only twice recorded from Ireland, one specimen on
-the Dublin coast, 1860, and one at Howth (Kane).
-
-THE CONFUSED (_Hama furva_).
-
-This darker mottled greyish brown moth (Plate 131, Figs. 3, 4) is very
-similar to the typical form of _A. gemina_ (Fig. 7); the fore wings,
-however, are distinctly broader at the base, the W-like angles of the
-submarginal line are less noticeable, and this line is comparatively
-straighter. The reddish tinge so usual in _A. gemina_ is absent in the
-present species.
-
-The caterpillar is ochreous tinged with pinkish, except on the first three
-rings and the under surface; central line dusky; usual dots reddish brown,
-as also are the head and plates on first and last rings. On grasses,
-September to June, feeding chiefly on the shoots near the roots (condensed
-from Buckler). The moth occurs from July to September, and may be obtained
-at flowers of ragwort, scabious, etc., and freely at sugar, in rocky places
-from Lancashire northwards through Scotland to the Shetlands. It also
-occurs in Wales, and suitable places in Gloucester, Somerset, Devon,
-Cornwall, and has also been recorded from Sussex. In Ireland found on
-several parts of {272} the coast, but not plentiful. Abroad the range
-extends to Amurland.
-
-THE DUSKY BROCADE (_Apamea obscura_ (_gemina_)).
-
-In its ordinary form the moth shown on Plate 131 is purplish brown, as in
-Fig. 7, sometimes mottled with greyish or pale ochreous. A more ornamented
-form is known as var. _remissa_ (Fig. 8), and the ground colour of this is
-not infrequently pale ochreous brown, or almost whitish, with the black
-marking very conspicuous. The caterpillar is brownish grey, finely striated
-with darker; a yellowish white line along the middle of the back, and a
-brownish ochreous stripe on each side of it; stripe along the black edged
-spiracles greyish ochreous. It feeds from autumn till March on grasses in
-moist situations. The moth is perhaps most abundant in the south, but it
-occurs, in June and July, pretty well all over the British Isles; and
-abroad its range extends to Amurland and Japan.
-
-THE RUSTIC SHOULDER KNOT (_Apamea basilinea_).
-
-The species shown on Plate 132, Figs. 1[male], 2[female], is found almost
-everywhere in the British Isles, is generally common, and in many parts
-abundant. Usually the pale brown fore wings are clouded or suffused with
-reddish, but this tint may be absent, or the wings may be tinged with
-greyish: the single black dash from middle of the base is the "Shoulder
-Knot." The caterpillar, according to Barrett, is pale olive brown varying
-to grey brown; a greyish white line along the middle of the back edged with
-short undulating black lines; spiracular line a row of blackish dashes,
-clouded with olive brown, or edged with greyish white and looped with grey
-brown; head black, plate on first ring black and white striped. It feeds
-from August to March on grasses, etc. The moth flies in May and June. {273}
-
-THE SMALL CLOUDED BRINDLE (_Apamea unanimis_).
-
-The fore wings are generally reddish brown mottled with darker, but the
-reddish tinge may be almost absent; the reniform is more or less outlined
-in white and there are two black streaks from the base. (Plate 132, Figs.
-3[male], 4[female].) The caterpillar is pale ochreous brown, sometimes
-tinged with greenish; three dark edged pale lines on the back; spiracular
-line pale edged above with darker; head, and plate on first ring, brown and
-glossy. On grasses that occur in damp places, such as water meads, marshes
-and fens from July to April. The moth flies in June and July. It is widely
-distributed, and sometimes common in most moist localities throughout
-England. More local in Scotland but occurring in Aberdeenshire, and on the
-western side ranging to the Orkneys. Not frequent in Ireland, but has been
-obtained in several parts. The distribution abroad extends to Amurland.
-
-THE UNION RUSTIC (_Apamea pabulatricula_).
-
-The very distinctly marked, and sometimes brownish tinged, greyish white
-moth shown on Plate 132, Fig. 12, is very local in the British Isles, and
-apart from its reported occurrence in the Clyde and Tay districts of
-Scotland, seems to be found only in some of the woods of South Yorkshire,
-as near Rotherham, Sheffield (Wharncliffe Woods), and Barnsley. It has been
-obtained in Cumberland; and Barrett states that formerly it occurred in
-Norfolk. The caterpillar, which is little known, is said to feed on grasses
-in May. The moth flies in August and early September. It is also known as
-_connexa_, Bork. {274}
-
-THE COMMON RUSTIC (_Apamea secalis_).
-
-Following Guenee, British entomologists at one time knew this species as
-_oculea_; afterwards it became the habit to label it _didyma_, a name given
-to it by Esper in 1788. Just now the authorities insist on _secalis_,
-Linnaeus, being adopted. The species is an exceedingly variable one, and
-six examples of it are shown on Plate 132, Figs. 6 to 11. The form with
-blackish fore wings and a white reniform mark is var. _leucostigma_, Esp.
-_Nictitans_, Esp., has brownish fore wings and a white reniform. _I-niger_,
-Haw., is greyish or grey brown with darker central band, and the cross
-lines united by a black bar. Ochreous or reddish ochreous specimens with
-the front marginal area broadly and irregularly reddish brown, and the
-outer margin bordered with reddish brown, are referable to var. _furca_,
-Haw. Many other forms have been named. The caterpillar is green with three
-reddish lines on the back; head and plate on the first ring pale brown,
-also plate on last ring. In stems of grasses such as _Festuca_, _Dactylis_,
-etc., also on wood-rush. From Autumn to April or May. The moth flies in
-July and August, and is common everywhere in the British Isles; its range
-abroad extends to Western China.
-
-THE DOUBLE LOBED (_Apamea ophiogramma_).
-
-This species (Plate 132, Fig. 5) is usually found in marshy localities, or
-in gardens, over the eastern counties, and from Northamptonshire through
-Bucks, and Hertfordshire, to Kent, and Surrey. The caterpillar feeds from
-September on the shoots of _Phalaris arundinacea_ and the cultivated form
-of that plant grown in gardens, and known as ribbon grass. Also said to
-feed on _Poa aquatica_. When the grass dies down in the late autumn the
-caterpillar enters the ground to hibernate, and {275} emerges in the spring
-ready to attack the young grass shoots as soon as they appear. Where the
-new growth of ribbon grass assumes a brown and withered appearance this
-larva will probably be found at the bottom of the trouble. When nearly full
-grown it eats down the interior of the thicker stems to the base. In colour
-it is ochreous with a pinkish tinge; a pale brownish plate on first and
-last rings, each edged with blackish and that on the first ring traversed
-by a white line; head pale brown, glossy. The moth flies in July and
-August, sometimes in June.
-
-THE MARBLED MINOR (_Miana strigilis_).
-
-Half a dozen specimens are shown on Plate 134, and these will serve to give
-some idea of the range of aberration in this species. The most typical of
-the species are those represented by Figs. 1 and 4; the farthest removed
-from the type is var. _aethiops_, Haworth (Fig. 16). In the reddish var.
-_latruncula_, Hubn., as figured by him, the most conspicuous character is
-the white lower curve of the second cross line, as in Fig. 7.
-
-The caterpillar is purplish brown above, and ochreous below; striped on the
-back with pale yellow, and less distinctly on the sides; spiracles black
-and very distinct; head and plates on the first and last rings of the body
-ochreous brown and shining. Found in March and April, after hibernation,
-feeding on the stems of various grasses. The moth is out in June and July,
-and may frequently be seen at rest on palings, etc., but at night it often
-abounds at sugar or honey dew. Generally distributed in the British Isles,
-except perhaps in the islands of Scotland.
-
-THE MIDDLE-BARRED MINOR (_Miana fasciuncula_).
-
-In its typical form this species (Plate 134, Fig. 3) has the fore wings
-reddish ochreous, with a darker central band, and {276} the cross lines,
-especially the second, distinctly white towards the inner margin.
-Sometimes, chiefly in Scotland, the ground colour is much paler,
-occasionally almost whitish, and the band reddish (var. _cana_, Staud.,
-Figs. 5, 8). There is a good deal of variation, both in the ground colour
-and in that of the band; the latter is often smoky brown in pale specimens
-of both sexes.
-
-The caterpillar is of a pale flesh tint, rather inclining to greyish
-ochreous, the dorsal stripe of a darker tint of the same colour well
-defined on each side by the pale ground colour; next a very broad stripe of
-pinkish brown, followed by a narrow stripe of the ground colour, faintly
-edged below with pinkish brown; above the black spiracles is a stripe of
-pinkish brown freckles; head and plates on first and last rings of the body
-light brown, shining (Buckler). In the shoots of grasses such as _Aira
-cespitosa_, in April and early May, probably after hibernation. The moth is
-out in May and June, and its haunts are moist woods and marshy grounds,
-generally. The species is widely distributed, and often common, throughout
-the British Isles. Abroad it seems to have a very limited range.
-
-THE ROSY MINOR (_Miana literosa_).
-
-The ground colour is pale, or dark, violet grey, more or less clouded
-inwards from the submarginal line, and on the basal area, with purplish; a
-central reddish or reddish brown band is limited inwardly by the,
-sometimes, whitish edged black first line, and outwardly by an almost
-straight black line passing between the stigmata to the inner margin.
-(Plate 134, Figs. 11, 14.)
-
-The caterpillar is dingy ochreous yellow, with a dark purplish stripe,
-enclosing a central line of the ground colour, on the back; spiracles
-black; head dark brown, plates pale brown (Porritt). From September to
-June, in stems of _Carex glauca_, _Dactylis glomerata_, and other grasses.
-The moth flies in July and August, and although rare inland is pretty
-generally distributed around the coasts of the British Isles; apparently,
-from the Clyde area, confined to the east coast of Scotland, and not
-extending north of Moray.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 134.
- 1, 4, 7, 10, 13, 16. MARBLED MINOR MOTH.
- 2, 5, 8. MIDDLE-BARRED MINOR.
- 11, 14. ROSY MINOR.
- 3, 6, 9, 12, 15. CLOAKED MINOR.
- 17, 18. LEAST MINOR.
- 19-21. SMALL DOTTED BUFF.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 135.
- 1, 2. CLOUDED-BORDERED BRINDLE.
- 3. LIGHT ARCHES.
- 4, 5. CLOUDED BRINDLE.
- 6. REDDISH LIGHT ARCHES.
- 7, 8. SLENDER BRINDLE.
-
-{277} THE CLOAKED MINOR (_Miana bicoloria_).
-
-This is another variable species of the genus, and five specimens of it are
-shown on Plate 134. The typical form (Fig. 3) has the fore wings more or
-less brownish on the basal area, and whitish bordered with brownish on the
-outer area. Very frequently these wings are pale, or dark, brown marbled
-with darker brown, and with the stigmata and cross lines distinct, faint,
-or absent. Fig. 15 represents a form from Ireland, which is uniformly pale
-ochreous brown, sometimes reddish tinged. The caterpillar is yellowish
-ochreous, tinged with pink; three dull reddish interrupted bands, each
-intersected by a line of the ground colour; head reddish brown; plates on
-first and last rings of the body pale reddish brown (Buckler). In stems of
-grasses, such as _Festuca_ and _Aira_--April and May; probably after
-hibernation. The moth flies in August and September, sometimes earlier. At
-dusk it is often common in rough fields and grassy places near the sea.
-Although found in some inland localities, it is more especially a coast
-species, and as such is widely distributed over the British Isles to the
-Orkneys.
-
-THE LEAST MINOR (_Phothedes captiuncula_).
-
-The pretty little moth shown on Plate 134, Figs. 17, 18, has the fore wings
-brownish ochreous, tinged with reddish brown, and with a darker central
-band and hind margin. Sometimes the whole basal area up to the white second
-line {278} is reddish brown; and in a form from Ireland named _tincta_,
-Kane, the coloration is somewhat similar to that of _M. literosa_. This
-species was first discovered in Britain by Messrs. Law and Sang, in a
-locality near Darlington, Durham, in 1854. It is now obtained in several
-places in that county, and in Northumberland. Also found in North
-Lancashire, Westmoreland, and once in Yorkshire. It occurs commonly in Co.
-Galway and Clare, Ireland, and has once been taken in Killarney. There is
-also a record from Perthshire in Scotland.
-
-The caterpillar is dull ochreous, with a reddish tinge inclining to
-purplish on rings two to seven; head reddish brown; plates on first and
-last rings yellow brown, the former edged in front with darker brown;
-spiracles black, three yellow spots on sides of rings two and three
-(Buckler). On _Carex glauca_ and other sedges, eating down the stems close
-to the roots. Will also eat ribbon grass--August to June. The moth flies,
-often in the early afternoon, from late June to August. It seems partial to
-rough fields, and hillsides, chiefly on the coast.
-
-THE CLOUDED-BORDERED BRINDLE (_Xylophasia rurea_).
-
-Of this common, generally distributed, and often abundant species,
-portraits of the typical form (Fig. 1), and of var. _alopecurus_, Esp.
-(Fig. 2), will be found on Plate 135. The ground colour varies from the
-normal greyish white to a silvery white (var. _argentea_, Tutt), and
-through yellowish shades to a reddish ochreous; the markings in all these
-colour aberrations are more or less typical. In the var. _alopecurus_,
-Esp., there are also gradations; thus _combusta_, Haworth, is dark greyish
-brown; and a blackish brown, red tinged form is _nigro-rubidea_, Tutt. The
-caterpillar (Plate 130, Fig. 4) is variable in colour, one form is ochreous
-grey with three lines on the back, the central one white shaded on each
-side with grey; usual dots and spiracles are black; head blackish and
-shining. From {279} August to May on grasses. The range abroad extends to
-Amurland.
-
-THE LIGHT ARCHES (_Xylophasia lithoxylea_).
-
-In this whitish ochreous species (Plate 135, Fig. 3) there is little
-variation except that the darker clouding is more pronounced in some
-specimens than in others. The caterpillar is brownish grey, tinged with
-ochreous or with greenish; usual dots blackish, as also are the head and
-the plates on first and last rings of the body. October to May, feeding on
-stems of grasses, near the roots. The moth is out in June and July, and is
-often seen on fences, etc., in the daytime. Generally distributed, and
-common in most places throughout the British Isles. In Scotland, however,
-it does not range north of Moray, and only on the eastern side.
-
-THE REDDISH LIGHT ARCHES (_Xylophasia sublustris_).
-
-Except that the fore wings are somewhat reddish tinged, and not so long,
-this species (Plate 135, Fig. 6) is very similar to the last. The
-caterpillar is also very like that of the Light Arches, but has more red in
-its coloration. The moth is out in June and July, and affects limestone and
-chalk localities, and these chiefly on the coast. In Berkshire and
-adjoining counties it occurs in beech woods. Specimens have been recorded
-from Kendal in Westmoreland, but Yorkshire has been considered the northern
-limit of the species in England. It has been recorded occasionally from the
-fens. Paisley and Bonhill are given as Scottish localities in the _Fauna of
-the Clyde Area_ (1901). Widely distributed in Ireland but most abundant in
-the province of Connaught.
-
-_Xylophasia zollikoferi._ The home of this species would seem to be in
-parts of Hungary, Russia and Western Asia, whence it very occasionally
-finds its way across the continent {280} to England. Its British history is
-as follows:--a specimen taken at Deal, by Mr. Harding, October, 1867; one
-at Inverurie in Scotland, by Mr. Tait, September, 1871; and one at sugar by
-Mr. T. A. Lofthouse at Linthorpe, Middlesbrough, September 26, 1903. Also
-recorded from Norwich, September, 1905, and from Methley, Yorks, August,
-1910. (Plate 153, Fig. 6.)
-
-THE DARK ARCHES (_Xylophasia monoglypha_).
-
-The five portraits of this moth on Plate 136 will give some idea of the
-various forms it assumes. The blackish specimen is referable to var.
-_infuscata_, White, and an extreme aberration of this form has been named
-_aethiops_, Tutt. The caterpillar is greyish, inclining to brownish or
-reddish; usual dots blackish; head and plate on first ring of body dark
-brownish, and shining. August to September, feeding on grasses and
-devouring the stems near the base. The moth is out from June to August,
-sometimes in October and November. It occurs in all parts of the British
-Isles and is often abundant.
-
-THE CLOUDED BRINDLE (_Xylophasia hepatica_).
-
-The most frequent form of this species (Plate 135) has the fore wings pale
-brown, with well-defined black markings, but without distinct cross lines.
-When the wings are more clouded and suffused with reddish or purplish brown
-the paler ground colour shows up as cross lines, and these are more or less
-edged with blackish (var. _characterea_, Hubner). The caterpillar (Plate
-130, Fig. 2) is dingy brown with shining black dots; three pale ochreous
-lines along the back, the central one most distinct; head black and
-shining; plate on first ring of the body black crossed by white lines,
-another on the last ring is blackish. Feeds from August to April on
-grasses, but will also eat various low plants. The chrysalis (Fig. 2A)
-which {281} is enclosed in a tender earthen cocoon, is reddish, blackish
-between the rings, and the last ring, which is blunt at apex, is furnished
-with four hooks. The moth is out in June and July. A common species in the
-eastern and southern counties of England, but less frequent or rare in the
-Midlands and northwards to Roxburgh in Scotland. Local and not numerous in
-Ireland. Range abroad extends to Amurland.
-
-THE SLENDER BRINDLE (_Xylophasia scolopacina_).
-
-This is another species with reddish brown clouded, pale ochreous brown
-fore wings. The ground colour may be whiter or redder than in the specimens
-shown on Plate 135, Figs. 7, 8. The caterpillar (Plate 130, Fig. 1) is
-dusky green above and whitish green beneath, the green shading into
-blackish along the sides; a fine whitish line along the middle of the back;
-usual dots black; head honey-brown and glossy, the jaws and a spot on each
-cheek black. It feeds on the juicy lower part of the stems of grasses, such
-as _Triticum_, but will also eat the leaves. In the spring, and till June,
-probably after hibernation. The moth is out in July and August, and as an
-uncommon event may be seen at rest on a tree trunk or paling. Stephens
-(1829) refers to its occurrence in the London district, and it still
-appears in woods around Highgate. It seems to be most plentiful in the
-woods of South Yorkshire, and in the Sherwood district of Nottinghamshire;
-but it has been found more or less frequently in several of the southern
-counties of England, and also in some northern ones. Its range abroad
-extends to Amurland and Japan.
-
-THE BIRD'S WING (_Dipterygia scabriuscula_).
-
-The curious wing-like marks on the blackish fore wings of this moth (Plate
-137, Figs. 1[male], 2[female]) are its chief features. The {282} stigmata
-are outlined in black, but are rarely paler than the ground colour. The
-caterpillar is reddish brown with yellow and black dots; three lines along
-the back, the central one white with a black edging, and the others
-blackish; head brown and glossy, marked with black; a blackish plate on
-first ring is also glossy, and is followed by a black mark on the next
-ring, both streaked with white. It feeds on dock, sorrel, and plants of the
-genus _Polygonum_, in July and August. The moth flies in late May and June,
-sometimes as a second generation in August or September. It occurs more or
-less commonly in most southern and eastern counties from Oxfordshire. In
-other parts of England, and in Scotland, it seems to be local or absent.
-
-THE PURPLE CLOUD (_Cloantha polyodon_).
-
-This moth is figured on Plate 137, Fig. 7. The first recorded British
-specimen was taken at Yarmouth, in June, 1839. In 1855 a specimen, found in
-a spider's web at Ashford, Hampshire, was exhibited at a meeting, held in
-May, of the Entomological Society of London. Two specimens were taken in
-1892; one at Folkestone, Kent, at sugar, and the other outside Norwich, in
-Norfolk, at a gas lamp. In the _Entomologist_ for 1894, there is a record
-of a specimen captured at sugar, July, 1891, at Clonbrock, Co. Galway,
-Ireland. The species has a wide range abroad, extending eastward to
-Amurland and Japan.
-
-THE DEEP-BROWN DART (_Aporophyla lutulenta_).
-
-In the south of England the species (Plate 137, Figs. 9, 10) is generally
-of a dark brown coloration on the fore wings, and the markings are often
-indistinct; but blackish forms also occur, although the latter are more
-frequent northwards, and in Scotland and Ireland are the prevailing form of
-the species. In black or blackish specimens, usually referred to
-_luneburgensis_, {283} Freyer, the hind wings in the male, have the veins
-more or less blackish and dotted with black beyond the middle; var. _sedi_,
-Guenee, has the fore wings pale greyish with the markings distinct, and the
-central area blackish.
-
-The caterpillar is green, sometimes tinged with pink on the first three
-rings; three brownish broken lines along the back, and a violet edged white
-line along the spiracles. It feeds on grasses, yarrow, groundsel, dock,
-plantain, gromwell (_Lithospermum_), and other low herbage; also on buds of
-hawthorn and sloe in the spring. October to April. The moth is out in
-August and September, sometimes later. It is found most frequently on the
-coast, perhaps, but occurs in Cambridgeshire, Hunts, Oxfordshire,
-Gloucestershire, Berks, Kent, Surrey, Sussex, Hants, and Isle of Wight;
-from Somerset to Cornwall; North and South Wales, Cheshire, Lancashire, and
-Yorkshire, and apparently in all counties northward except Westmoreland.
-Widely distributed in Scotland from the border to the Hebrides and Orkneys.
-It is found only on the coast in Ireland, and chiefly in the north-west.
-
-THE BLACK RUSTIC (_Aporophyla nigra_).
-
-This black or brownish black moth (Plate 137, Fig. 8) has the outer edge of
-the reniform stigma ochreous, and the cross lines are sometimes dotted with
-the same colour. The caterpillar is green, yellowish-brown, or dull
-purplish; first three rings often tinged with reddish; three darker, often
-broken, lines along the back; line along the black-edged white spiracles
-yellowish. It feeds on bedstraw (_Galium mollugo_), dock, plantain,
-grasses, etc. October to May. (The egg is figured on Plate 139, Fig. 3.)
-The moth is out in September and October. Chiefly a northern species, but
-it occurs in some of the southern counties. It is, however, most frequent
-in Northampton, Huntingdon, and Cambridgeshire; in Gloucestershire, {284}
-and Wales, and in the Isle of Man, Cumberland, and Westmoreland. In
-Lincolnshire, Yorkshire, and Lancashire it seems to be local or rare. It is
-found up to Moray in Scotland, and is sometimes plentiful in Aberdeenshire,
-Inverness, and Moray. Very local in Ireland, but Kane says that it is found
-in the extreme north, south, east, and west.
-
-THE FEATHERED BRINDLE (_Aporophyla australis_).
-
-The fore wings are pale grey, sometimes darker clouded, chiefly on the
-costa; the black cross lines, slender, wavy, but not always distinct; a
-short black bar from middle of the base and one below it on the inner
-margin; often two other bars, pretty much in a line with the basal ones, on
-the central area; a row of black wedges on the outer area, near margin.
-Hind wings white in the male, pale brownish grey in the female. Most of our
-specimens, perhaps all, are referable to var. _pascuea_, Curtis. The
-caterpillar is yellowish green tinged with reddish above; a pale reddish
-line along the middle of the back has black V-shaped marks upon it, and
-there is a series of black marks on each side; the line along the spiracles
-yellowish; head green, brown freckled. Feeds, from October to April, on
-grasses, catchfly (_Silene maritima_), etc. The moth, which is figured on
-Plate 137, Figs. 3, 4, is out from late August to October.
-
-This is a local species in England and occurs on the south coast; in Kent,
-on the sand hills at Deal; in Sussex, on the downs at Brighton and Lewes;
-also on downs on the Isle of Wight. Farther west it is found at Portland in
-Dorset, and Torquay in Devon; thence along the Devon and Cornish coasts. In
-Ireland it is obtained, according to Kane, on the coast of Wicklow and
-Waterford, and is not scarce on the sand hills of Wexford Harbour.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 136.
- DARK ARCHES MOTH.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 137.
- 1, 2. BIRD'S WING MOTH.
- 3, 4. FEATHERED BRINDLE.
- 5, 6. FEATHERED RANUNCULUS.
- 7. PURPLE CLOUD.
- 8. BLACK RUSTIC.
- 9, 10. DEEP-BROWN DART.
-
-{285}
-
-THE FEATHERED RANUNCULUS (_Epunda lichenea_).
-
-This is a maritime species and is chiefly found in the Isle of Wight, the
-Isle of Portland, and along the coasts of Cornwall, Devon, Somerset,
-Gloucester, and on the opposite Welsh coast. It is locally common in
-Cheshire and Lancashire, and occurs on the coast of North Wales, in Flint
-and Carnarvon. In Yorkshire it is not uncommon at Scarborough. Has been
-recorded from the Lincolnshire coast and from Eastbourne. There are two
-records from Scotland--Renfrew and Ayr. In Ireland it is common at Howth,
-and abundant at Rossbeigh, Co. Kerry. This species, and the last two, have
-a rather limited range abroad. On Plate 137 are portraits of two local
-forms, Fig. 5 is from Portland, and Fig. 6 from Plymouth. It will be noted
-that the former is greyish in tone whilst the latter is greenish and rather
-larger. Similar local variation occurs throughout the range of the species.
-
-The caterpillar (Plate 133, Fig. 2) is olive green inclining to brownish
-above; along the back are darker markings forming a central stripe and a
-paler interrupted stripe on each side; a pale stripe along the spiracles.
-It feeds from autumn to May on various low plants. The moth flies from late
-August to early October. The first British specimen is said to have been
-taken in the New Forest in 1847; but in 1850 about a hundred were captured
-at New Brighton in Cheshire.
-
-THE BRINDLED OCHRE (_Dasypolia templi_).
-
-The dull ochreous-brown moth shown on Plate 138, Fig. 1, has hardly any
-well-defined markings, but the cross lines are generally darker, and the
-reniform and orbicular paler. The caterpillar, which feeds in the stems of
-cow-parsnip (_Heracleum sphondylium_) from April to August, is pinkish
-ochreous with a rather darker stripe on the back; raised spots brown; head
-{286} reddish brown. The moth flies in the autumn, and, after hibernation,
-in the spring. It frequents rocky places on the coast and on hills. Its
-range in England is pretty much as in the last species, but it does not
-seem to occur on the south-east coast. In Scotland it is widely spread over
-the country to the Orkneys, and has been found in the most northern isle of
-the Shetlands, but it is generally uncommon. It has been taken near Dublin
-in Ireland, and less frequently in Antrim and Donegal.
-
-THE LARGE RANUNCULUS (_Polia flavicincta_).
-
-The fore wings of this moth (Plate 138, Figs. 6 and 7), are pale grey,
-clouded, and marked with darker; yellowish freckles at the base, and on the
-central area and the submarginal line are usually, but not always, present.
-Sometimes, chiefly in northern specimens, these wings are much suffused
-with darker grey, approaching blackish. The caterpillar is green with a
-yellowish or bluish tinge; a dusky line along the back, and a dark green
-line along the black-edged white spiracles. It feeds on dock, groundsel,
-plantain, and many other plants from April to July. The moth flies in
-September and October, and, except in Kent, and perhaps Sussex, is rather
-uncommon in the southern counties of England. It occurs, however, not
-infrequently in the eastern counties, and through Oxford, Berks,
-Gloucester, Somerset to Cornwall, and northward through Hereford and parts
-of the Midlands to Lancashire, Yorkshire, and Durham.
-
-THE GREY CHI (_Polia chi_).
-
-Four specimens are depicted on Plate 138. Figs. 2 and 3 represent the sexes
-of the type form, and Figs. 4 and 5, the greenish-grey var. _olivacea_,
-Stephens. Both forms may be paler or darker, but the green tinge is apt to
-fade out. Var. _suffusa_, Tutt, is a dark greyish suffused form. {287}
-
-The caterpillar is green, inclining to bluish green above; the lines on the
-back are whitish, edged with dark green; that along the black-margined
-white spiracles is white, shaded above with dark green. It feeds on dock,
-dandelion, groundsel, etc.; also on sallow and hawthorn, from April to
-June. The moth is out in August and September. It prefers the open country
-to woodlands, and is often seen resting on rocks, stone, or other walls,
-and buildings. Except that it occurs in Devon and Dorset, the species seems
-to be absent in the south of England, but its area of distribution extends
-in the British Isles from the Midlands of England to Moray and Ross in
-Scotland, and to Ireland.
-
-THE BLACK-BANDED (_Polia xanthomista_).
-
-The form of this species occurring in Britain is var. _nigrocincta_, Tr.
-(Plate 140, Figs. 2, 3), which is pale grey, spotted with white, and
-clouded on the central area with black. The typical yellow flecking and
-dotting is in this form usually sparse, but occasionally it is prominent. A
-specimen reared from a caterpillar taken in the Isle of Man was suffused on
-the fore wings with bright orange.
-
-The caterpillar is ochreous brown, varying in tint, above and pale green
-below the brown spiracles; the head is rather yellowish and very glossy. It
-feeds on sea thrift (flowers), and plantain in its haunts, which are the
-rocky coasts of Cornwall, North Devon, and the Isle of Man. In confinement
-it will eat groundsel, dock, dandelion, lettuce, etc. Usually the
-caterpillars do not hatch out until the spring, and then feed until June or
-July; but they have been known to hatch in the autumn, and then to
-hibernate. The moth flies in August and September, but, although it has
-been taken at sugar and light, is more frequently reared from caterpillars,
-which are readily found at night by those who may undertake the sometimes
-{288} hazardous business of collecting them. The earliest known British
-specimen was taken at a lighthouse near Padstow in Cornwall, and five years
-later the moth was bred from a caterpillar found in the Isle of Man. In
-1880 a specimen was taken at sugar in the middle of a small wood in South
-Pembrokeshire. According to Hampson this, and the other two species usually
-included in _Polia_, are referable to _Antitype_, Hubn. On the same
-authority _nigrocincta_, Treit., is the earlier name for the present
-species, as the figure of _xanthomista_, Hubn., was not published until
-1827.
-
-THE SPRAWLER (_Brachionycha_ (_Asteroscopus_) _sphinx_).
-
-The black streaked and dotted, pale brownish grey moth (Plate 138, Fig. 8)
-occurs, more or less locally, in most of the English counties from Norfolk,
-Huntingdon, and Oxford, southwards; and from Gloucester northwards through
-Hereford and Worcester, to Cheshire, Lancashire, Yorkshire, to Darlington
-in Durham, and Cumberland. It is, however, rare in the northern counties.
-The caterpillar is yellowish green; three whitish lines on the back, the
-central one broadly edged with green on both sides, and the others inwardly
-by a dark line; the front ring is edged with whitish, and the head is
-greenish. It feeds on the foliage of various trees, including oak, beech,
-elm, ash, sallow, lime in May and June. The moth flies in November and
-December.
-
-THE RANNOCH SPRAWLER (_Brachionycha_ (_Asteroscopus_) _nubeculosa_).
-
-The first British specimen was taken at Rannoch in the spring of 1854, and
-in that Perthshire locality the species is still to be found, sitting on
-the trunks of the birch trees in late March and in April. It has frequently
-been reared from the egg, but the caterpillars must be sleeved out on
-growing birch, or the mortality among them may be high. Even if they attain
-the chrysalis stage, the moth may not appear the following spring, as it
-has a habit of remaining in its shell for two winters, and sometimes more.
-(Plate 140, Figs. 1[male], 4[female].)
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 138.
- 1. BRINDLED OCHRE MOTH.
- 2, 3. GREY CHI MOTH.
- 4, 5. GREY CHI MOTH, _var. olivaceae._
- 6, 7. LARGE RANUNCULUS.
- 8. SPRAWLER.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 139.
- 1, 1a. BLACK-BANDED MOTH: _eggs, natural size and enlarged._
- 2, 2a. GOTHIC MOTH: _caterpillar and chrysalis._
- 3, 3a. BLACK RUSTIC: _eggs, natural size and enlarged._
-
-{289} The caterpillar is yellowish green, whiter on the back; the third
-ring is obliquely marked with yellow on each side; the eleventh ring is
-slightly raised and marked yellow, and there is an oblique yellow mark
-above the claspers; spiracles white edged with black, and the usual dots
-are pale yellow. It feeds on birch. May and June.
-
-THE GREEN-BRINDLED CRESCENT (_Miselia oxyacanthae_).
-
-This moth, which in its typical form was known to the ancient fathers of
-entomology as "Ealing's Glory," is shown on Plate 141, Fig. 2. The var.
-_capucina_, Mill (Fig. 3), a purely British production by the way, has the
-fore wings dark sooty brown, inclining to blackish. The caterpillar, which
-has a white-marked and divided hump on ring eleven, is reddish or greyish
-brown, with dark grey and greenish mottling; the back has three darker
-lines along it, and there is a sort of diamond pattern in greyish between
-the outer ones; rings three and ten striped with black; head reddish brown.
-It feeds in April and May on hawthorn, sloe, crab, and apple. Widely
-distributed throughout the British Isles, but apparently not found north of
-Moray in Scotland.
-
-THE DOUBLE-SPOT BROCADE (_Miselia bimaculosa_).
-
-Stephens, referring to this species in 1829, states that he had only seen
-one British specimen. This was in the British Museum, "to which it was
-presented by Dr. Leach; it was captured near Bristol, I believe, in July,
-1815." Barrett notes {290} a specimen, said to have been taken by Peter
-Bouchard, in the collection of the late Dr. Mason. This is all that there
-seems to be known concerning this species in Britain. The specimen figured
-on Plate 141, Fig. 4, is continental.
-
-THE MERVEILLE DU JOUR (_Agriopis aprilina_).
-
-The pretty green moth, with white-edged black markings, shown on Plate 141,
-Fig. 1, is widely distributed over the greater part of the British Isles.
-It occurs in oak woods, or in localities where oak trees are plentiful. The
-caterpillar is of an obscure greenish-grey coloration, sometimes inclining
-to brownish; a white line along the back, and a dark one low down on the
-sides; over the back spreads a series of blackish marks showing a more or
-less diamond pattern. It feeds in the spring and until June on oak leaves,
-and often rests by day on the trunks, in the chinks of the bark. The moth
-flies in September and October, rather earlier in Scotland.
-
-FLAME BROCADE (_Rhizotype_ (_Trigonophora_) _flammea_).
-
-The earliest record of this species (Plate 141, Fig. 6) in England dates
-back to 1855, when five specimens were obtained at sugar in a locality near
-Brighton, in Sussex. The next year, and subsequently, it was found, not
-only in the original place, but also in the Lewes and Shoreham districts.
-Later it was met with in other localities in the county, and for several
-years captures were made in most of its known haunts. For some years past,
-however, it seems to have disappeared from Sussex, and is not known to
-occur in any other part of the British Isles.
-
-The caterpillar is ochreous brown, tinged with reddish; a dull brownish
-diamond pattern, and three lines along the back, the central line paler
-than the others; the spiracles and usual dots are white, ringed with
-brownish. Another form is green, as also are both forms in the younger
-stages. It feeds from December to April on pilewort (_Ranunculus ficaria_),
-_R. repens_, and other kinds of buttercup. When full grown it is said to
-prefer ash or privet. The moth flies in late September and October.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 140.
- 1, 4. RANNOCH SPRAWLER.
- 2, 3. BLACK-BANDED MOTH.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 141.
- 1. MERVEILLE-DU-JOUR MOTH.
- 2, 3. GREEN-BRINDLED CRESCENT.
- 4. DOUBLE-SPOT BROCADE.
- 5. SMALL ANGLE SHADES.
- 6. FLAME BROCADE.
- 7. ANGLE SHADES.
-
-{291} THE SMALL ANGLE SHADES (_Euplexia lucipara_).
-
-The pale reniform mark on the outer edge of the blackish central area is
-the prominent feature of this pinkish- or purplish-brown moth. (Plate 141,
-Fig. 5.) The caterpillar is green, or pinkish-brown, and velvety in
-appearance; three indistinct lines and some dusky V-shaped marks on the
-back; a white line along the sides; usual dots white, and the spiracles
-black. It feeds in August and September on most low plants, birch, sallow,
-bracken, etc. It is often destructive to ferns in the garden or
-conservatory; usually selecting the choicer kinds, and as its depredations
-are carried on only at night, the culprit escapes detection. The moth flies
-in June and July, and a few specimens sometimes appear in the autumn.
-Generally distributed and often common in the South. The range abroad
-extends to Amurland, Japan, and North America.
-
-THE ANGLE SHADES (_Phlogophora meticulosa_).
-
-The moth shown on Plate 141, Fig. 7, is, when newly emerged from the
-chrysalis, an exceedingly pretty creature. After death the pinky-brown
-colour remains, but the olive green of the triangular central band, and
-border of outer margin, fades and distinctly mars the pleasing effect of
-the general colour scheme. Sometimes the central band and outer border are
-red, and in such specimens the ground colour is more rosy. The caterpillar
-is green or brown, minutely dotted with white; a pale central line and
-dusky V-shaped marks on each side of it; the outer arm of the V more
-distinct than the inner; the line along the dark {292} ringed spiracles
-whitish; head green or brown freckled with darker. It feeds on groundsel,
-dock, bracken, and almost anything in the way of an herbaceous plant; often
-attacks geraniums in the greenhouse as well as outdoors. Has been found in
-almost every month of the year, but perhaps most common in July, August,
-and September. The moth also occurs at all seasons of the year, but seems
-to be most frequent in May and June, and sometimes in September and
-October. It is found throughout the British Isles. Both this species and
-the last mentioned, when resting on herbage, paling, or tree stem, chiefly
-the former, sit with the wings folded in to the body, but each fore wing is
-broadly wrinkled or folded throughout its length. In this position the moth
-is very like a crumpled decaying leaf, and for such may be readily
-mistaken.
-
-THE OLD LADY (_Mania_ (_Mormo_) _maura_).
-
-From its habit of creeping behind curtains, shutters, etc., and otherwise
-disposing itself in dwelling-houses during the day, as well as in summer
-houses and other buildings, this moth (Plate 142, Figs. 1[male], 3[female])
-must often come under observation. The caterpillar is ochreous brown with a
-darker diamond pattern on the back; the central line is ochreous, but much
-broken, and on each side of it there is a series of pale oblique streaks;
-the spiracles are reddish ochreous, edged with black, and the line along
-them is ochreous; head pale brown, glossy. The general colour varies to
-greyish or purplish brown. It feeds on various low herbage in the autumn,
-and on the young shoots and leaves of sallow, hawthorn, birch, etc., in the
-spring after hibernation. The moth flies in July and August, and is
-generally common in the south of England. Sometimes it abounds even in the
-London suburbs, and in 1904 it was seen pretty frequently during August
-flying, in the evening, low down along the roads and in gardens all over
-the southern district. The species is also {293} found more or less
-frequently throughout England northwards, and well into Scotland, as least
-as far as Clydesdale. Renton records it as common at sugar in
-Roxburghshire, and White gives the Forth and Tay districts. Widely
-distributed in Ireland, common in some parts.
-
-THE GOTHIC (_Naenia typica_).
-
-This moth (Plate 142, Fig. 2) is common in gardens, as well as along the
-weedy wayside and hedgerow in all parts of England and Wales, Scotland to
-Sutherland, and in Ireland. The caterpillar (Plate 139, Fig. 2) varies in
-colour from brownish-grey to pale ochreous brown, or greenish grey,
-freckled with darker; three pale lines on the first ring, and partly on the
-second; some pale oblique streaks on the sides, and blackish marks on rings
-ten and eleven, the latter more or less united behind; head of the body
-colour darker marked. It feeds on all kinds of herbage, also on the leaves
-of sallow, sloe, apple, etc. When young in large companies on the underside
-of leaves. August to May. The moth flies in June and July.
-
-THE CRESCENT (_Helotropha leucostigma_).
-
-Of this purplish-brown species the typical form (Fig. 1), and the pale
-banded form, var. _fibrosa_, Hubn., are shown on Plate 143. The
-caterpillar, according to Buckler, is slaty brown, inclining to olive drab
-above; three paler lines on the back; the spiracles are black and the usual
-dots black-brown; head warm brown, very glossy; plate on first ring glossy
-black, that on the last ring blackish brown. It feeds in the stems of
-_Cladium mariscus_, sedge (_Carex paludosa_), and yellow flag (_Iris
-pseudacorus_). May to July. The moth is out in late June, July, and August.
-It inhabits fens and marshy ground, and seems to be found in such
-localities throughout the British Isles, including the {294} Hebrides and
-Shetlands. Abroad the range extends to Amurland, China, Japan, also North
-America.
-
-THE EAR MOTH (_Hydroecia_ (_Gortyna_) _nictitans_).
-
-On Plate 143 are shown a more or less typical specimen of this species
-(Fig. 3); the reddish spotted var. _erythrostigma_, Haw. (Fig. 4); and two
-examples of the marsh or saltern form, _paludis_, Tutt (Figs. 5, 6), for
-which specific rank has been claimed. Specimens found in marshes,
-especially those by the sea, are usually somewhat larger than normal, but I
-cannot see that they otherwise differ from forms of _nictitans_. The
-caterpillar is greenish pink with pinkish grey stripes on the back and
-sides; spiracles black, and usual dots dark brownish; head pinkish
-ochreous, plate on ring one of the body yellowish brown. It feeds from May
-to August on grasses, chiefly the lower part of the stems. The moth flies
-in August and September, and is sometimes seen in the daytime on the
-flowers of thistle and ragwort, etc., but far more frequently at night,
-when it also visits sugar more or less freely. Usually common in marshy
-places throughout our islands. The range abroad extends to Amurland, Corea,
-Japan, and North America.
-
-THE ROSY RUSTIC (_Hydroecia_ (_Gortyna_) _micacea_).
-
-This moth (Plate 143, Figs. 8, 9) is also widely spread over the British
-Isles, occurring most freely on the coast, but not uncommonly inland. It
-appears in the autumn, and is frequently seen at light, and although not
-very partial to sugar it occasionally visits that attraction as well as
-ragwort blossom, etc. The caterpillar is dull smoky pink, with a faintly
-darker central stripe; the usual dots dark brown, and the spiracles black;
-head, and plates on first and last rings of the body ochreous brown. May to
-August on dock, plantain, feeding in the stems and down into the roots.
-Sometimes it attacks the potato, eating down the stalk into the tuber. The
-range abroad extends to Amurland.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 142.
- 1, 3. OLD LADY MOTH.
- 2. GOTHIC MOTH.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 143.
- 1, 2. THE CRESCENT.
- 3, 4. EAR MOTH.
- 5, 6. EAR MOTH, _saltern form_.
- 7. BUTTERBUR MOTH.
- 8, 9. ROSY RUSTIC.
-
-{295} THE BUTTERBUR (_Hydroecia_ (_Gortyna_) _petasitis_).
-
-This is a larger species than the last, and more dingy in coloration. Its
-chief haunts, among the butterbur (_Petasites_), are in the northern
-counties from Cheshire to Durham. It was first met with by Stainton in 1846
-at Falkirk in Scotland, and Doubleday named and described it in 1847. An
-account of its caterpillar feeding in the roots of the butterbur was
-published by N. Cooke in 1850, and by 1855 the northern collectors had
-reared and distributed large numbers of the moths among their confreres in
-other parts of the country. The species is still common in the north of
-England, but continues scarce and very local in Scotland. Odd specimens
-have been reported from the eastern counties and once from Somerset. The
-caterpillar is greyish white with black dots; head, and plate on first ring
-of the body brown. July and August. The moth occurs among its food plant in
-August and September. (Plate 143, Fig. 7.)
-
-THE FROSTED ORANGE (_Ochria ochracea_).
-
-Except that it sometimes visits a strong light, and may then be captured,
-this moth (Plate 144, Figs. 1[male], 2[female]) is most easily obtained in
-its early stages. The caterpillar is pale ochreous white with conspicuous
-black dots; head ochreous brown, the plate on first ring of the body is
-blackish with white lines upon it. It feeds in the stems of thistles,
-burdock, hemp-agrimony, etc. April to July, or later. The brownish
-chrysalis may be found in stems of the plants, generally low down near the
-ground. The moth, also known as _flavago_, Schiff., occurs from August to
-October in most places, especially marshy ground, where {296} thistles
-flourish, throughout England and Wales. It is found in Scotland up to
-Perthshire and Aberdeen. Only recorded from Wicklow, Galway, Sligo, and
-Clare, in Ireland.
-
-REED WAINSCOT (_Nonagria algae_ (_cannae_)).
-
-This moth (Plate 144, Fig. 4) varies in size and also in the colour of the
-fore wings, which range from a pale ochreous, through reddish shades, to
-sooty brown. The cross lines are indicated by black dots. The black dotted
-greenish caterpillar has a brown head and a whitish green plate on first
-ring of the body. It feeds from May to July in the stems of reed-mace
-(_Typha latifolia_), often called the bulrush or catstail; also in the true
-bulrush (_Scirpus lacustris_). Fig. 5, Plate 148, shows the chrysalis in
-its characteristic position when in the stem, that is with the head
-upwards. The moth flies, in August and September, at dusk, over and among
-the reeds; the males especially freely responding to the attraction of
-light. Its chief localities are in the fens of Norfolk and Suffolk, but it
-has also occurred in Mid-Sussex.
-
-WEBB'S WAINSCOT (_Nonagria sparganii_).
-
-This moth also varies in the colour of the fore wings, from almost whitish
-through various shades of ochreous and red. The main veins are shaded with
-grey, and the median one has black dots upon it, chiefly at the end of the
-cell; the outer margin with a row of large or small black dots. (Plate 144,
-Fig. 3.) The caterpillar is yellowish green with darker lines; head and
-plate on first ring of the body pale brown. It feeds in July and August in
-stems of bur-reed (_Sparganium_), reed-mace, and yellow flag. Fig. 6, Plate
-148, shows the chrysalis in its natural position in the stem. The hole in
-the stem from which the moth escapes is also clearly in evidence above the
-chrysalis. {297} The moth flies among reeds, etc., in August and September.
-Its chief localities in England are in East and South-east Kent, in which
-county the first British specimens were obtained by Mr. Sydney Webb in
-1879. In 1899 a specimen reared from a caterpillar found in a stem of
-_Typha_, was recorded from Suffolk (Woodbridge district); and in 1901 the
-species was recorded from South Devon. It is also not uncommon "between Old
-Head of Kinsale and Glandore," Co. Cork, Ireland.
-
-THE BULRUSH WAINSCOT (_Nonagria typhae_).
-
-The fore wings of this species (Plate 144, Fig. 5), usually of a pale
-whity-brown colour, in some specimens are reddish tinged; or they may be
-almost uniformly reddish brown or blackish (var. _fraterna_, Treit.). The
-row of black spots on the outer area are wedge-shaped and are placed just
-before the margin. The caterpillar is pale ochreous more or less tinged
-with pink; a paler line along the spiracles; head and plate on first ring
-of the body red-brown. July to August, in stems of _Typha_. The moth flies
-in August and September, and although it may be netted when on the wing at
-dusk, or at light, it is obtained in better condition by rearing it from
-the chrysalis, which may be found in the stems (Plate 148, Fig. 3), those
-of the previous year for choice, of reed mace. Generally distributed in
-England up to Yorkshire; it has been recorded also from Northumberland and
-the Scottish border. It is common in southern Ireland, and found northwards
-up to Sligo, Tyrone, and Armagh.
-
-THE TWIN-SPOTTED (_Nonagria geminipuncta_).
-
-This species, shown on Plate 144, Figs. 6, 7, varies in colour from pale
-brown, more or less suffused with grey, through darker, or reddish brown to
-blackish (var. _nigricans_, Staud.). {298} In the brown typical form the
-reniform mark is represented by two dark-edged white dots, the upper one
-often tiny or absent (var. _unipuncta_, Tutt), or both may be absent (var.
-_obsoleta_, Tutt). The caterpillar in pale ochreous, pink-tinged, a pale
-line along the spiracles; head dark brown. May and June, in stems of reeds
-(_Phragmites_). The chrysalis lies in the reed stem with the head towards
-the oval hole above it from which the moth escapes. In August the moth may
-be found in its haunts in the south and east of England. These are marshes,
-often near the sea, in Cambridgeshire, Suffolk, Essex, the Thames valley,
-Sussex, Hants, and the Isle of Wight, Wiltshire and Somerset.
-
-THE BROWN-VEINED WAINSCOT (_Nonagria dissoluta_).
-
-The popular name applies more especially to the ordinary form of this
-species known as _arundineta_, Schmidt. (Plate 144, Fig. 8.) The dark brown
-or black typical form (_dissoluta_, Treit. = _hessii_, Boisd.) is local and
-uncommon; in fact until 1900 it had not been noted in England for a number
-of years, and specimens were only known from Yaxley. In the year just
-mentioned however, several examples of it were recorded from Suffolk, taken
-in the Needham Market district; and in 1905 specimens were reported from
-the East Kent marshes. Var. _arundineta_, the _neurica_ of some authors,
-occurs in the fens of Norfolk, Suffolk, Cambridge, and Lincolnshire; also
-in marshes in Essex and Kent; and is said to have been taken in Middlesex
-and Lancashire. The caterpillar is dirty white, light reddish on the back;
-raised dots black inclining to brown on front three rings; spiracles white
-edged with black; head dark brown; plate on first and last rings of the
-body brownish grey. It feeds in June in the stems of reed and turns to a
-chrysalis in the lower part of the stem, head downwards in the direction of
-the exit hole below it. (Plate 148, Fig. 1.) The moth flies in July and
-August.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 144.
- 1, 2. FROSTED ORANGE MOTH.
- 3. WEBB'S WAINSCOT.
- 4. REED WAINSCOT.
- 5. BULRUSH MOTH.
- 6, 7. TWIN-SPOTTED WAINSCOT.
- 8. BROWN-VEINED WAINSCOT.
- 9. FENN'S WAINSCOT, 10. _aberration sinelinea._
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 145.
- 1, 2. LARGE WAINSCOT.
- 3, 4. FEN WAINSCOT.
- 5, 6. FLAME WAINSCOT.
- 7, 8. SILKY WAINSCOT.
- 9, 10, 11. SMALL RUFOUS MOTH.
- 12, 13, 14. SMALL WAINSCOT.
-
-{299}
-
-THE SMALL RUFOUS (_Coenobia rufa_).
-
-Varies from pale ochreous white, through reddish shades, to a greyish
-brown. (Plate 145, Figs. 9 to 11.) The caterpillar is described by Hofmann,
-as pale reddish above and whitish below, with minute dark dots on the back
-and a fine blackish line along the sides; head and plate on first ring of
-the body brown and glossy. May and June, in stems of the jointed rush
-(_Juncus lamprocarpus_). The moth flies in July and August, and occurs in
-fens and marshes. At one time it was not uncommon in marshy localities
-around London, and it is still to be obtained in Richmond Park, Surrey. In
-some years it abounds in the Norfolk and Cambridge fens, and in others is
-hardly seen. It is also to be found more or less frequently but always
-local in Suffolk, Essex, Berks, Kent, Sussex, Isle of Wight, Dorset (Isle
-of Purbeck), Devon, Somerset, Gloucester, North and South Wales, Cheshire,
-and Yorkshire; Argyllshire in Scotland; Ireland.
-
-THE SILKY WAINSCOT (_Senta maritima_).
-
-In its typical form (Fig. 7) the moth shown on Plate 145 is whity-brown,
-clouded with grey and sometimes tinged with brownish on the disc. The
-orbicular and reniform stigmata are round and faintly outlined in whitish.
-In var. _bipunctata_, Haworth, the stigmata are black and conspicuous: var.
-_wismariensis_, Schmidt, has a blackish central streak from the base
-broadening out towards the outer margin (Fig. 8): var. _nigristriata_,
-Staud., has the fore-wings finely streaked with black; and var.
-_nigrocostata_, Staud., has the front margin broadly black. The caterpillar
-is ochreous grey with three fine interrupted, whitish lines on the back;
-spiracles black with darker lines along their area; head dark brown and
-shining. September to May, hiding by day in stems of reed (_Phragmites_)
-and at night {300} feeding on the caterpillars and chrysalids of other reed
-insects (Hofmann). The moth flies from late June to early August. It occurs
-in the fens of Norfolk and Cambridge, but in the former county it has been
-taken at Merton and King's Lynn. Dr. Wheeler states that it is usually
-found in the thicker reed beds where stems of the previous year's growth
-still remain. Specimens were obtained among reeds in the Harwich district,
-Essex, in 1902, and the species has also been recorded from Tring,
-Hertfordshire, Surrey, Sussex, and the Isle of Wight.
-
-THE FLAME WAINSCOT (_Meliana flammea_).
-
-The original British specimen, which Curtis in 1829 named, described, and
-figured, was stated to have been taken "near Lewisham, towards Lee, in
-July." Now it is only known to occur in Huntingdon, Norfolk, and
-Cambridgeshire, chiefly in the fens; in Wicken fen in the latter county it
-is most plentiful. (Plate 145, Figs. 5, 6.) The caterpillar is greyish
-ochreous brown, rather paler beneath, with paler lines along the back and
-sides, the central one edged on each side with darker; spiracles whitish,
-outlined with black, and a greyish drab spiracular stripe with paler edges;
-head shining, and faintly netted with darker grey. (Condensed from
-Buckler.) Hides by day in the old stems of reed (_Phragmites_), and feeds
-at night on the leaves, August to October.
-
-THE SMALL WAINSCOT (_Tapinostola fulva_).
-
-The fore wings vary in colour from almost whitish through various shades of
-grey brown and reddish brown (Plate 145, Figs. 12 to 14). The caterpillar,
-pale shining pinkish ochreous; central stripe pale, bordered on each side
-with greyish brown. Head pale brown, marked with darker, shining. June and
-July in stems of sedges (_Carex_). The moth flies in August and {301}
-September, and is found in fens and marshy ground pretty well all over the
-British Isles, including the Hebrides.
-
-THE CONCOLOROUS (_Tapinostola extrema_).
-
-This species (Plate 146, Fig. 3) was at one time subsequent to 1844, when
-it was first discovered in Yaxley Fen, not at all scarce in that locality
-and in other fens in Huntingdonshire and Cambridgeshire. It then
-disappeared from all its old haunts, some of which were destroyed; but a
-few years since it was met with again in Hunts, and apparently not
-uncommonly.
-
-BOND'S WAINSCOT (_Tapinostola bondii_).
-
-The whitish moth shown on Plate 146, Fig. 4, was first taken at Folkestone,
-Kent, by Dr. Knaggs, in 1859, and named and described by him in 1861. It
-still occurs in that locality and also on the Devon and Dorsetshire coast,
-the known localities being Charmouth, Lyme Regis, and Sidmouth.
-
-The caterpillar is dirty white in colour inclining to brownish at each end;
-a whitish line along the middle of the back; head brown. Feeds from August
-to June in stems of _Festuca arundinacea_. The moth flies in June and July.
-
-THE MERE WAINSCOT (_Tapinostola hellmanni_).
-
-Present localities for this reddish species (Plate 146, Figs. 1, 2) are
-Wicken and Chippenham fens, Chatteris and Whittlesford, in Cambridgeshire;
-Monk's Wood in Hunts. Formerly Yaxley, where it was first taken in 1847,
-used to be a noted locality, but the insect disappeared when the fen was
-drained. It has been reported from Norfolk (Yarmouth), Lincolnshire,
-Devonshire (Dartmoor), and Hertfordshire (Hitchin), chiefly in odd
-specimens. The caterpillar has been described by Hofmann as
-yellowish-white, or reddish above and paler beneath; plate {302} on first
-ring of the body rather glossy, head glossy yellow brown. It lives from
-autumn to June of the next year in stems of the wood smallreed
-(_Calamagrostis epigeios_). The moth flies in July and August.
-
-THE LYME GRASS (_Tapinostola elymi_).
-
-The more or less brownish-tinged, whitish-ochreous species shown on Plate
-146, Figs. 5, 6, was not recorded as a British insect until 1861. It is now
-known to occur in England in many localities, but all on the east coast
-from Norfolk to Durham. In the _Entomologist_ for 1894, it is recorded as
-occurring at Montrose on the Forfarshire coast in Scotland. The caterpillar
-is described by Buckler as pale flesh colour, with a rather darker stripe
-along the back; spiracles black; head reddish-brown, shining; shining
-yellowish-brown plates on the first and last rings of the body. It feeds on
-the stems of lyme-grass (_Elymus arenarius_) in May and June. The moth
-flies at early dusk over and among its food plants, and later on it settles
-on the stems, from which it may be easily boxed.
-
-THE BRIGHTON WAINSCOT (_Oria_ (_Synia_) _musculosa_).
-
-This yellowish-clouded, whitish insect is a native of Southern Europe, Asia
-Minor, Syria, and North-west Africa. Occasionally it has occurred in
-England, and in the time of Haworth and Stephens one or two specimens seem
-to have been recorded as British. In 1855 an example was captured at
-Brighton, and others occurred in the same locality, and at Bexhill, Kent
-(Jenner), between that year and 1860. A specimen was recorded from Brighton
-in 1883, and one from South Devon in 1899. Reported from Wiltshire in 1910.
-(Plate 146, Fig. 7.)
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 146.
- 1, 2. MERE WAINSCOT.
- 3. THE CONCOLOROUS.
- 4. BOND'S WAINSCOT.
- 5, 6. LYME GRASS MOTH.
- 7. BRIGHTON WAINSCOT.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 147.
- 1, 2. COMMON WAINSCOT.
- 3, 4. SMOKY WAINSCOT.
- 5. SOUTHERN WAINSCOT.
- 6. STRIPED WAINSCOT.
- 7, 8. OBSCURE WAINSCOT.
- 9. DEVONSHIRE WAINSCOT.
- 10. SHOULDER-STRIPED WAINSCOT.
-
-{303}
-
-THE LARGE WAINSCOT (_Calamia lutosa_).
-
-This species, shown on Plate 145, Figs. 1, 2, varies somewhat in the colour
-of the fore wings, which is usually pale ochreous brown, but may be more or
-less reddish tinged, or clouded with dusky; there is a row of black dots
-beyond the middle of the wing, but these are sometimes faint or absent. The
-range in size is considerable, some specimens are about the size of _L.
-straminea_ whilst others will equal that of a large _N. typhae_.
-
-The caterpillar is whitish tinged with pink above, and with a dusky line
-along the back; head reddish brown and glossy; plates on first and last
-rings of the body shining pale brown. It feeds from April to June in the
-stems of reed (_Phragmites_), causing the leaves of the affected stems to
-whiten. The moth flies in August, September, and October, sometimes later,
-and occurs in marshes, and on the banks of streams and ditches, in most of
-the southern and eastern counties of England, and from Derbyshire to
-Durham; in Scotland it has been recorded from Roxburghshire (near Kelso,
-rare), Perthshire, Aberdeen, and Shetland. The species is widely spread in
-Ireland.
-
-THE FEN WAINSCOT (_Calamia phragmitidis_).
-
-In the typical form this species (Plate 145, Figs. 3, 4) the fore wings are
-whitish on the basal half, and incline to reddish on the outer half; var.
-_rufescens_, Tutt, has these wings reddish all over, but somewhat darker on
-the outer margin. The caterpillar is ochreous white with a slightly paler
-stripe along the back, edged on each side with purplish; the spots are
-black, as also are the spiracles; head and plates on the first and last
-rings of the body black or blackish brown, glossy. It feeds from August to
-June in stems of reed (_Phragmites_), and is said {304} to hatch from the
-egg in the autumn. The moth flies in July and August, and is fond of the
-flowers of grasses growing in its marshy haunts. It is common in the
-Norfolk and Cambridge fens, and is found in suitable locations in
-Huntingdon, Northampton, Lincoln, Yorkshire, Cheshire, and South
-Lancashire, also in Berkshire, Suffolk, Essex, Kent, and Sussex.
-
-THE COMMON WAINSCOT (_Leucania pallens_).
-
-This common, often abundant species (Plate 147, Figs. 1, 2) is pretty
-generally distributed over the British Isles. The typical coloration is
-pale ochreous; ab. _arcuata_, Stephens, is pale brownish ochreous; ab.
-_ectypa_, Hubn. = _rufescens_, Haworth, is reddish; and ab. _suffusa_,
-Stephens, is also reddish, but powdered with blackish scales between the
-veins, and chiefly so under the median nervure. The hind wings in all forms
-are white in both sexes; but sometimes slightly tinged with greyish on the
-outer margin in the female. The caterpillar (Plate 152, Fig. 1) which feeds
-on grasses from August to May, is pale whity-brown freckled above with
-pinkish brown; three whitish lines along the back, the central one narrowly
-edged on each side, and the others on the inner side only, with blackish; a
-greyish stripe along the sides with two pinkish brown lines above it; dots,
-minute, black; head freckled with dark brown. Distribution abroad extends
-to Amurland.
-
-MATHEW'S WAINSCOT (_Leucania favicolor_).
-
-This species (Plate 149, Figs. 1, 2) has been mainly found on the coasts of
-North-east Essex and South-east Suffolk, but it has also been taken at
-Hemley in Suffolk, and has been recorded from near Southend in Essex, and
-Rochester in Kent. In 1906 six specimens were captured in the Isle of
-Sheppey. So far as is known at present this is its range in England, and it
-does not seem to occur anywhere abroad. It was first discovered by
-Paymaster-in-Chief G. F. Mathew, in 1895, and was described by the late Mr.
-C. G. Barrett in 1896.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 148.
- 1, 1a. BROWN-VEINED WAINSCOT: _egg and chrysalis_.
- 2. TWIN-SPOTTED WAINSCOT: _egg, enlarged_.
- 3. BULRUSH MOTH: _chrysalis_.
- 4, 4a. FENN'S WAINSCOT: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
- 5. REED WAINSCOT: _chrysalis_.
- 6. WEBB'S WAINSCOT: _chrysalis_.
- 7. DEVONSHIRE WAINSCOT: _caterpillar_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 149.
- 1, 2. MATHEW'S WAINSCOT.
- 3. THE DELICATE.
- 4. THE WHITE SPECK.
- 5. THE WHITE POINT.
- 6. THE COSMOPOLITAN.
-
-{305} In the typical form the fore wings are of a smooth soft honey colour,
-or colour of the honeycomb, having the nervures faintly perceptible, but
-not paler; a black discal dot, and two more dots with some faint blackish
-dashes indicate the usual second line. Tutt has named several forms, the
-most important being ab. _lutea_, bright yellow buff with discal dot and
-two dots beyond; and ab. _rufa_, deep reddish with discal dot and two
-others beyond. Besides these there are ab. _aenea_, Mathew, deep orange,
-with only one dot representing second line; and ab. _obscura_, Mathew,
-cinnamon-brown, with smoky shading between some of the nervures. The hind
-wings vary from whitish with darker nervures, to smoky grey; but the
-fringes always remain whitish.
-
-The caterpillar is a warm putty colour, or pinkish brown, mottled and
-shaded with darker shades; three pale whitish brown lines on the back, the
-central one bordered on each side by a darker shade, and the outer ones
-shaded inwardly with darker and edged below by a darker line; a brown or
-pinkish stripe above the spiracles, and a pinkish yellow stripe below them;
-head yellowish-brown, shining, and dotted with darker colour. It feeds on
-grasses from July to April (adapted from Mathew). The moth flies in June
-and July, and frequents the flowers of the large grasses growing on salt
-marshes. Sometimes specimens of a second brood appear in August or
-September.
-
-THE SMOKY WAINSCOT (_Leucania impura_).
-
-The range of this common species (Plate 147, Figs. 3[male], 4[female]), in
-the British Isles is almost the same as that of _L. pallens_, but it does
-not extend further north than Moray in Scotland. The hind wings are greyish
-or blackish grey. A form with reddish {306} fore wings is var. _punctina_,
-Haw., which sometimes has a row of black dots on the outer margin. The
-caterpillar is greyish ochreous above, greenish tinged beneath; a brown
-stripe along the middle of the back is intersected by a very fine white
-line; above the reddish black-edged spiracles is a brownish stripe; usual
-dots black; head pale brown, shining, netted with brown and lined with
-blackish. It feeds on grasses from August to May. The moth is out in July
-and August; rather later in the north. Distribution abroad extends to
-Amurland and Japan.
-
-THE SOUTHERN WAINSCOT (_Leucania straminea_).
-
-In its more usual form this species (Plate 147, Fig. 5) has pale
-whity-brown or pale straw-coloured fore wings, and the black dots forming
-the second line not infrequently absent, at least as regards some of them.
-Var. _rufolinea_, Tutt, has the fore wings reddish ochreous, the rays
-whitish, and the shade under the median nervure reddish. Var.
-_nigrostriata_, Tutt, has the ground colour of the fore wings obscured by a
-thick powdering of black scales. The hind wings in all forms are whitish,
-sometimes greyish tinged. Generally there is a central black dot, and a
-more or less complete series of black dots beyond it; but some, or all, of
-these dots may be absent. The caterpillar, which feeds on the leaves of
-reeds, _Phalaris_, and other coarse grasses from October to May, is
-ochreous with an orange tinge, and dusted with grey; three white lines on
-the back are broadly shaded with bluish grey; on the sides are two grey
-shaded white lines; head shining brownish ochreous (Fenn). The moth flies
-in July and August, sometimes earlier.
-
-Hammersmith Marshes, a once noted locality for this, the Obscure Wainscot,
-and other good species, have long since been built over; but the present
-insect, and perhaps some of the other ancient inhabitants of the said
-marshes, possibly still occur along the banks of the Thames. Anyhow, it
-does lower {307} down in the Kentish marshes. It is found in most of the
-eastern counties from Essex to Huntington and Lincoln, and also, but less
-frequent, in Sussex, Devon, and Cornwall. Kane gives Dromoland, Co. Clare,
-and Enniskillen, Co. Fermanagh, Ireland.
-
-THE STRIPED WAINSCOT (_Leucania impudens_).
-
-This is a rather larger insect than either of the last four species. The
-fore wings are whitish ochreous, powdered with blackish scales, and often
-tinged with pinkish. The black shading along the median nervure is
-sometimes very conspicuous. The caterpillar is ochreous brown, with three
-blackish-edged whitish lines on the back and dark stripes along the sides;
-head pale brown marked with darker. It feeds on the leaves of the reed
-(_Phragmites_) in June. The moth flies in July and August in fens, boggy
-heaths, and marshy ground, and is found in such places in most of the
-eastern counties, in Yorkshire, and from Berkshire and Kent to Devon, also
-in South Wales and in Galway, Cork, and Kerry, Ireland. Abroad the range
-extends to Siberia and Amurland. (Plate 147, Fig. 6.)
-
-THE OBSCURE WAINSCOT (_Leucania obsoleta_).
-
-This species (Plate 147, Figs. 7[male], 8[female]) will be recognized by
-the fine blackish lines on the fore wings, the white dot at lower end of
-the cell, and the row of black dots representing the second cross line. It
-is a very local species, chiefly found among reeds in Norfolk and
-Cambridgeshire, and may also occur in marshy places along the banks of the
-Thames from Bucks to Kent. The caterpillar is greyish ochreous above and
-paler beneath; three white lines on the back, the central one edged with
-greenish on each side, and the others edged with brownish; the line along
-the black-edged spiracles is greyish; head pale {308} brown striped with
-darker. It feeds from August to October on the leaves of the reed
-(_Phragmites_), hiding by day in the stems. It also hibernates in the reeds
-when full grown, but does not change to the chrysalis state until the
-spring. The moth flies in June and July.
-
-THE SHORE WAINSCOT (_Leucania littoralis_).
-
-The white line running through the pale ochreous brown fore wings is the
-chief character of this species. (Plate 150, Figs. 4, 5.) The caterpillar
-(Plate 152, Fig. 2) is whity-brown with three lines on the back, the
-central one is whitish, shaded with dusky on each side, the others brown
-edged with whitish; the spiracles are whitish, outlined in blackish; head,
-and plate on first ring of the body, bone colour, shining. It feeds from
-August to May on marram grass (_Psamma arenaria_), but will eat meadow
-grass (_Poa_) and other kinds in confinement. The moth is out in June and
-July, sometimes earlier or later. It is a coast species, occurring only on
-sandhills where the marram grass flourishes, and in such localities is
-found all round England and Wales; on the east coast of Scotland to
-Forfarshire, and on the west to Clydesdale and Arran; and in Ireland on the
-north, south, and east coasts.
-
-FENN'S WAINSCOT (_Leucania brevilinea_).
-
-On Plate 144, Fig. 9 represents the type of this specimen, and Fig. 10 ab.
-_sinelinea_, Farn. This form, which has also been referred to as
-"_alinea_," is without the typical black streak at the base of the fore
-wings. The caterpillar is pale pinkish grey; dorsal line pale yellow or
-bone colour; subdorsal stripes of the same colour, edged on each side by a
-grey line, and each divided down the middle by a slender pale brown line;
-spiracular stripe of a dull opaque yellowish white edged above with grey;
-head, and plate on the first ring of the body, pale brown, the latter
-striped with pale yellow (Barrett). It feeds in the upper part of reed
-stems until nearly full grown, and then upon the leaves. April to July.
-Barrett states that it prefers the reeds near small trees or bushes to
-those growing in masses. The moth is out in July and August, and may be
-netted as it flies at dusk along the edges of the reed beds, etc.; later on
-it resorts to the honeydew-covered leaves of sallow and alder, and also
-visits light. This species was first taken in 1864 at Ranworth in Norfolk;
-it is now obtained in Barton Broad and several other localities in the
-Norfolk fens, but not in any other part of the British Isles. It does not
-appear to occur abroad.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 150.
- 1, 2. BROWN-LINE BRIGHT-EYE MOTH.
- 3, 6. DOUBLE-LINE MOTH.
- 4, 5. SHORE WAINSCOT.
- 7, 8. CLAY MOTH.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 151.
- 1, 2, 3. TREBLE LINES MOTH.
- 4. ANOMALOUS MOTH.
- 5. MOTTLED RUSTIC.
- 6. UNCERTAIN MOTH.
- 7. RUSTIC MOTH.
- 8. VINE'S RUSTIC.
- 9, 10. PALE MOTTLED WILLOW.
- 11. SMALL-MOTTLED WILLOW.
-
-{309} THE SHOULDER-STRIPED WAINSCOT (_Leucania_ (_Cirphis_) _comma_).
-
-The striking features of this moth (Plate 147, Fig. 10) are the white
-median nervure, and the black streak below it, of the fore wings; there are
-also black marks on the veins before the outer margin. The caterpillar is
-very like that of _L. impura_, but there is a dark line on the back between
-the central and outer whitish lines. It feeds on cocksfoot and other
-grasses from June to August. The moth flies in June and July, and is not
-uncommon in meadows and grassy places, even by the roadside. Except that it
-does not, apparently, extend beyond Perthshire in Scotland, it seems to be
-widely, or even generally, distributed over the British Isles. Abroad it
-ranges to Siberia and Amurland.
-
-_Leucania l-album._--Barrett, "Lepidoptera of the British Islands," vol.
-ix. p. 450 (1904), remarks: "This species now seems to have made its way to
-this country, though it is still doubtful whether it has established
-itself. Mr. Eustace R. Bankes has captured a female specimen in South
-Devon, and he mentions the occurrence of one or two other specimens. It is
-a very pretty species, and widely distributed abroad." {310}
-
-THE DEVONSHIRE WAINSCOT (_Leucania_ (_Cirphis_) _putrescens_).
-
-So far as the British distribution of this species (Plate 147, Fig. 9) is
-known, it seems to be confined to the coasts of South Devon and South
-Wales. It was first noted at Torquay in the year 1859, and about twelve
-years later was detected in Carmarthenshire. Abroad it occurs somewhat
-locally in France, Italy, Dalmatia, and in North-west Africa.
-
-The caterpillar is pale brown with three whitish lines on the back, the
-central one edged on each side with blackish, the others shaded above with
-blackish with black dots in the shading, and edged below by a blackish
-line; all these lines become faint on the last three rings of the body; the
-usual dots are black; head rather paler, somewhat shiny, the lobes
-conspicuously edged with black, and the jaws marked with blackish. It feeds
-on grasses from September to January. The figure on Plate 148, Fig. 7, is
-from one of a few caterpillars kindly sent by Mr. J. Walker, of Torquay. He
-writes: "They are full fed by the beginning of January as a rule, and
-although they go down, they do not turn until the beginning of June." Mine
-unfortunately died in the cocoon. The moth flies in July and August, and
-favours particular coves and banks by the sea. It visits sugar, and also
-the flowers of wild sage.
-
-THE WHITE-SPECK OR AMERICAN WAINSCOT (_Leucania_ (_Cirphis_) _unipuncta_).
-
-This moth (Plate 149, Fig. 4) is known in America, where it is exceedingly
-abundant and destructive, as the "Army Worm." It ranges through India,
-China, and Japan, and occurs in many other parts of the world, including
-Madeira and the Canary Isles. It is rare in Europe, and appears to have
-been noted in parts of Spain, Portugal, and France. Since Haworth described
-and {311} named it _unipuncta_ in 1803 it has been renamed many times, and
-was long known in England as _extranea_, Guenee. About a score have been
-recorded as taken in the British Isles altogether, and of these two only in
-Ireland; the others were captured in England and Wales, and nearly all on
-the south or south-west coast, chiefly in the month of September. The most
-recent being one in the New Forest, Hampshire, 1896, one in Devon, 1903,
-one in 1907, and one in 1911. Also in Isle of Wight, 1912.
-
-THE COSMOPOLITAN (_Leucania_ (_Cirphis_) _loreyi_).
-
-Barrett accepted this species as British, chiefly on the strength of two
-specimens captured at sugar by a sedgy ditch, nearer to Worthing than to
-Brighton in Sussex; the date was 1862. More recent records are one specimen
-at Torquay on September 27, 1900, and another, also in South Devon,
-September 6, 1903. The former taken at sugar, and the latter netted when
-"flying wildly over rough herbage at dusk." Ireland in 1908.
-
-The species has a wide range through Southern and Eastern Asia, etc., but
-in Europe it is only found in the south and along the Mediterranean. The
-specimen shown on Plate 149, Fig. 6, is from India.
-
-THE DELICATE (_Leucania_ (_Sideridis_) _vitellina_).
-
-The first recorded British specimen of this species (Plate 149, Fig. 3) was
-captured at Brighton, Sussex, some fifty odd years ago. The species has
-occurred in and around that locality several times since, but seems to have
-been found more frequently at Torquay and other places on the Devonshire
-coast. It has also been recorded from the Scilly Isles, Cornwall, the Isle
-of Wight, the New Forest, and Chichester; Kent, on the coast, and inland at
-Canterbury, Sussex. In 1902, a year in which several specimens were
-obtained on the south coast, {312} one example was taken at Navestock, in
-Essex. August and September are the months during which it is seen in this
-country, but abroad it occurs also in June and July. The caterpillar, which
-feeds on grasses in the spring, is described by Hofmann as pinkish ochreous
-with three white lines on the back and black dots between them, two on each
-ring; below the black spiracles is a yellowish stripe; head brown with
-black dots.
-
-THE WHITE-POINT (_Leucania_ (_Sideridis_) _albipuncta_).
-
-This species (Plate 149, Fig. 5) appears to have been confused with the
-following one. It may be distinguished by its generally smaller size and
-the pure white spot on the fore wings. The colour of the fore wings is
-brownish red, rather than rusty tinged as in some reddish forms of _L.
-lithargyria_; the second cross line is more distinct, and the series of
-black marks beyond less so. The hind wings are paler than those of the next
-species. The caterpillar is yellowish wainscot brown above, inclining to
-flesh-colour on the sides and beneath; three white lines on the back, the
-central one edged on each side by a wavy blackish line, the outer ones
-edged above by a blackish line and below by a brownish line; a pale stripe
-low down along the sides; head ochreous, shining, and lined on the face
-with greyish. It feeds from autumn to spring on grasses. The moth is out
-from August to October. It occurs more or less frequently, and chiefly on
-the coast, in Kent (first taken at Folkestone, in 1868), Sussex, Hants,
-Isle of Wight, South Devon, and Essex (Shoeburyness).
-
-THE CLAY (_Leucania_ (_Sideridis_) _lithargyria_).
-
-Two specimens of this species are shown on Plate 150, Figs. 7 [male], 8
-[female]. The colour of the fore wings varies from pale ochreous brown,
-often with a pink tinge, to a deep rusty red; the reniform stigma is
-generally represented by a pale crescent with a white or whitish dot at its
-lower end; the cross lines are rarely distinct, but a series of black dots
-before the outer margin are usually well in evidence. The caterpillar is
-pale brown tinged with pinkish or yellowish; central line white edged with
-dark brown, and on each side of this is an interrupted broad blackish line
-edged below with white; a whitish line below the blackish spiracles; head
-and plate on the first ring of the body, pale brown, rather shining, the
-former freckled with blackish. It is found in April and May on grasses,
-probably after hibernation, The moth is out from late June to early August
-and is common in woods, and woody places throughout the greater part of the
-British Isles.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 152.
- 1. COMMON WAINSCOT: _caterpillar_.
- 2. SHORE WAINSCOT: _caterpillar_.
- 3. CLAY MOTH: _caterpillar_.
- 4. BROWN RUSTIC: _caterpillar_.
- 5, 5a. DOUBLE LINE: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
- 6. THE ANOMALOUS MOTH: _caterpillar_.
- 7, 7a, 7b. SMALL MOTTLED WILLOW: _eggs and caterpillars_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 153.
- 1, 3. REDDISH BUFF MOTH.
- 2. MARSH MOTH.
- 4, 5. BROWN RUSTIC.
- 6. _XYLOPHASIA ZOLLIKOFERI._
-
-{313} THE BROWN-LINE BRIGHT-EYE (_Leucania_ (_Chabuata_) _conigera_).
-
-This species (Plate 150, Figs. 1 [male], 2 [female]) ranges in the colour
-of fore wings from pale ochreous brown to a dusky tawny hue; the cross
-lines are sometimes very faint, but otherwise the markings are constant.
-Var. _suffusa_, Tutt, is described as rusty red suffused with darker
-scales, markings typical, but deeper in colour and more distinct. The
-caterpillar is ochreous or greyish brown; three yellow lines on the back
-are black edged; a yellow line along the sides is often edged with black,
-and the line below the black spiracles is blackish; head pale brown marked
-with black. It feeds on grasses, and may be found in April and May. The
-moth appears in June and July and is pretty generally distributed. It is
-regarded as a common species in South England, but in the north seems to be
-rather local and most frequently found on the coast. In Scotland it does
-not appear to have been noted north of Ross or in the isles. Abroad the
-range extends through Northern and Central Asia to India and Japan. {314}
-
-THE DOUBLE LINE (_Leucania_ (_Eriopyga_) _turca_).
-
-The sexes of this species are shown on Plate 150, Figs. 3 [male], 6
-[female]. The general colour of the fore wings may be paler or darker than
-in the specimens shown. Sometimes the central area enclosed by the black
-cross lines is darker than the other parts of the fore wings; var.
-_obscura_, Tutt, has the fore wings obscure smoky grey, with a dull coppery
-tinge, much suffused with dark scales; markings indistinct.
-
-The caterpillar is pale brown freckled with darker; a whitish line along
-the middle of the back is edged on both sides with blackish merging into
-black at the ring divisions; a rather wavy, but less distinct, whitish line
-on each side of the central one edged above with blackish; spiracles black
-ringed with pale brown and set in a broad dark brown line below which the
-colour is pinkish; head shining pale brown, freckled with darker on the
-cheeks. It feeds on cocksfoot and various other grasses occurring in
-woodlands. August to May. The moth, which inhabits woods and well-timbered
-parks, is out in June and July. It is, perhaps, most frequent in the New
-Forest, Hampshire, thence it is found more or less sparingly to Cornwall.
-Sometimes not uncommon in Savernake Forest, Wiltshire, and occurs in
-Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Essex (Epping Forest, etc.), Surrey (Richmond
-Park). Recorded from Cheshire and from South Wales. In Scotland it is said
-to have been taken at Newfield, Ayrshire. The only records from Ireland are
-Clonbrock (1), and Merlin Park, Galway (2). Abroad it ranges to Amurland,
-China, Corea and Japan.
-
-TREBLE LINES (_Meristis_ (_Grammesia_) _trigrammica_).
-
-The fore wings range in colour from whitish or greyish brown to ochreous
-brown; the cross lines are usually distinct, {315} and the central one is
-often broad. (Plate 151, Fig. 1.) In var. _approximans_, Haw., the cross
-lines fall nearer together on the inner margin; and in var. _semi-fuscans_,
-Haw., the basal half is greyish or reddish grey, and the outer half is
-suffused with brownish (Fig. 2). Then there is a somewhat rarer form, with
-dark grey, brown, or blackish brown fore wings, with the cross lines more
-or less distinct, as in Fig. 3; or with the central one absent (var.
-_bilinea_, Hubn.); or all the lines may be obscured by the dark colour.
-Kane states that var. _obscura_, Tutt (= _bilinea_, Haw.), is pretty common
-at Howth and other places in Ireland, and, according to Barrett, it is not
-infrequent in Wales. The caterpillar is greyish or dingy reddish brown;
-three pale lines on the back, the central one partly edged with black, and
-the outer ones are broken and inwardly edged with blackish marks; the
-stripe along the black spiracles is ochreous brown; head brownish. From
-July to April on plantain and other low plants. The moth is out in June and
-July. In Scotland it is local and rare, but has been recorded from
-Clydesdale, Arran, and once from Perthshire. Local but widely distributed
-in Ireland.
-
-THE ANOMALOUS (_Stilbia anomala_).
-
-A local species, but sometimes not uncommon on heaths, or in rocky places
-by the sea. It is found from Surrey westward to Cornwall; and from
-Staffordshire, in which county it has been seen in abundance on Cannock
-Chase, it ranges into Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire, Cheshire, Wales (North
-and South), Lancashire, Yorkshire (commonly at Saltaire), Durham (once),
-and Cumberland. Generally distributed in Scotland, including the Orkneys.
-It occurs in the Isle of Man, and seems to be pretty widely spread in
-Ireland, but found chiefly on the coast. Abroad it seems to be only found
-in France and in Central and Western Germany. In Southern Spain it is {316}
-represented by var. _andalusiaca_, Staud., and in Syria by var. _syriaca_,
-Staud. A typical male is shown on Plate 151, Fig. 4.
-
-The caterpillar is green, inclining to yellowish between the rings of the
-body; three lines on the back are whitish, edged with dark green; a stripe
-low down on the sides is whitish, shaded above with dark green merging into
-the ground colour; head shining bright green, obscurely mottled with
-darker. In other forms the general colour is reddish or pinkish brown, with
-the lines edged and shaded with darker brown; the head is ochreous brown,
-mottled with darker brown. The green form is figured on Plate 152, Fig. 6,
-but the browner forms are more frequent. It feeds on grasses from the
-autumn until about March.
-
-THE MOTTLED RUSTIC (_Caradrina morpheus_).
-
-A specimen of this species is shown on Plate 151, Fig. 5. There is some
-variation in the darker mottling and suffusion of the ochreous or pale
-brown fore wings. The dark brown or blackish stigmata are generally
-distinct. Hind wings whitish, tinged with smoky on the veins, and in the
-female on the outer marginal area. The caterpillar is brownish or greyish
-brown, inclining to ochreous on the back; central line whitish, with a
-broken edging of brown; on each side of the central line there is a series
-of blackish arrow heads; spiracles blackish; head dark brown, and very
-glossy. It feeds from August and through the autumn on various low plants,
-including goose-foot, knot-grass, dandelion, etc. The moth flies from June
-to August, and occasionally there is a second flight in October. The
-species is generally distributed and often common over the greater part of
-England, but is less frequent in the more northern counties, and in Wales,
-Ireland, and Scotland. Abroad the range extends to Amurland and Corea.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 154.
- 1, 2, 3. COPPER UNDERWING MOTH.
- 4, 5. MOUSE MOTH.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 155.
- 1, 2, 3. PINE BEAUTY MOTH.
- 4. WHITE-MARKED MOTH.
- 5, 6. RED CHESTNUT MOTH.
- 7, 8. HEBREW CHARACTER MOTH.
- 9, 10. HEBREW CHARACTER MOTH, _var. gothicina_.
-
-{317}
-
-THE UNCERTAIN (_Caradrina alsines_).
-
-This species (Plate 151, Fig. 6) and the next one--The Rustic--are often
-confused, but the present one may be recognized by the more ochreous tinge
-of its fore wings, the more distinct markings, and the general rougher
-appearance of all the wings. The hind wings are more smoky, or sometimes
-brownish tinged.
-
-The caterpillar is ochreous brown, frequently with a reddish tinge; three
-whitish lines on the back, edged with black, the edging of the central one
-interrupted at the ring divisions; a dusky area along the sides is edged
-above and below by a black line; head ochreous brown. It feeds from
-September to March on dock, chickweed, primrose, and various other low
-plants. The moth flies in July and August, and, like most of its congeners,
-is partial to the blossoms of privet. The species is widely distributed
-over England, but seems to occur more commonly in the south and east. It is
-also found in Wales, Scotland, and Ireland.
-
-NOTE.--_C. superstes_, an inhabitant of Central and Southern Germany,
-Hungary, Southern Europe, and Asia Minor, has been mentioned as British,
-but the record needs confirmation.
-
-THE RUSTIC (_Caradrina taraxaci_).
-
-Compared with the last species, the one now considered (Plate 151, Fig. 7)
-has browner fore wings, inclining to brownish or blackish, smoother and
-glossy; and the markings are usually rather obscure. The hind wings are
-silky, and whiter in the male.
-
-The caterpillar is greyish brown, with an olive tinge; central line dark
-brown, expanding on each ring; on either side of this is a brown-edged
-white line; a light brown line along the spiracles; head ochreous brown. It
-feeds from September to April on low plants, such as dock, chickweed,
-plantain, etc. {318} The moth flies from late June to early August, and its
-range in the British Isles is pretty much as in the last species, but more
-generally distributed than _alsines_ in Ireland.
-
-VINE'S RUSTIC (_Caradrina ambigua_).
-
-The fore wings of this species (Plate 151, Fig. 8) are rather greyer than
-those of the last, and the hind wings are shining white, tinged with
-greyish brown in the female, especially on the veins.
-
-Barrett describes the caterpillar as follows: "Plump, cylindrical; head
-round, the lobes dark brown, but the face paler; dorsal region between the
-subdorsal lines broadly yellowish brown, with slender, delicate, oblique
-lines on each segment; dorsal line a row of black dots, one on each
-segment; lateral space from the subdorsal lines to the spiracles darker
-brown or umberous, containing a row of ovate, oblique, yellowish spots,
-each rather raised into a knob by the wrinkling of the skin; spiracles
-black; under surface, legs, and prolegs pale rosy brown, except the anal
-prolegs, which are brown." It feeds from October to May on dandelion,
-plantain, chickweed, and other low plants; also on lettuce and grass. The
-moth flies in August and September. Sometimes the caterpillars will feed up
-and attain the moth state the same year in November or December. The
-species was not known to occur in England until some specimens were taken
-by Mr. Vine at sugar, near Shoreham, Sussex, in 1879. Since that year it
-has been taken more or less freely at several places on the south and
-south-west coast, from Deal, in Kent, to Truro, in Cornwall.
-
-THE PALE MOTTLED WILLOW (_Caradrina quadripunctata_).
-
-The black spots on the front margin of the fore wings of this species
-(Plate 151, Figs. 9, 10) are pretty constant characters, {319} and are
-usually present even when most or all the other markings are absent. The
-caterpillar is greyish brown, often tinged with green above; the lines are
-faintly paler, and edged with darker; head blackish. It feeds from
-September to May on grasses, seeds of plantain; also on peas and corn;
-often common in stacks of wheat and other grain.
-
-The moth flies chiefly in July and August, but it is sometimes seen as
-early as May and as late as October. Generally distributed, and often very
-common. Except that it does not occur in America the range abroad is almost
-as extensive as that of the next species.
-
-SMALL MOTTLED WILLOW (_Laphygma_ (_Caradrina_) _exigua_).
-
-This species (Plate 151, Fig. 11) practically ranges over the globe. It is
-the "Beet Army-worm" of American economic entomologists; whilst in South
-Africa it is known in the early stage as "The Pigweed Caterpillar." In
-Asia, and especially in India, where it is destructive to the indigo
-plants, maize, etc., it is a familiar pest, but does not seem to bear a
-common name. As regards our own country, it was apparently unnoticed until
-somewhere about the middle of the last century, when a specimen was
-captured in the Isle of Wight. Its occurrence here is always considered a
-noteworthy event, but the records are very scanty except for the years
-1896, 1897, 1900-03, and 1906. In the latter year there seems to have been
-an invasion on quite a large scale, and captures in some localities on the
-south and south-west coasts must have been in hundreds, whilst the species
-was also taken in fewer numbers in Essex, Surrey, Wiltshire, Somerset,
-Devon, and South Wales. A specimen occurred at Crosby, Lancs., in 1884. In
-1903 one example was taken at Chester, Cheshire. At Keighley, Yorks, eight
-were secured, which, added to three taken in other years, gives a total of
-eleven specimens for the county. In Ireland one example was {320} obtained
-at honeydew, September, 1899, at Timologue, Co. Cork.
-
-The eggs (Plate 152, Fig. 7a) are laid in batches on a leaf, and more or
-less covered with whitish hairs. Some deposited on Sept. 8, 1906, hatched
-on the 20th of that month. When just hatched the caterpillar is greenish,
-paler on the last rings; head and plate on first ring shining black; when a
-week old a black plate appears on the last ring also. Later on the colour
-varies from green to olive green, brownish, and dark greyish. Green
-examples are figured on Plate 152, Fig. 7. The central line is ochreous,
-and there are series of black bars and blackish marks on the back; along
-the black-edged white spiracles is a pinkish brown band, edged above by an
-interrupted black line; the pinkish brown colour runs up the front part of
-each ring four to eleven; head blackish. The caterpillars were fed upon
-plantain, dandelion, and groundsel, but they would eat the foliage of any
-weed that was put in their cage. They formed fairly tough earthen cocoons
-on, or just below, the surface; but, although they pupated, the moths
-failed to emerge, probably because they were kept too dry. The ochreous or
-pinkish brown colour of the orbicular stigma, and sometimes of the
-reniform, distinguishes this moth; the hind wings are white with a very
-distinct pearly gloss.
-
-THE SMALL DOTTED BUFF (_Petilampa arcuosa_).
-
-This pale whity-brown insect (Plate 134, Figs. 19 to 21) is often without
-markings, and where these are present on the fore wings they comprise two
-series of dusky dots representing two cross lines, and sometimes there is a
-dot at the end of the cell. These wings may be shaded with brown, and
-occasionally there is a dark band-like shade between the series of dots, in
-the male as well as in the smaller and narrower-winged female. Var.
-_morrisii_, Dale, seems to be a whiter form of this species. {321} The
-caterpillar, which may be found in May and June in the flower stems of
-_Aira caespitosa_, is of a pale pinkish ochreous with three darker bars on
-each ring, and a brown, glossy head. The moth flies in July and part of
-August, and may be found, often in abundance, in most English and Welsh
-counties, in Scotland to Aberdeenshire; and widely spread in Ireland.
-
-THE REDDISH BUFF (_Acosmetia caliginosa_).
-
-Both sexes of this reddish tinged grey-brown species are shown on Plate
-153, Figs. 1 [male], 3 [female]. As will be noted, the female is much
-smaller than the male. Except that it has been recorded from the Isle of
-Wight and from Bloxworth, Dorset, in the past, this species is restricted
-to certain portions of the New Forest, Hampshire. Even in these favoured
-haunts its numbers have become far less than formerly. The moth is out in
-July. Apparently it has no taste for sugar, neither does it seem to visit
-blossoms of any kind. It may be disturbed from its retreat among the grass
-by day, or netted as it flies at dusk. The caterpillar is stated by Hofmann
-to live on saw-wort (_Serratula tinctoria_); it is sap-green, yellow at the
-ring divisions, and marked with fine white lines.
-
-THE MARSH MOTH (_Hydrilla palustris_).
-
-The fore wings of the male of this species (Plate 153, Fig. 2) are greyish
-brown in colour, and more or less tinged with violet; the cross lines are
-dusky, and the reniform and orbicular stigmata are represented by black
-dots, the former the larger; hind wings whitish with a smoky tinge. The
-female is much smaller, darker, and the cross lines heavier; hind wings
-blackish grey.
-
-Stainton ("Manual," 1857) refers to a specimen taken at Compton's Wood,
-near York, and this, no doubt, is the same as {322} that stated by Barrett
-to have been captured in a moist place at Stockton-in-the-Forest, about
-four miles from York, certainly before the year 1855. Then there is a
-record of a specimen from Quy Fen, Cambridgeshire, in May, 1862. Seven
-years later the late Mr. C. G. Barrett took a specimen as it fluttered
-about a gas-lamp outside Norwich. In 1877 and 1878 the use of bright
-collecting lanterns in Wicken Fen may have led to the capture of nearly
-twenty Marsh Moths, anyway it seems to have been a record for the time.
-
-Very few specimens were taken in the fens between the year last mentioned
-and 1898, when the total secured by several collectors visiting the fens in
-June of that year amounted to something like fifty examples, all males. Two
-female specimens were captured in the Carlisle district, one in 1896, and
-the other in 1897. No male was noted in that locality until 1899, when a
-specimen was netted as it flew along a hedgeside at night, on May 20. Two
-other males have since been taken there, in much the same way. The life
-history of the species is little known. Hofmann describes the caterpillar
-as reddish brown with white dots, and a white line along the middle of the
-back; spiracles and head black. It feeds in the summer on low-growing
-plants in meadows, and hides in the daytime on the underside of a leaf.
-
-The range of the species abroad extends to Siberia and Amurland.
-
-THE BROWN RUSTIC (_Rusina tenebrosa_).
-
-Here, again, the female is smaller than the male, as will be seen on Plate
-153, Figs. 4 [male], 5 [female]. Sometimes the general colour of the fore
-wings is of a blacker tint, and in such specimens the fine black cross
-lines are obscured.
-
-The caterpillar is dark cinnamon brown; three whitish lines on the back,
-the central one, most distinct on the front rings, is edged on each side
-with dark brown, and the shading of the outer lines is interrupted by
-oblique pale dashes; head, shining dark brown, almost blackish. It feeds on
-grasses, and many low-growing plants from August to May. (Plate 152, Fig.
-4.) The moth flies in June and July, sometimes earlier. The species is
-generally distributed over nearly the whole of England, but more local in
-the north than in the south. It is found in North and South Wales. In
-Scotland it is locally abundant and widely distributed up to Ross, and
-occurs in the Hebrides. It is also widely spread in Ireland, and common in
-some parts.
-
-_Umbratica_, Goeze, is said to be an earlier name for this species, and
-will probably have to be adopted.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 156.
- 1, 1a, 1b. HEBREW CHARACTER: _eggs, caterpillars and chrysalis_.
- 2, 2a. CLOUDED DRAB: _caterpillars and chrysalis_.
- 3. MOUSE MOTH: _caterpillar_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 157.
- 1-6. CLOUDED DRAB MOTH.
- 7, 8. LEAD-COLOURED DRAB MOTH.
- 9, 10. NORTHERN DRAB.
-
-{323} THE COPPER UNDERWING (_Amphipyra pyramidea_).
-
-The striking species shown on Plate 154, Figs. 1 to 3, varies somewhat in
-the tint of its brown-coloured fore wings, and in the greater or lesser
-amount of blackish shading on the central area; the latter is sometimes
-quite absent, and not infrequently the outer marginal area is pale ochreous
-brown. The hind wings, normally of a coppery colour, are occasionally
-paler, and sometimes of a reddish hue.
-
-The caterpillar is green with three interrupted whitish stripes on the
-back; the dots are yellowish; and the stripe along the black-edged white
-spiracles is whitish; the back of ring eleven is raised, forming a cone,
-the apex of which is hornlike and slightly curved backwards; the head is
-green. It feeds from April, or in forward seasons from March, to June, on
-the foliage of oak, birch, sallow, plum, rose, and other trees and shrubs.
-The moth flies from late July to September, and sometimes later. Although
-somewhat local in Southern England, it is often common enough in the New
-Forest, and most of the larger woods from Essex to Devonshire. Northwards
-from Oxfordshire it becomes more local, less frequent, and even rare, {324}
-except, perhaps, in Worcestershire (Malvern district, common) and
-Herefordshire. Apparently not recorded from Scotland. In Ireland it is
-sometimes plentiful in the south, but does not seem to occur north of Sligo
-on the west, and Howth on the east.
-
-THE MOUSE (_Amphipyra tragopogonis_).
-
-The English name of this generally distributed, and usually common,
-greyish-brown moth (Plate 154, Figs. 4, 5) applies more especially to the
-mouse-like way it scuttles off when discovered in its retreat by the
-collector. In colour, however, it is sometimes not unlike the familiar
-little rodent. The caterpillar (Plate 156, Fig. 3) is green with white
-lines and stripes along the back and sides; spiracles white, margined with
-black; head yellowish-green. In another form the ground colour is pale
-reddish brown. It feeds from April to June on sallow, hawthorn, and many
-other plants. Barrett states that it is partial to the blossoms,
-particularly yellow ones, of garden as well as wild plants. The moth flies
-in July and August, sometimes later.
-
-The range abroad extends to Central Asia and to the Atlantic States of
-America.
-
-NOTE.--Some recent authors refer this and the preceding species to
-_Pyrophila_, Hubn.
-
-THE PINE BEAUTY (_Panolis griseo-variegata_ = _piniperda_).
-
-The general colour of the fore wings of this species (Plate 155, Figs. 1, 3
-[male], 2 [female]) is ochreous brown, more or less reddish tinged;
-sometimes greenish grey. The cross markings are bright or dull reddish
-brown; the orbicular and reniform stigmata are white, or outlined in white,
-sometimes connected by a white line along the median nervure; occasionally
-these marks are united, forming a blotch. {325}
-
-The caterpillar is green with three broad white lines along the back, the
-outer ones edged above with black; a yellow, inclining to reddish orange,
-stripe along the black spiracles; head reddish brown. It greatly resembles
-the needles of the Scotch fir (_Pinus sylvestris_), upon which it feeds
-from May to July. The moth is out in the spring and continues on the wing
-until early May, and is often common at sallow bloom, where this occurs in
-the immediate vicinity of pine woods; it also comes to the sugar patch not
-infrequently, and may occasionally be seen on the trunks of fir trees, or
-beaten from the boughs. The species seems to occur wherever there are fir
-woods or plantations throughout England, Wales, and Scotland to Ross, and
-is found locally in Ireland.
-
-THE WHITE-MARKED (_Pachnobia leucographa_).
-
-A portrait of this moth will be found on Plate 155, Fig. 4. The fore wings
-are reddish brown, sometimes tinged with purplish, or clouded with
-blackish. The reniform and orbicular stigmata are usually yellowish grey,
-often only outlined, but not infrequently indistinct, and sometimes absent.
-The cross lines are rarely well defined, although the second line may be
-indicated by blackish dots flanked by whitish ones on the veins.
-
-The caterpillar is green freckled with whitish; three whitish lines along
-the back are edged with dark green, the outer ones with oblique dark-green
-dashes spreading to the central line; head paler green. In another form the
-general colour is pale reddish brown, lines yellowish, and dashes darker
-reddish brown. It feeds on sallow, bilberry, dock, plantain, and other low
-plants. May and June. The moth flies in March and April, and may be found
-at sallow bloom around woods. The species is obtained more or less
-frequently in Kent, Surrey, Sussex, Hampshire, Somerset, and Devon; also in
-Buckinghamshire and in Suffolk. In Herefordshire it is local but not {326}
-uncommon, and I have taken it in the Malvern district. British specimens
-were first obtained near York. Porritt ("List of Yorks. Lep.," 1904) states
-that it is still abundant in Bishop's Wood, and is found in other Yorkshire
-localities; also occurs from Lancashire to Durham. In Ireland it has been
-reported from Clonbrock, Galway.
-
-THE RED CHESTNUT (_Pachnobia rubricosa_).
-
-The fore wings of this moth (Plate 155, Figs. 5, 6) are purplish red and
-more or less suffused with greyish. Sometimes these wings are more
-distinctly reddish and without the greyish suffusion (var. _rufa_, Haw.).
-The egg is pale straw colour, with a reddish-brown girdled dot. The
-caterpillar (Plate 159, Fig. 3) is pinkish brown with three yellowish lines
-along the back, the central one rather obscure; a yellowish stripe along
-the sides; usual dots yellowish or whitish margined with blackish; head
-yellowish brown, lined with darker brown. It feeds from April to June on
-dock, dandelion, groundsel, and other low plants. The moth is out in March
-and April, and is often not uncommon at sallow and plum blossom. It seems
-to be pretty generally distributed throughout the British Isles, including
-the Orkneys.
-
-THE HEBREW CHARACTER (_Taeniocampa gothica_).
-
-This species (Plate 155) varies in the general colour of the fore wings
-from pale purplish grey to dark reddish brown. Figs. 7[male] and 8[female]
-represent the more usual form. The black markings, often very conspicuous,
-are in the somewhat smaller var. _gothicina_, reddish (Fig. 9). Sometimes
-in Scotch specimens they are very indistinct or absent (Fig. 10).
-
-The early stages are figured on Plate 156. The eggs (Fig. 1a) are laid in a
-batch, two deep towards the centre of the {327} heap. In colour they are
-whitish with a dark grey ring and dot. When five days old the young
-caterpillars were pale whitish green with black dots; head and plates on
-first and last rings of the body black. The nearly full-grown caterpillar
-(Fig. 1) is green above and yellowish green below; three whitish lines on
-the back and a yellowish stripe along the sides; usual dots black, ringed
-with whitish; head shining yellowish, dotted with black. Feeding on dock,
-dandelion, etc., it will also eat sallow and hawthorn, and the foliage of
-other trees and bushes, in April, May, and June. The moth is common at
-sallow bloom all over the British Isles. The range of the species abroad
-extends to Amurland.
-
-THE BLOSSOM UNDERWING (_Taeniocampa miniosa_).
-
-A portrait of this species will be found on Plate 158, Fig. 8. The fore
-wings are pinkish, or reddish grey, and the redder central area is often
-tinged with orange; the hind wings are whitish, faintly shaded or tinged
-with pink.
-
-The full-grown caterpillar is bluish, inclining to black on the sides;
-three yellow lines on the back, the central one broad; and a white blotched
-yellow stripe along the sides; head shining black. (Adapted from Fenn.) The
-eggs are laid in batches on the twigs of oak, usually just below a bud.
-When the caterpillars hatch out they spin a web of silk under which they
-live in company for a time; later on they separate, and then either
-continue to feed on the oak or betake themselves to birch, hawthorn,
-bramble, or some low-growing herbaceous plant. The "nests" of young
-caterpillars are found chiefly on oak bushes rather than trees.
-
-The moth flies in March and April, and generally occurs only in oak woods.
-It is most frequently met with in the South of England--from Middlesex and
-Essex to Hampshire; but it occurs in most of the southern counties, and
-also northwards {328} up to Yorkshire. It has been found in Wales (Pembroke
-and Dolgelly), and appears to be rare in Ireland, except at Glenmalure, Co.
-Wicklow.
-
-THE SMALL QUAKER (_Taeniocampa pulverulenta_).
-
-Most specimens of this species (Plate 158, Figs. 9[male], 10[female]) have
-the fore wings pale greyish ochreous, more or less mottled or dusted with
-reddish brown. Occasionally these wings are pale grey (var. _nana_,
-Haworth); or dark grey brown and more rarely blackish. The dingy brownish
-dots representing the first and second cross lines are sometimes distinct
-and not infrequently absent.
-
-The egg is whitish with brown girdled dot.
-
-The caterpillar is greenish grey and rather greener between the rings;
-there are five yellow or whitish lines, that along the centre of the back
-being the broadest, usual dots black and glossy; head greenish, much marked
-with black: plates on first and last rings of the body black. It feeds from
-April to June on oak, hawthorn, sallow, rose, etc. (Plate 159, Fig. 2.) The
-moth flies in March and April, and is a constant visitor to the sallow
-catkins, also to the blossoms of plum, damson, and sloe. It appears to be
-common throughout England and Wales; more or less frequent in Scotland to
-Moray; and is not uncommon in some districts of Wicklow and Galway, but
-local and rather scarce in other parts of Ireland.
-
-THE COMMON QUAKER (_Taeniocampa stabilis_).
-
-The ground colour of the fore wings of this species (Plate 158, Figs. 1, 2)
-ranges from whitish or pale grey brown through tints of reddish brown to
-dark brown; the stigmata are outlined in pale ochreous, the centres often
-darker than the general colour of the wings; the orbicular is of large size
-and frequently {329} touches the reniform; the ochreous submarginal line is
-usually inwardly edged with, and sometimes obscured by, blackish; very
-often the submarginal line and the dusky central shade are the only
-distinct cross markings.
-
-The caterpillar is green, minutely dotted with yellow; three lines on the
-back, and a stripe on the sides, yellow, the latter most distinct, edged
-above with black, and united by a yellow bar on the last ring. It feeds on
-oak, birch, sallow, beech, elm, etc., from April to June. The moth flies in
-March and April, and is generally common throughout the British Isles,
-except, perhaps, the islands of Scotland.
-
-THE LEAD-COLOURED DRAB (_Taeniocampa populeti_).
-
-The ground colour of the species shown on Plate 157, Figs. 7, 8, is usually
-some shade of purplish grey, ranging from very pale to dark; the cross
-lines are often indistinct, but occasionally they show up clearly; the
-central shade, usually in evidence, is sometimes almost blackish and
-broadened out to the second line; the orbicular and reniform have pale
-margins but the centres are frequently no darker than the general colour.
-
-The egg is greyish white with dark grey girdled dot.
-
-When full grown the caterpillar is whitish or yellowish green, but always
-whitish on the back: three white lines on the back, the central one rather
-broad; head ochreous brown with a blackish spot on each side. It feeds from
-April to June on aspen chiefly, but also on other kinds of poplar, hiding
-by day between two leaves. The moth is out in March and April, and may be
-found on the sallow catkins. It seems to be more or less rare in the South
-of England, but it is locally not uncommon in many parts of the country
-from Middlesex northwards to Yorkshire. Farther north it is again
-infrequent, and this is also the case in Scotland and in Ireland. {330}
-
-THE CLOUDED DRAB (_Taeniocampa incerta_).
-
-Six specimens of this most variable species are shown on Plate 157, Figs. 1
-to 6. To refer in detail to all the forms, named or otherwise, would occupy
-much space, so that it can only be stated here that the general colour of
-the fore wings ranges from pale greyish brown, through various shades of
-reddish brown, to deep brown or purplish brown; the darker greys range
-through slaty grey to purplish black. In all the lighter shades the wings
-are usually much variegated, but they may be nearly or quite plain.
-
-The egg is yellowish white with brown girdled dot.
-
-The caterpillar is green, minutely freckled with whitish; three white lines
-on the back, the central one broadest; a white stripe, edged above with
-black, along the sides; usual dots black, minute, ringed with whitish; head
-yellowish green with a few black dots. It feeds on sallow, oak, hawthorn,
-also on apple, elm, etc. (Plate 156, Fig. 2.) The moth is generally to be
-found at sallow-bloom in almost every part of the British Isles.
-
-THE TWIN-SPOTTED QUAKER (_Taeniocampa munda_).
-
-The fore wings range in ground colour from very pale ochreous (typical) or
-pale greyish (var. _pallida_, Tutt), through reddish shades to a dingy
-brown. The black or brownish twin spots on the middle of the submarginal
-line are sometimes accompanied by others above and below them (var.
-_geminatus_). In var. _immaculata_, Staud., the "twin spots," and also the
-others, are absent. (Plate 158, Figs. 11, 12.)
-
-The caterpillar (Plate 159, Fig. 1) is pale brown minutely freckled with
-darker; a whitish line along the centre of the back finely edged with
-black; a broad velvety black stripe along the sides, edged with whitish;
-head reddish brown, freckled with darker. It feeds from April to June on
-elm, oak, sallow, plum, etc. The moth is out in March and April, but a
-specimen has been taken at "ivy bloom" in the autumn. Plum blossoms, as
-well as the sallow catkins, are an attraction to this moth, and it will
-also visit the sugar patch. The species probably occurs in most woodland
-districts throughout the greater part of England and Wales. It seems to be
-found in South Scotland, but is local and infrequent; in Ireland it is
-widely spread in the north, but uncommon in the south.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 158.
- 1, 2. COMMON QUAKER MOTH.
- 3-7. POWDERED QUAKER.
- 8. BLOSSOM UNDERWING.
- 9, 10. SMALL QUAKER.
- 11, 12. TWIN-SPOTTED QUAKER.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Pl. 159.
- 1. TWIN-SPOTTED QUAKER: _caterpillar_.
- 2. SMALL QUAKER: _caterpillar_.
- 3, 3a. RED CHESTNUT: _caterpillar and chrysalis_.
-
-{331} THE NORTHERN DRAB (_Taeniocampa opima_).
-
-The dark form (var. _brunnea_, Tutt) (Plate 157, Fig. 10 [male]) has the
-outlines of the orbicular and reniform stigmata, and the submarginal line
-pale and distinct; sometimes the general colour is much blacker than in the
-specimen shown. In the more typical greyish form (Fig. 9 [female]) the
-central area is blackish or dark reddish brown. The caterpillar is olive
-green above, inclining to yellowish beneath; three pale lines on the back,
-and a yellow stripe along the black-edged white spiracles; head olive
-green. It feeds from April to June on sallow, willow, birch, rose, etc. The
-moth flies in March and April.
-
-As suggested by the English name, this moth was supposed to be confined to
-the northern counties from Cheshire to Cumberland and Northumberland, but
-it occurs more locally in Herefordshire, Worcestershire (Wyre Forest),
-Somerset, Gloucester, and Wales; also in Essex, Surrey, and Sussex. Renton
-records it from Roxburghshire in Scotland, and Kane states that it is local
-in Ireland.
-
-THE POWDERED QUAKER (_Taeniocampa gracilis_).
-
-In the ordinary English form of this species (Plate 158, Figs. 3 [male], 4
-[female]) the fore wings are pale whity brown, more or {332} less tinged
-with grey; the submarginal line, and the stigmata, are usually distinct,
-but the other cross lines are only indicated by blackish dots on the veins.
-In Ireland the specimens are creamy white and very often tinged with pink
-(Fig. 5), but in the New Forest, Hants (Fig. 7), and in the marshes of
-North Kent (Fig. 6), deep purplish grey, purplish brown, and reddish (var.
-_rufescens_, Cockerel) forms occur.
-
-The caterpillar is green, sometimes tinged with yellowish or with bluish;
-usual spots whitish; three whitish or yellowish lines along the back and
-one along the sides, the latter shaded above with dark green or blackish;
-head ochreous brown. It feeds from May to July on meadow-sweet (_Spiraea_),
-fleabane (_Inula_), purple loosestrife (_Lythrum salicaria_), yellow
-loosestrife (_Lysimachia vulgaris_), sweet-gale, sallow, bramble, etc. The
-moth is out in April and May, and is often plentiful at damson and plum
-blossom, as well as sallow catkins. The species is widely distributed
-throughout the greater part of the British Isles, but is perhaps more
-generally common in the southern and eastern counties of England. The range
-abroad extends to Japan.
-
-PEUCEPHILA ESSONI, Hampson.
-
-_Trans. Ent. Soc., Lond._, 1909, Part IV., Pp. 461-463, Pl. xvi., Fig. 1,
-Dec. _Entom._, 1909, p. 258. See Appendix. {333}
-
-APPENDIX.
-
-Page 28. HERSE CONVOLVULI.--Reported from several English counties, August
-and September, 1911, and again in 1915. In 1917 the species seems to have
-been more widely spread over our islands, specimens being recorded from
-Ireland and Shetland.
-
-Page 41. PHRYXUS LIVORNICA.--Further records are: In July, 1909, a dead
-male specimen was found under an electric light standard at Exeter, and one
-was noted on a bowling green at Blackpool in October. Specimens were
-recorded from Surrey, Sussex, Hants, Devon, and Cornwall in 1911. On
-January 19, 1912, a male was taken from a shrub in a garden at Tavistock.
-Thirty-five were captured in South Cornwall between May 9 and 23 of the
-same year, and single specimens were reported from North Wales, Norfolk,
-Dorset, also in May.
-
-Page 47. DAPHNIS NERII.--Further records: Ilfracombe, September 22, 1909;
-Sydenham, September 24, 1910; Eastbourne (August 15), Ashford, 1911;
-Folkestone, August 30, 1916, on trunk of poplar tree; Littleover,
-Derbyshire, in a conservatory, August 18, 1917; Dovercourt, Essex,
-September, 1919. {334}
-
-Page 141. NOLA CONFUSALIS.--A grey form of this species, ab. _columbina_,
-Image, has been recorded from Epping Forest.
-
-Page 146. SARROTHRIPA REVAYANA.--A number of forms of this species are
-named and described by Mr. Sheldon in the _Entomologist_ for 1919.
-
-Page 268. LUPERINA GUENEEI.--Over thirty years ago the late Mr. Baxter, of
-St. Anne's, Lancashire, sent me a specimen of _Luperina_ that he had
-captured in his district. This I considered to be a form connecting
-_gueneei_ with _nickerlii_, and that both were forms of _L. testacea_.
-Since that time _gueneei_ has been found in some numbers on the Lancs.
-coast, and has been recognized as a distinct species, and its identity with
-_nickerlii_ established.
-
-The earlier published history of this species in Britain may here be
-quoted: "The late Mr. J. B. Hodgkinson, in a note on _Luperina gueneei_,
-published in the _Entomologist_ for 1885, vol. 54, wrote:--'In 1860 or
-1861, T. Porter (still living) brought me two fine specimens of a moth I
-did not know. They were of both sexes. I purchased them from him, and sent
-them on to the Rev. H. Burney, who forwarded them to Henry Doubleday. From
-him they went to Guenee, and he returned them with the remark that he had a
-specimen in his collection marked as a variety of _L. testacea_, but he was
-quite satisfied they represented a good species when he saw both sexes. H.
-Doubleday then named them after Guenee, as the latter was evidently the
-original captor. I saw Porter again, and he told me another man, by name H.
-Stephenson, had one. They took three in all near the ferry at Rhyl, North
-Wales. I sent Porter again, and went myself, but we failed to find more
-afterwards. I bought the specimen from Stephenson, and sent it to Miss
-Sulivan, of Fulham, where, I suppose, it remains. I think it was a
-female.'" {335}
-
-According to Barrett (_British Lepidoptera_, IV., p. 335), the three North
-Wales specimens "were raked from overhanging edges of sandhills."
-
-Page 294. HYDROECIA CRINANENSIS.
-
- "HYDROECIA CRINANENSIS, Burrows. Larger than _H. nictitans_. F.-w.
- slightly pointed at the apex, bright red-brown, longitudinal and
- transverse lines very distinct, fringes concolorous. Orbicular stigma,
- lighter than the ground colour. Reniform stigma orange, full, fairly
- straight edged inwardly, lower lobe projecting outwardly, interior
- lines faint. H.-w. red-brown, darker towards the outer margin; fringes
- yellow, the yellow colour intruding in dots upon the darker margin.
-
- "Type specimen taken by Mr. A. W. Bacot at Crinan Canal, September,
- 1899."
-
-The above is extracted from an instructive paper by the Rev. C. R. N.
-Burrows, entitled, "On the _nictitans_ group of the genus _Hydroecia_,
-Gn.," published in the _Transactions of the Entomological Society_, 1911,
-pp. 738-749, plates li.-lviii. In this paper specific rank is also claimed
-for _lucens_, Frr., and _paludis_, Tutt, both of which have been considered
-as merely forms of _H. nictitans_, L.
-
-_H. crinanensis_ has been recorded from Inveran, Crinan Canal, Aberfeldy,
-and Liddelbank, in Scotland; from Lough Foyle and Enniskillen, in Ireland;
-and from Bolton and Burnley, in England.
-
-Page 298. NONAGRIA NEURICA.--In 1907, when the first edition of this volume
-was published, the fact of _N. neurica_ being a British species was not
-truly ascertained. In the following year, however, some specimens of
-_Nonagria_, which were not identical with _N. dissoluta_, Treit. =
-_arundineata_, Schmidt, were named _edelsteni_, Tutt. {336}
-
-Quite a number of _N. edelsteni_ were obtained by Messrs. Wightman and
-Sharp in the Cuckmere Valley of Sussex, July, 1908.
-
-At a meeting of the Entomological Society of London, held on November 4,
-1908, a series of bred _edelsteni_ from Sussex was exhibited by Mr.
-Edelsten.
-
-By a consensus of opinion among entomologists, Sussex specimens are now
-considered to be true British representatives of _neurica_, Hubn., Fig.
-381.
-
-Page 332. PEUCEPHILA ESSONI, Hamps.--On July 12, 1909, Mr. Esson, of
-Aberdeen, captured a specimen of a noctuid moth at sugar on a fir tree.
-This he sent to me for identification. As the insect was a novelty to me,
-it was submitted to Sir George F. Hampson, who, finding that the moth was
-not only a species new to science, but not even congeneric with any other
-noctuid, described and figured it as indicated on page 332 of this volume.
-
-Although keenly searched for, no other example of the species had been
-detected up to the end of 1919.
-
-INDEX.
-
- _Acherontia Atropos_, 24. _Plates 8, 9, 11_
- _Acosmetia caliginosa_, 321
- _Acronyctinae_, 189
- _Acronycta aceris_, 192, _Plates 100, 102_;
- _alni_, 193, _Plate 100_;
- _auricoma_, 196, _Plates 102, 103_;
- _euphorbiae_, 197, _Plate 103_;
- _leporina_, 161, _Plate 100_;
- _megacephala_, 193, _Plates 100, 101_;
- _menyanthidis_, 196, _Plate 103_;
- _myricae_, 197, _Plate 103_;
- _psi_, 195, _Plates 100, 101_;
- _rumicis_, 198, _Plates 102, 103_;
- _strigosa_, 194, _Plate 100_;
- _tridens_, 195, _Plates 100, 101_
- _Agriopis aprilina_, 290. _Plate 141_
- _Agrotis agathina_, 214, _Plate 107_;
- _ashworthii_, 216, _Plate 110_;
- _cinerea_, 204, _Plate 105_;
- _comes_, 230, _Plates 115, 118_
- _Agrotis corticea_, 203, _Plates 105, 109_;
- _crassa_, 217;
- _cursoria_, 206, _Plate 106_;
- _exclamationis_, 208, _Plate 105_;
- _fennica_, 217;
- _hyperborea_, 215, _Plate 108_;
- _lucernea_, 213, _Plate 107_;
- _lunigera_, 205, _Plate 105_;
- _nigricans_, 207, _Plate 106_;
- _obelisca_, 208, _Plate 106_;
- _obscura_, 215, _Plate 107_;
- _orbona_, 230, 231, _Plates 115, 118_;
- _praecox_, 211, _Plate 107_;
- _pronuba_, 232, _Plates 115, 118_;
- _puta_, 204, _Plate 104_;
- _ripae_, 210, _Plate 106_;
- _saucia_, 212, _Plate 104_;
- _segetum_, 201, _Plate 104_;
- _simulans_, 214, _Plate 107_;
- _spinifera_, 217
- _Agrotis strigula_, 210, _Plates 107, 109_;
- _subsequa_, 231, _Plate 115_;
- _tritici_, 207, _Plate 106_;
- _vestigialis_, 202, _Plate 104_;
- _ypsilon_, 209, _Plate 104_
- Alder Kitten, 58. _Plate 22_
- Alder Moth, 193. _Plate 100_
- _Amorpha populi_, 20. _Plates 4, 5_
- _Amphipyra pyramidea_, 323, _Plate 154_;
- _tragopogonis_, 324, _Plates 154, 156_
- Angle Shades, 291. _Plate 141_
- Anomalous, 315. _Plates 151, 152_
- _Antennae_, 1, 3
- Antler Moth, 256. _Plate 127_
- _Apamea basilinea_, 272, _Plate 132_;
- _gemina_, 272, _Plate 131_;
- _ophiogramma_, 274, _Plate 132_;
- _pabulatricula_, 273, _Plate 132_;
- _secalis_, 274, _Plate 132_;
- _unanimis_, 273, _Plate 132_
- _Aplecta advena_, 237, _Plate 117_;
- _nebulosa_, 238, _Plate 119_;
- _tincta_, 237, _Plate 117_
- _Aporophyla australis_, 284. _Plate 137_
- _Aporophyla lutulenta_, 289, _Plate 137_;
- _nigra_, 283, _Plates 137, 139_
- Archer's Dart, 202. _Plate 104_
- _Arctiidae_, 7, 148
- _Arctia caia_, 100, _Plates 82, 84, 85_;
- _villica_, 162, _Plates 86, 87_
- _Arctiinae_, 148
- Areas of Wings, 5
- _Arsilonche albovenosa_, 199. _Plate 130_
- _Ascometia caliginosa_, 321. _Plate 153_
- Ashworth's Rustic, 216. _Plate 110_
- _Asphalia diluta_, 91. _Plate 39_
- _Asteroscopus nubeculosa,_ 288, _Plate 140_;
- _sphinx_, 288, _Plate 138_
- _Atolmis rubricollis_, 173. _Plates 92, 93_
- Autumnal Rustic, 218. _Plate 119_
- _Axylia putris_, 219. _Plate 132_
-
- _Barathra brassicae_, 239. _Plate 120_
- Barred Chestnut, 225. _Plate 114_
- Barred Hook-tip, 135. _Plates 70, 71_
- Barrett's Marbled Coronet, 247. _Plate 123_
- "Beating," 14
- Beautiful Arches, 260. _Plate 121_
- Beautiful Brocade, 243. _Plate 121_
- Beautiful Gothic, 267. _Plates 127, 133_
- Bedstraw Hawk, 38. _Plates 14, 15_
- Bird's Wing, 281. _Plate 137_
- Black Arches, 105, _Plates 46, 47_
- Black-banded, 287. _Plates 139, 140_
- Black Collar, 221
- Black Rustic, 283. _Plates 137, 139_
- Blossom Underwing, 327. _Plate 158_
- _Bombycia viminalis_, 263. _Plate 125_
- Bond's Wainscot, 301. _Plate 146_
- Bordered Gothic, 254. _Plate 126_
- _Brachionycha nubeculosa_, 288, _Plate 140_;
- _sphinx_, 288, _Plate 138_
- Bright-Line Brown Eye, 241. _Plates 120, 129_
- Brighton Wainscot, 302. _Plate 146_
- Brindled Green, 261. _Plates 122, 129_
- Brindled Ochre, 285. _Plate 138_
- Bristle and Catch, 4
- Broad-barred White, 254. _Plate 125_
- Broad-bordered Bee Hawk-Moth, 53. _Plates 20, 21_
- Broad-bordered Yellow Underwing, 10, 233. _Plates 116, 118_
- Broom Moth, 244. _Plates 122, 129_
- Brown-Line Bright Eye, 313. _Plate 150_
- Brown Rustic, 323. _Plates 152, 153_
- Brown-tail, 99. _Plates 42, 43, 44_
- Brown-veined Wainscot, 298. _Plates 144, 148_
- _Bryophila algae_, 201;
- _glandifera_, 200, _Plate 103_;
- _perla_, 200, _Plate 103_
- Buff Arches, 85. _Plate 36_
- Buff Ermine, 151. _Plates 76, 77_
- Buff Footman, 180. _Plates 96, 97_
- Buff-tip, 81. _Plates 35, 37_
- Bulrush Wainscot, 297. _Plates 144, 148_
- Burnets, 6
- Butterbur, 295. _Plate 143_
-
- Cabbage Moth, 239. _Plate 120_
- _Calamia lutosa_, 303, _Plate 145_;
- _phragmitidis_, 303, _Plate 145_
- _Callimorpha dominula_, 166, _Plates 88, 89_;
- _quadripunctaria_, 164, _Plates 88, 89_
- Campion, 251. _Plate 124_
- _Caradrina alsines_, 317, _Plate 151_;
- _ambigua_, 318, _Plate 151_;
- _exigua_, 319, _Plates 151, 152_;
- _morpheus_, 310, _Plate 151_;
- _quadripunctata_, 318, _Plate 151_;
- _superstes_, 317;
- _taraxaci_, 317, _Plate 151_
- Catch and Bristle, 4
- Caterpillar, 1
- _Celerio galii_, 38. _Plates 14, 15_
- _Celaena haworthii_, 269. _Plate 128_
- _Cerigo matura_, 269. _Plate 128_
- _Cerura bicuspis_, 58, _Plate 22_;
- _bifida_, 59, _Plates_ 22, 23;
- _furcula_, 61, _Plates_ 22, 23
- _Chabuata conigera_, 313
- _Charaeas graminis_, 256. _Plate 127_
- Chinese Character, 138. _Plate 71_
- _Chloephoridae_, 143
- Chocolate-tip, 82. _Plates 34, 35_
- _Chaerocampa celerio_, 43, _Plates 1, 16_;
- _elpenor_, 49, _Plates 17, 19_;
- _nerii_, 45, _Plates 1, 16;_
- _porcellus_, 48, _Plates 18, 19_
- Chrysalis, 1
- _Cilix glaucata_, 138. _Plate 71_
- Cinnabar, 171. _Plates 92, 93_
- _Cirphis comma_, 309, _Plate 147_;
- _loreyi_, 311, _Plate 149_;
- _putrescens_, 310, _Plates 147, 148_;
- _unipuncta_, 310, _Plate 149_
- Classification, 6
- Clay, 312. _Plates 150, 152_
- Clearwings, 6
- Cloaked Minor, 277. _Plate 134_
- _Cloantha polyodon_, 282
- Clouded-Bordered Brindle, 278. _Plates 130, 135_
- Clouded Brindle, 280. _Plates 130, 135_
- Clouded Buff, 158. _Plates 82, 83_
- Clouded Drab, 330. _Plate 157_
- Coast Dart, 206. _Plate 106_
- _Cochliopodidae_, 6
- _Coenobia rufa_, 299. _Plate 145_
- _Coenophila subrosea_, 217. _Plate 108_
- _Comacla senex_, 175. _Plate 95_
- Common Footman, 182. _Plates 96, 97_
- Common Quaker, 328. _Plate 158_
- Common Rustic, 270. _Plate 132_
- Common Wainscot, 304. _Plates 147, 152_
- Concolorous, 301. _Plate 146_
- Confused, 271. _Plate 131_
- Convolvulus Hawk-Moth, 2, 28. _Plates 9, 10, 11_
- Copper Underwing, 323. _Plate 154_
- Coronet, 198. _Plate 103_
- _Coscinia cribrum_, 168, _Plates 90, 91_;
- _striata_, 167, _Plate 90_
- Cosmopolitan, 311. _Plate 149_
- _Cosmotriche potatoria_, 123. _Plates 60, 61_
- _Cossidae_, 6
- _Cossus ligniperda_, 6
- Costa, 5
- Cousin German, 227. _Plate 114_
- Coxcomb Moth, 11
- Coxcomb Prominent, 77. _Plates 32, 33_
- _Craniophora ligustri_, 198. _Plate_ 103
- Cream-Bordered Green Pea, 144. _Plate 73_
- Cream-spot Tiger, 162. _Plates 86, 87_
- Crescent, 293. _Plate 143_
- Crescent Dart, 205. _Plate 105_
- Crescent Striped, 270. _Plate 131_
- Crimson Speckled Footman, 169. _Plates 92, 94_
- _Crymodes exulis_, 262. _Plate 123_
- _Cybosia mesomella_, 178. _Plate 95_
- _Cymbidae_, 7
-
- _Daphnis nerii_, 45. _Plates 1, 16_
- Dark Arches, 280. _Plate 136_
- Dark Brocade, 260. _Plate 121_
- Dark Dagger, 195. _Plates 100, 101_
- Dark Sword Grass, 209. _Plate 104_
- Dark Tussock, 97. _Plates 40, 41, 42_
- _Dasychira fascelina_, 97, _Plates 40, 41, 42_;
- _pudibunda_, 98, _Plates 40, 41_
- _Dasypolia templi_, 285. _Plate 138_
- Death's-Head Hawk Moth, 24. _Plates 8, 9, 11_
- December Moth, 113. _Plates 50, 53_
- Deep-brown Dart, 282. _Plate 137_
- _Deilephila euphorbiae_, 36, _Plates 1, 14, 15_;
- _galii_, 38, _Plates 14, 15_;
- _livornica_, 41, _Plate 15_
- _Deiopeia pulchella_, 169. _Plates 92, 94_
- Delicate, 311. _Plate 149_
- _Demas coryli_, 190. _Plates 100, 101_
- _Dendrolimus pini_, 106
- Devonshire Wainscot, 310. _Plates 147, 148_
- Dew Moth, 177. _Plate 95_
- _Diacrisia sanio_, 158. _Plates 82, 83_
- _Dianthoecia albimacula_, 249, _Plate 124_;
- _barrettii_, 247, _Plate 123_;
- _capsophila_, 251, _Plate 124_;
- _capsincola_, 250, _Plates 124, 130_;
- _carpophaga_, 251, _Plate 124_;
- _caesia_, 248, _Plate 123_;
- _compta_, 250, _Plate 124_;
- _conspersa_, 248, _Plate 123_;
- _cucubali_, 251, _Plate 124_;
- _irregularis_, 252, _Plate 125_;
- _luteago_, 247, _Plate 123_
- _Diaphora mendica_, 153. _Plates 75, 78, 79_
- _Dicranura vinula_, 62. _Plates 24, 25_
- _Dilina tiliae_, 17. _Plates 2, 3_
- Dingy Footman, 181. _Plates 97, 98_
- Disc, 5
- _Diloba caeruleocephala_, 265. _Plates 127, 133_
- _Diphtera orion_, 189. _Plates 100, 101_
- _Dipterygia scabriuscula_, 281. _Plate 137_
- Dog's Tooth, 242. _Plate 121_
- Dorsum, 5
- Dot, 239. _Plates 120, 129_
- Dotted Clay, 220. _Plate 114_
- Dotted Footman, 187. _Plates 98, 99_
- Dotted Rustic, 214. _Plate 107_
- Double Dart, 218. _Plates 110, 111_
- Double Line, 314. _Plates 150, 152_
- Double Lobed, 274. _Plate 132_
- Double-spot Brocade, 289. _Plate 141_
- Double Square-spot, 223. _Plate 113_
- _Drepana binaria_, 135. _Plates 70, 71_;
- _cultraria_, 135, _Plates 70, 71_;
- _falcataria_, 133, _Plates 68, 69_;
- _harpagula_, 134, _Plates 68, 69_;
- _lacertinaria_, 136, _Plates, 69, 71_
- _Drepanidae_, 132
- Drinker, 8, 123. _Plates 60, 61_
- _Drymonia chaonia_, 68, _Plates 28, 29_;
- _trimacula_, 67, _Plate 28_
- Dumeril's Luperina, 268
- Dusky Brocade, 272. _Plate 131_
- Dusky Marbled Brown, 66. _Plate 28_
- Dusky Sallow, 263. _Plate 126_
-
- Ear Moth, 294. _Plate 143_
- _Earias chlorana_, 144. _Plate 73_
- Egg, 1
- Elephant, 49. _Plates 17, 19_
- Emperor Moth, 131. _Plates 66, 67_
- _Endromididae_, 129
- _Endromis versicolor_, 129. _Plates 64, 65_
- _Endrosa irrorella_, 177. _Plate 95_
- _Epia irregularis_, 252
- _Epicnaptera ilicifolia_, 125. _Plates 62, 63_
- _Epineuronia popularis_, 255. _Plate 127_
- _Epipsilia ashworthii_, 216, _Plate 110_;
- _hyperborea_, 215, _Plate 108_
- _Epunda lichenea_, 285. _Plates 133, 137_
- _Eremobia ochroleuca_, 263. _Plate 126_
- _Eriogaster lanestris_, 114. _Plates 50, 53_
- _Eriopyga turca_, 314. _Plates 150, 152_
- _Eumichtis adusta_, 260, _Plate 121_;
- _protea_, 261, _Plate 122_;
- _satura_, 260, _Plate 121_
- _Eumorpha elpenor_, 49. _Plates 17, 19_
- _Euplexia lucipara_, 291. _Plate 141_
- _Euproctis chrysorrhoea_, 99. _Plates 42, 43_
- _Euretagrotis agathina_, 214. _Plate 107_
- _Eurois occulta_, 236, _Plate 117_;
- _prasina_, 235, _Plate 117_
- _Euxoa cinerea_, 204, _Plate 105_;
- _corticea_, 203, _Plates 105, 109_;
- _cursoria_, 206, _Plate 106_;
- _lunigera_, 205, _Plate 105_;
- _nigricans_, 207, _Plate 106_;
- _obelisca_, 208, _Plate 106_;
- _puta_, 204, _Plate 104_;
- _segetum_, 201, _Plate 104_;
- _tritici_, 207, _Plate 106_;
- _vestigialis_, 202, _Plate 104_
- Eyed Hawk-moth, 14, 22. _Plates 6, 7_
- _Exarnis augur_, 218. _Plates 110, 111_
-
- Feathered Brindle, 284. _Plate 137_
- Feathered Ear, 257. _Plate 128_
- Feathered Footman, 167. _Plate 90_
- Feathered Gothic, 255. _Plate 127_
- Feathered Ranunculus, 285. _Plates 133, 137_
- _Feltia exclamationis_, 208. _Plate 104_
- Fen Wainscot, 303. _Plate 145_
- Fenn's Wainscot, 308. _Plates 144, 148_
- Field Work, 8
- Figure of Eight Moth, 265. _Plates 127, 133_
- Figure of Eighty, 88. _Plate 36_
- Flame, 229. _Plate 132_
- Flame Brocade, 290. _Plate 141_
- Flame Shoulder, 228. _Plates 110, 111_
- Flame Wainscot, 300. _Plate 145_
- Flounced Rustic, 267. _Plate 128_
- Footman Moths, 173. _Plates 90-99_
- Four-dotted Footman, 178. _Plate 95_
- Four-spotted Footman, 179. _Plates 94, 95_
- Fox Moth, 121. _Plates 58, 59_
- Frenulum, 4
- Frosted Green, 93. _Plates 38, 39_
- Frosted Orange, 295. _Plate 144_
-
- Garden Dart, 207. _Plate 106_
- Garden Tiger, 160. _Plates 82, 84, 85_
- _Gastropacha quercifolia_, 126. _Plates 62, 63_
- _Geometridae_, 7
- Gipsy, 103. _Plate 46_
- Glaucous Shears, 245. _Plate 122_
- _Gluphisia crenata_, 66. _Plate 28_
- Goat-moth, 6
- _Gortyna micacea_, 294, _Plate 143_;
- _nictitans_, 294, _Plate 143_;
- _petasitis_, 295, _Plate 143_
- Gothic, 293. _Plates 139, 142_
- _Grammesia trigrammica_, 314. _Plate 151_
- Grass Eggar, 119. _Plates 56, 57_
- Great Brocade, 236. _Plate 117_
- Great Prominent, 74. _Plates 30, 31_
- Green Arches, 235. _Plate 117_
- Green-brindled Crescent, 289. _Plate 141_
- Green Brindled Dot, 266. _Plate 127_
- Green Silver Lines, 145. _Plates 72, 73_
- Grey, 248. _Plate 123_
- Grey Arches, 238. _Plate 119_
- Grey Chi, 286. _Plate 138_
- Grey Dagger, 192. _Plates 100, 101_
- Ground Lackey, 109. _Plates 48, 49_
-
- _Habrosyne derasa_, 85. _Plate 36_
- _Hadena adusta_, 260;
- _protea_, 261, _Plate 122_;
- _satura_, 260
- _Hama abjecta_, 270, _Plate 131_;
- _furva_, 271, _Plate 131_;
- _sordida_, 271, _Plate 131_
- _Hapalia praecox_, 211. _Plate 107_
- Hawk-Moths, 6, 17. _Plates 1-21_
- Haworth's Minor, 269. _Plate 128_
- Heart and Club, 203. _Plates 105, 109_
- Heart and Dart, 208. _Plate 105_
- Heath Rustic, 214. _Plates 107, 109_
- Hebrew Character, 326. _Plates 155, 156_
- _Hecatera chrysozona_, 253, _Plate 125_;
- _serena_, 254, _Plate 125_
- Hedge Rustic, 256. _Plate 128_
- _Heliophobus hispidus_, 267. _Plates 127, 133_
- _Helotropha leucostigma_, 293. _Plate 143_
- _Hemaris fuciformis_, 53, _Plates 20, 21_;
- _tityus_, 55, _Plates 20, 21_
- _Hepialidae_, 7
- _Heterogenea limacodes_, 6
- _Heterocera_, 1
- _Hippotion celerio_, 43. _Plates 1, 16_
- _Hipocrita jacobaeae_, 171. _Plates 92, 93_
- Hoary Footman, 185. _Plates 98, 99_
- Hook-tips, 132
- Humming-bird Hawk-moth, 51. _Plate 21_
- _Hydrilla palustris_, 321. _Plate 153_
- _Hydroecia micacea_, 294, _Plate 143_;
- _nictitans_, 294, _Plate 143_;
- _petasitis_, 295, _Plate 143_
- _Hyles euphorbiae_, 36. _Plates 1, 14, 15_
- _Hyloicus pinastri_, 34. _Plates 11, 12_
- _Hylophila bicolorana_, 146, _Plates 72, 73_;
- _prasinana_, 145, _Plates 72, 73_
- _Hyppa rectilinea_, 265. _Plate 126_
-
- Imago, 1
- Ingrailed Clay, 224. _Plates 112, 113_
- Iron Prominent, 72. _Plates 30, 31_
-
- Jersey Tiger, 164. _Plates 88, 89_
- Jugum, 4
-
- Kent Black Arches, 141. _Plate 73_
- Kentish Glory, 129. _Plates 64, 65_
- Knot Grass, 198. _Plates 102, 103_
-
- Lackey, 167. _Plates 48, 49_
- _Laelia coenosa_, 101. _Plates 44, 45_
- Lappet, 126. _Plates 62, 63_
- Large Dark Prominent, 73. _Plate 31_
- Large Marbled Tortrix, 146. _Plate 72_
- Large Nutmeg, 271. _Plate 131_
- Large Ranunculus, 286. _Plate 138_
- Large Wainscot, 303. _Plate 145_
- Large Yellow Underwing, 232. _Plates 115, 118_
- _Lasiocampa quercus_, 115, _Plates 52, 54, 55_;
- _trifolii_, 119, _Plates 56, 57_
- _Lasiocampidae_, 106
- Lead-coloured Drab, 326. _Plate 157_
- Least Black Arches, 141. _Plate 73_
- Least Minor, 277. _Plate 134_
- Least Yellow Underwing, 234. _Plate 116_
- Lesser Broad-border, 234. _Plates 116, 118_
- Lesser Lutestring, 91. _Plate 39_
- Lesser Satin Moth, 89. _Plate 39_
- Lesser Swallow Prominent, 70. _Plates 28, 29_
- Lesser Yellow Underwing, 230. _Plates 115, 118_
- _Leucania albipuncta_, 312, _Plate 149_;
- _brevilinea_, 308, _Plates 144, 148_;
- _comma_, 309, _Plate 147_;
- _conigera_, 313, _Plate 150_;
- _favicolor_, 304, _Plate 149_;
- _impudens_, 307, _Plate 147_;
- _impura_, 305, _Plate 147_;
- _lithargyria_, 312, _Plates 150, 152_;
- _littoralis_, 308, _Plates 150, 152_;
- _loreyi_, 311, _Plate 149_;
- _obsoleta_, 307, _Plate 147_;
- _pallens_, 304, _Plates 147, 152_;
- _putrescens_, 310, _Plates 147, 148_;
- _turca_, 314, _Plates 150, 152_;
- _straminea_, 306, _Plate 147_;
- _unipuncta_, 310, _Plate 149_;
- _vitellina_, 311. _Plate 149_
- _Leucodonta bicoloria_, 75. _Plates 32, 33_
- _Leucoma v-nigrum_, 94
- Light Arches, 279. _Plate 135_
- Light Brocade, 241. _Plate 121_
- Light Feathered Rustic, 204. _Plate 105_
- Light Knot Grass, 196. _Plate 103_
- Lime Hawk-moth, 17. _Plates 2, 3_
- Lines of Wings, 5
- _Lithosia caniola_, 185, _Plates 98, 99_;
- _complana_, 183, _Plates 96, 97_;
- _deplana_, 180, _Plates 96, 97_;
- _griseola_, 181, _Plates 97, 98_;
- _lurideola_, 182, _Plates 96, 97_;
- _lutarella_, 184, _Plate 99_;
- _sericea_, 184, _Plate 97_;
- _sororcula_, 187, _Plate 99_
- _Lithosiinae_, 173
- Lobster, 64. _Plates 26, 27_
- _Lophopteryx camelina_, 77, _Plates 32, 33_;
- _cuculla_, 76, _Plates 32, 33_
- Lunar Marbled Brown, 68. _Plates 28, 29_
- Lunar Yellow Underwing, 231. _Plate 115_
- _Luperina dumerilii_, 268;
- _testacea_, 267, _Plate 128_
- Lychnis, 250. _Plates 124, 130_
- _Lycophotia ripae_, 210. _Plate 106_;
- _strigula_, 210. _Plates 107, 109_
- _Lymantria dispar_, 103, _Plate 46_;
- _monacha_, 105, _Plates 46, 47_
- _Lymantriidae_, 94
- Lyme Grass, 302. _Plate 146_
-
- _Macrogaster castaneae_, 6
- Macro-lepidoptera, 6
- _Macroglossa stellatarum_, 52. _Plate 21_
- _Macrothylacia rubi_, 121. _Plates 58, 59_
- _Malacosoma neustria_, 107, _Plates 48, 49_;
- _castrensis_, 109, _Plates 48, 49_
- _Mamestra advena_, 237, _Plate 117_;
- _albicolon_, 240, _Plate 120_;
- _contigua_, 243, _Plate 121_;
- _dentina_, 246, _Plate 122_;
- _dissimilis_, 242, _Plate 121_;
- _genistae_, 241, _Plate 121_;
- _glauca_, 245, _Plate 122_;
- _nebulosa_, 238, _Plate 119_;
- _oleracea_, 241, _Plates 120, 129_;
- _peregrina_, 246, _Plate 122_;
- _persicariae_, 239, _Plates 120, 129_;
- _pisi_, 244, _Plates 122, 129_;
- _thalassina_, 243, _Plate 121_;
- _tincta_, 237, _Plate 117_;
- _trifolii_, 245, _Plate 122_
- _Manduca atropos_, 24. _Plates 8, 9, 11_
- Maple Prominent, 76. _Plates 32, 33_
- Marbled Beauty, 200. _Plate 103_
- Marbled Brown, 67. _Plate 28_
- Marbled Coronet, 248. _Plate 123_
- Marbled Green, 200. _Plate 103_
- Marbled Minor, 275. _Plate 134_
- Marsh Dagger, 194. _Plate 100_
- Marsh Moth, 321. _Plate 153_
- Mathew's Wainscot, 304. _Plate 149_
- _Meliana flammea_, 300. _Plate 145_
- Mere Wainscot, 301. _Plate 146_
- Merveille du jour, 290. _Plate 141_
- _Metopsilus porcellus_, 48. _Plates 18, 19_
- _Miana bicoloria_, 277, _Plate 134_;
- _fasciuncula_, 275, _Plate 134_;
- _literosa_, 276, _Plate 134_;
- _strigilis_, 275, _Plate 134_
- Micro-lepidoptera, 6
- _Micropterygidae_, 7
- Middle-barred Minor, 275. _Plate 134_
- Miller, 191. _Plate 100_
- _Miltochrista miniata_, 176. _Plate 95_
- _Mimas tiliae_, 17. _Plates 2, 3_
- Minor Shoulder-knot, 263. _Plate 125_
- _Miselia bimaculosa_, 289, _Plate 141_;
- _oxyacanthae_, 289, _Plate 141_
- _Mormo maura_, 292. _Plate 142_
- Mottled Rustic, 316. _Plate 151_
- Mouse, 324. _Plates 154, 156_
- Muslin, 153. _Plates 75, 78, 79_
- Muslin Footman, 174. _Plates 94, 95_
-
- _Naenia typica_, 293. _Plates 139, 142_
- Narrow-bordered Bee Hawk-moth, 55. _Plates 20, 21_
- Neglected or Grey Rustic, 219. _Plates 109, 110_
- _Neuria reticulata_, 254. _Plate 126_
- _Noctuidae_, 7, 189. _Plates 100-159_
- _Noctua augur_, 218, _Plates 110, 111_;
- _baja_, 220;
- _brunnea_, 224, _Plates 112, 113_;
- _castanea_, 219, _Plates 109, 110_;
- _c-nigrum_, 221, _Plate 110_;
- _dahlii_, 225, _Plate 114_;
- _depuncta_, 220, _Plate 110_;
- _ditrapezium_, 222, _Plates 110, 111_;
- _flammatra_, 221;
- _glareosa_, 218, _Plate 110_;
- _plecta_, 228, _Plates 110, 111_;
- _primulae_, 224, _Plates 112, 113_;
- _rubi_, 226, _Plate 114_;
- _sobrina_, 227, _Plate 114_;
- _stigmatica_, 223, _Plate 113_;
- _subrosea_, 217, _Plate 108_;
- _triangulum_, 223, _Plate 113_;
- _umbrosa_, 227, _Plate 114_;
- _xanthographa_, 228, _Plates 112, 114_
- _Nolidae_, 139. _Plates 72, 73_
- _Nola albula_, 141, _Plate 73_;
- _centonalis_, 142, _Plate 73_;
- _confusalis_, 141, _Plate 73_;
- _cucullatella_, 139, _Plates 72, 73_;
- _strigula_, 140, _Plate 73_
- _Nonagria cannae_, 296, _Plates 144, 148_;
- _dissoluta_, 298, _Plates 144, 148_;
- _geminipuncta_, 297, _Plates 144, 148_;
- _sparganii_, 296, _Plates 144, 148_;
- _typhae_, 297, _Plates 144, 148_
- _Notodonta dromedarius_, 72, _Plates 30, 31_;
- _phoebe_, 72, _Plate 31_;
- _torva_, 73, _Plate 31_;
- _trepida_, 74, _Plates 30, 31_;
- _tritophus_, 72, 73, _Plate 31_;
- _ziczac_, 70, _Plates 30, 31_
- Northern Arches, 262. _Plate 123_
- Northern Dart, 215. _Plate 108_
- Northern Drab, 331. _Plate 157_
- Northern Eggar, 116. _Plate 54_
- Northern Footman, 184. _Plate 97_
- Northern Rustic, 213. _Plate 107_
- _Notodontidae_, 56
- _Nudaria mundana_, 174, _Plates 94, 95_
- Nutmeg, 245. _Plate 122_
- Nut-tree Tussock, 190. _Plates 100, 101_
-
- Oak Eggar, 115. _Plates 52, 55_
- Oak Hook-tip, 135. _Plates 70, 71_
- Obscure Wainscot, 307. _Plate 147_
- _Ochria ochracea_, 295. _Plate 144_
- _Ochropleura plecta_, 228. _Plates 110, 111_
- _Odontosia carmelita_, 78. _Plates 32, 33_
- _Oeonestis quadra_, 179. _Plates 94, 95_
- _Ogygia obscura_, 215, _Plate 107_
- Old Lady, 292. _Plate 142_
- Oleander Hawk-moth, 45. _Plates 1, 16_
- Orache Moth, 264. _Plate 126_
- Orange Footman, 187. _Plate 99_
- _Orgyia antiqua_, 96, _Plates 40, 41_;
- _gonostigma_, 94, _Plates 40, 41_
-
- _Pachetra leucophaea_, 257. _Plate 128_
- _Pachnobia Leucographa_, 325, _Plate 155_;
- _rubricosa_, 326, _Plates 155, 159_
- Palaearctic Fauna, 7
- Pale Footman, 181. _Plate 97_
- Pale Mottled Willow, 318. _Plate 151_
- Pale Oak Eggar, 111. _Plates 50, 51_
- Pale Prominent, 80. _Plates 32, 33_
- Pale-shouldered Brocade, 243. _Plate 121_
- Pale Shining Brown, 237. _Plate 117_
- Pale Tussock, 7, 98. _Plates 40, 41_
- _Palimpsestis duplaris_, 89, _Plate 39_;
- _fluctuosa_, 90, _Plate 39_;
- _octogessima_, 88, _Plate 36_;
- _or_, 88, _Plate 36_
- _Panolis griseo-variegata_, 324. _Plate 155_;
- _piniperda_, 324. _Plate 155_
- _Parasemia plantaginis_, 157. _Plates 80, 81_
- Peach Blossom, 86. _Plates 36, 37_
- Pearly Underwing, 212. _Plate 104_
- Pebble Hook-tip 133. _Plates 68, 69_
- Pebble Prominent, 70. _Plates 30, 31_
- _Pelosia muscerda_, 187. _Plates 98, 99_
- _Peridroma saucia_, 212. _Plate 104_
- _Petilampa arcuosa_, 320. _Plate 134_
- _Phalera bucephala_, 81. Plates 35, 37
- _Pheosia tremula_, 69, _Plates 28, 29_;
- _dictaeoides_, 70, _Plates 28, 29_
- _Phlogophora meticulosa_, 291. _Plate 141_
- _Phothedes captiuncula_, 277. _Plate 134_
- _Phragmatobia fuliginosa_, 155. _Plates 80, 81_
- _Phryxus livornica_, 41
- Pigmy Footman, 184. _Plate 99_
- Pine Beauty, 324. _Plate 155_
- Pine Hawk, 34. _Plates 11, 12_
- Plain Clay, 220. _Plate 110_
- Plumed Prominent, 79. _Plate 33_
- Pod-lover, 252. _Plate 124_
- _Poecilocampa populi_, 113. _Plates 50, 53_
- _Polia chi_, 286, _Plate 138_;
- _flavicincta_, 286, _Plate 138_;
- _xanthomista_, 287, _Plates 139, 140_
- _Polyploca flavicornis_, 92, _Plates 38, 39_;
- _ridens_, 93, _Plates 38, 39_
- Poplar Grey, 193. _Plates 100, 101_
- Poplar Hawk-moth, 20. _Plates 4, 5_
- Poplar Kitten, 59. _Plates 22, 23_
- Poplar Lutestring, 88. _Plate 36_
- _Porthesia similis_, 100. _Plates 42, 43_
- Portland Moth, 211. _Plate 107_
- Powdered Quaker, 331. _Plate 158_
- Powdered Wainscot, 199. _Plate 103_
- Proboscis, 2
- Privet Hawk, 15, 33. _Plates 12, 13_
- _Prodenia littoralis_, 264
- Prominents, 56
- _Psychina_, 7
- _Pterostoma palpina_, 80. _Plates 32, 33_
- _Ptilophora plumigera_, 79, _Plate 33_
- Pupa-digging, 16
- Purple Clay, 11, 224. _Plates 112, 113_
- Purple Cloud, 282. _Plate 137_
- Puss Moth, 62. _Plates 24, 25_
- _Pygaera anachoreta_, 83, _Plate 35_;
- _curtula_, 82, _Plates 34, 35_;
- _pigra_, 84, _Plates 34, 35_
- _Pyralidina_, 7
-
- Rannoch Sprawler, 288. _Plate 140_
- Red Chestnut, 326. _Plates 155, 159_
- Reed Tussock, 101. _Plates 44, 45_
- " Wainscot, 296. _Plates 144, 148_
- Reddish Buff, 321. _Plate 153_
- " Light Arches, 279. _Plate 135_
- Red-necked Footman, 173. _Plates 92, 93_
- Retinaculum, 4
- Rosy Footman, 176. _Plate 95_
- " Marsh Moth, 217. _Plate 108_
- " Minor, 276. _Plate 134_
- " Rustic, 294. _Plate 143_
- Round-winged Muslin, 175. _Plate 95_
- Ruby Tiger, 155. _Plates 80, 81_
- _Rusina tenebrosa_, 322. _Plate 153_
- Rustic, 317. _Plate 151_
- " Shoulder-knot 272. _Plate 134_
-
- Sallow Kitten, 61. _Plates 22, 23_
- Sand Dart, 210. _Plate 106_
- _Sarrothripinae_, 146
- _Sarrothripa revayana_, 146. _Plate 72_
- Satin Carpet, 90. _Plate 39_
- _Saturnia pavonia_, 131. _Plates 66, 67_
- Saxon, 265. _Plate 126_
- Scalloped Hook-tip, 136. _Plates 69, 71_
- Scarce Black Arches, 142. _Plate 73_
- " Chocolate-tip, 83. _Plate 35_
- " Dagger, 196. _Plates 102, 103_
- " Footman, 183. _Plates 96, 97_
- " Hook-tip, 134. _Plates 68, 69_
- " Merveille du jour, 9, 189. _Plates 100, 101_
- " Prominent, 78. _Plates 32, 33_
- " Silver Lines, 146. _Plates 72, 73_
- " Vapourer, 94. _Plates 40, 41_
- Scarlet Tiger, 166. _Plates 88, 89_
- _Segetia xanthographa_, 228. _Plates 112, 114_
- _Senta maritima_, 299. _Plate 145_
- _Sesiidae_, 6
- Setaceous Hebrew Character, 221 _Plate 110_
- Shears, 246. _Plate 122_
- Shore Wainscot, 308. _Plates 150, 152_
- Short-cloaked Moth, 139. _Plates 72, 73_
- Shoulder-striped Wainscot, 309. _Plate 147_
- Shuttle-shaped Dart, 204. _Plate 104_
- _Sideridis albipuncta_, 312, _Plate 149_;
- _lithargyria_, 312, _Plates 150, 152_;
- _vitellina_, 311, _Plate 149_
- Silky Wainscot, 299. _Plate 145_
- Silver Cloud, 258. _Plate 128_
- Silvery Arches, 237. _Plate 117_
- Silver-striped Hawk, 48. _Plates 1, 16_
- Six-striped Rustic, 227. _Plate 114_
- Slender Bridle, 281. _Plate 135_
- Small Angle Shades, 291. _Plate 141_
- " Black Arches, 140. _Plate 73_
- " Chocolate-tip, 84. _Plates 34, 35_
- " Clouded Brindle, 273. _Plate 132_
- " Dotted Buff, 320. _Plate 134_
- " Eggar, 114. _Plates 50, 53_
- " Elephant, 48. _Plates 18, 19_
- " Lappet, 125. _Plates 62, 63_
- " Mottled Willow, 319. _Plates 151, 152_
- " Quaker, 328. _Plates 158, 159_
- " Ranunculus, 253. _Plate 125_
- " Rufous, 299. _Plate 145_
- " Square Spot, 226. _Plate 114_
- " Wainscot, 300. _Plate 145_
- _Smerinthus ocellatus_, 22, _Plates 6, 7_;
- _populi_, 20, _Plates 4, 5_
- Smoky Wainscot, 305. _Plate 147_
- Southern Wainscot, 306. _Plate 147_
- Speckled Footman, 168. _Plates 90, 91_
- _Sphingidae_, 6, 17
- _Sphinx convolvuli_, 28, _Plates 9, 10, 11_;
- _ligustri_, 33, _Plates 12, 13_
- _Spilosoma lubricipeda_, 151, _Plates 76, 77_;
- _menthastri_, 149, _Plates 74, 75, 78_;
- _urticae_, 150, _Plate 75_
- Sprawler, 288. _Plate 138_
- Spurge Hawk, 36. _Plates 1, 14, 15_
- Square-spot Dart, 208. _Plate 106_
- " " Rustic, 228. _Plates 112, 114_
- Square-spotted Clay, 223. _Plate 113_
- _Stauropus fagi_, 64. _Plates 26, 27_
- Stigmata, 5, 6
- _Stilbia anomala_, 315. _Plates 151, 152_
- _Stilpnotia salicis_, 112. _Plates 43, 44_
- Stout Dart, 215. _Plate 107_
- Stranger, 246. _Plate 122_
- Straw Underwing, 269. _Plate 128_
- Striped Hawk, 41. _Plate 15_
- Striped Wainscot, 307. _Plate 147_
- "Sugaring," 11
- Swallow Prominent, 69. _Plates 28, 29_
- Sweet-gale Moth, 197. _Plate 103_
- Swifts, 4, 7
- Sycamore, 192. _Plates 100, 102_
- _Synia musculosa_, 302. _Plate 146_
-
- _Tapinostola bondii_, 301, _Plate 146_;
- _elymi_, 302, _Plate 146_;
- _extrema_, 301, _Plate, 146_;
- _fulva_, 300, _Plate 145_;
- _hellmanni_, 301, _Plate 146_
- Tawny Shears, 251. _Plate 124_
- _Tholera cespitis_, 256. _Plate 128_
- Three Humped, 72. _Plate 31_
- _Thyatiridae_, 85
- _Thyatira batis_, 86. _Plates 36, 37_
- Tiger Moths, 148
- _Taeniocampa gothica_, 326, _Plate 155_;
- _gracilis_, 331, _Plate 158_;
- _incerta_, 330, _Plate 157_;
- _miniosa_, 327, _Plate 158_;
- _munda_, 330, _Plates 158, 159_;
- _opima_, 331, _Plate 157_;
- _populeti_, 329, _Plate 157_;
- _pulverulenta_, 328, _Plates 158, 159_;
- _stabilis_, 328, _Plate 158_
- Tongue, 2
- _Tortricina_, 7
- _Trachea atriplicis_, 264. _Plate 126_
- Treble Lines, 314. _Plate 151_
- Tree-lichen Beauty, 201
- _Trichiura crataegi_, 111. _Plates 50, 51_
- _Trigonophora flammea_, 290. _Plate 141_
- _Trifinae_, 201
- _Triphaena comes_, 230, _Plates 115, 118_;
- _fimbria_, 233, _Plates 116, 118_;
- _ianthina_, 234, _Plates 116, 118_;
- _interjecta_, 234, _Plate 116_;
- _orbona_, 230, 231, _Plates 115, 118_;
- _pronuba_, 232, _Plates 115, 118_;
- _subsequa_, 231, _Plate 115_
- Triple-spotted Clay, 222. _Plates 110, 111_
- True Lover's Knot, 210. _Plate 107_
- _Trypanus cossus_, 6
- _Trypanidae_, 6
- Turnip Moth, 201. _Plate 104_
- Tussock Moths, 94
- Twin-spotted, 297. _Plates 114, 148_
- " Quaker, 330. _Plates 158, 159_
-
- Uncertain, 317. _Plate 151_
- Union Rustic, 273. _Plate 132_
-
- _Valeria oleagina_, 266. _Plate 127_
- Vapourer, 96. _Plates 40, 41_
- Varied Coronet, 250. _Plate 124_
- Vine's Rustic, 318. _Plate 151_
- Viper's Bugloss, 252. _Plate 125_
-
- Water Ermine, 150. _Plate 75_
- Webb's Wainscot, 296. _Plates 144, 148_
- White Colon, 240. _Plate 120_
- " Ermine, 149. _Plates 74, 75, 78_
- White-line Dart, 207. _Plate 106_
- White-marked, 325. _Plate 155_
- White-point, 312. _Plate 149_
- White Prominent, 75. _Plates 32, 33_
- " Satin Moth, 102. _Plates 43, 44_
- " Speck or American Wainscot, 310. _Plate 149_
- " Spot, 249. _Plate 124_
- Wings, 3
- Wing Areas and Lines, 4;
- cells, 6
- Wood Tiger, 157. _Plates 80, 81_
-
- _Xylomania conspicillaris_, 258. _Plate 128_
- _Xylophasia hepatica_, 280, _Plates 130, 135_;
- _lithoxylea_, 279, _Plate 135_;
- _monoglypha_, 280, _Plate 136_;
- _rurea_, 278, _Plates 130, 135_;
- _scolopacina_, 281, _Plate 135_;
- _sublustris_, 279, _Plate 135_;
- _zollikoferi_, 279, _Plate 153_
- Yellow Horned, 92. _Plates 38, 39_
- Yellow-tail, 100. _Plates 42, 43_
- Yoke, 4
-
- _Zeuzera pyrina_, 6
- _Zygaenidae_, 6
-
-MOTHS.--SERIES I.
-
- OLD EDITION. NEW EDITION.
- For Sphinx convolvuli read Herse (Sphinx) convolvuli
- " Arsilonche albovenosa " Simyra (Arsilonche) albovenosa
- " Bryophila glandifera " Bryophila muralis (glandifera)
- " Agrotis (Hapalia) praecox " Agrotis (Lycophotia) praecox
- " Agrotis (Peridroma) saucia " Agrotis (Lycophotia) saucia
- " Agrotis (Spaelotis) lucernea " Agrotis (Episilia) lucernea
- " Agrotis (Pachnobia) simulans " Agrotis (Episilia) simulans
- " Agrotis (Ogygia) obscura " Agrotis ravida (obscura)
- " Noctua sobrina " Noctua (Mythimna) sobrina
- " Epineuronia popularis " Tholera (Epineuronia) popularis
- " Charaeas graminis " Cerapteryx (Charaeas) graminis
- " Hyppa rectilinea " Lithomoea (Hyppa) rectilinea
- " Hama abjecta " Hama oblonga (abjecta)
- " Apamea gemina " Apamea obscura (gemina)
- " Trigonophora flammea " Rhizotype flammea
- " Mormo maura " Mania maura
- " Nonagria cannae " Nonagria algae (cannae)
- " Synia musculosa " Oria (Synia) musculosa
- " Grammesia trigrammica " Meristis (Grammesia) trigrammica
- " Caradrina exigua " Laphygma exigua
-
-SPECIAL INDEX.
-
- _abjecta_ (_Hama_), 270
- _aceris_ (_Acronycta_), 192
- _Acronyctinae_, 189
- _adusta_ (_Eumichtis_), 260
- _advena_ (_Aplecta_), 237
- _aestiva_ (_Drepana_), 136
- _aethiops_ (_Miana_), 275
- _agathina_ (_Agrotis_), 214
- _albicolon_ (_Mamestra_), 240
- _albida_ (_Arsilonche_), 199
- _albimacula_ (_Dianthoecia_), 249
- _albipuncta_ (_Leucania_), 312
- _algae_ (_Bryophila_), 201
- _algae_ (_Nonagria_), 296
- _albovenosa_ (_Arsilonche_), 199
- _albula_ (_Nola_), 141
- _alni_ (_Acronycta_), 193
- _alopecurus_ (_Xylophasia_), 278
- _alpinum_ (_Diphtera_), 190
- _alsines_ (_Caradrina_), 317
- _ambigua_ (_Caradrina_), 318
- _anachoreta_ (_Pygaera_), 82, 83
- _anceps_ (_Hama_), 271
- _anomola_ (_Stilbia_), 315
- _antiqua_ (_Orgyia_), 96
- _approximans_ (_Meristis_), 315
- _aprilina_ (_Agriopis_), 294
- _aqulina_ (_Agrotis_), 207
- _Arctiidae_, 148
- _arcuosa_ (_Petilampa_), 320
- _argentea_ (_Palimpsestis_), 90
- _argillacea_ (_Dianthoecia_), 241
- _ariae_ (_Trichiura_), 113
- _arundineta_ (_Nonagria_), 298
- _ashworthii_ (_Agrotis_), 216
- _assimilis_ (_Crymodes_), 262
- _atriplicis_ (_Trachea_), 264
- _atropos_ (_Acherontia_), 24
- _augur_ (_Noctua_), 218
- _auricoma_ (_Acronycta_), 196
- _australis_ (_Aporophyla_), 284
-
- _baja_ (_Noctua_), 220
- _barrettii_ (_Dianthoecia_), 247
- _basilinea_ (_Trachea_), 272
- _batis_ (_Thyatira_), 86
- _bicolorana_ (_Hylophila_), 146
- _bicoloria_ (_Leucodonta_), 75
- _bicoloria_ (_Miana_), 277
- _bicuspis_ (_Cerura_), 58
- _bidens_ (_Acronycta_), 196
- _bifida_ (_Cerura_), 59
- _bilinea_ (_Meristis_), 315
- _bimaculosa_ (_Miselia_), 289
- _binaria_ (_Drepana_), 135
- _bipunctata_ (_Senta_), 299
- _bombyliformis_ (_Hemaris_), 55
- _bondii_ (_Tapinostola_), 301
- _borealis_ (_Phragmatobia_), 155
- _bradyporina_ (_Acronycta_), 191
- _brassicae_ (_Barathra_), 239
- _brevilinea_ (_Leucania_), 308
- _brunnea_ (_Noctua_), 224
- _bucephala_ (_Phalera_), 81
-
- _caeruleocephala_ (_Diloba_), 265
- _caia_ (_Arctia_), 160
- _caliginosa_ (_Acosmetia_), 321
- _callunae_ (_Lasiocampa_), 116
- _camelina_ (_Lophopteryx_), 77
- _cana_ (_Miana_), 276
- _candelarum_ (_Agrotis_), 216
- _candelisequa_ (_Acronycta_), 192
- _candida_ (_Stilpnotia_), 103
- _caniola_ (_Lithosia_), 185
- _cannae_ (_Nonagria_), 296
- _capsincola_ (_Dianthoecia_), 250
- _capsophila_ (_Dianthoecia_), 251
- _captiuncula_ (_Phothedes_), 277
- _capucina_ (_Miselia_), 289
- _carmelita_ (_Odentosia_), 78
- _carpophaga_ (_Dianthoecia_), 251
- _castanea_ (_Noctua_), 219
- _celerio_ (_Chaerocampa_), 43
- _celerio_ (_Hippotion_), 43
- _centonalis_ (_Nola_), 142
- _cespitis_ (_Tholera_), 256
- _chaonia_ (_Drymonia_), 68
- _characterea_ (_Xylophasia_), 280
- _chi_ (_Polia_), 286
- _Chloephoridae_, 143
- _chlorana_ (_Earias_), 144
- _chrysorrhoea_ (_Euproctis_), 99
- _chrysozona_ (_Hecatera_), 253
- _cinerea_ (_Agrotis_), 204
- _c-nigrum_ (_Noctua_), 221
- _coenosa_ (_Laelia_), 101
- _combusta_ (_Xylophasia_), 278
- _comes_ (_Triphaena_), 230
- _comma_ (_Leucania_), 309
- _complana_ (_Lithosia_), 183
- _compta_ (_Dianthoecia_), 250
- _conflua_ (_Noctua_), 224
- _confusalis_ (_Nola_), 141
- _conigera_ (_Leucania_), 313
- _connexa_ (_Apamea_), 273
- _consequa_ (_Triphaena_), 231
- _conspersa_ (_Dianthoecia_), 248
- _conspicilaris_ (_Xylomania_), 258
- _contigua_ (_Mamestra_), 243
- _convolvuli_ (_Herse_), 28
- _convolvuli_ (_Sphinx_), 28
- _corticea_ (_Agrotis_), 203, 209
- _coryli_ (_Demas_), 190
- _crataegi_ (_Trichiura_), 112
- _crenata_ (_Chaonia_), 66
- _crenata_ (_Gluphisia_), 66
- _cribrum_ (_Coscinia_), 168
- _crinanensis_ (_Hydroecia_), App.
- _cucubali_ (_Dianthoecia_), 251
- _cuculla_ (_Lophopteryx_), 76
- _cucullatella_ (_Nola_), 139
- _cultraria_ (_Drepana_), 135
- _cursoria_ (_Agrotis_), 206
- _curtisii_ (_Triphaena_), 231
- _curtula_ (_Pygaera_), 82, 84
- _Cymatophoridae_, 85
-
- _dahlii_ (_Noctua_), 225
- _dentina_ (_Mamestra_), 246
- _deplana_ (_Lithosia_), 180
- _depuncta_ (_Noctua_), 220
- _derasa_ (_Habrosyne_), 85
- _deschangei_ (_Spilosoma_), 152
- _desillii_ (_Agrotis_), 210
- _dictaeoides_ (_Pheosia_), 70
- _didyma_ (_Apamea_), 274
- _diluta_ (_Asphalia_), 91
- _dimidiata_ (_Pheosia_), 70
- _dispar_ (_Lymantria_), 103
- _dissimilis_ (_Mamestra_), 242
- _dissoluta_ (_Nonagria_), 297
- _ditrapezium_ (_Noctua_), 222
- _dodonides_ (_Drymonia_), 68
- _dominula_ (_Callimorpha_), 166
- _Drepanidae_, 131
- _dromedarius_ (_Notodonta_), 70
- _dumerilli_ (_Luperina_), 268
- _duplaris_ (_Palimpsestis_), 89
-
- _eboraci_ (_Spilosoma_), 152
- _ectypa_ (_Leucania_), 304
- _edda_ (_Noctua_), 219
- _elpenor_ (_Chaerocampa_), 49
- _elpenor_ (_Eumorpha_), 49
- _elpenorcellus_ (_Metopsilus_), 48
- _elymi_ (_Tapinostola_), 302
- _Endromididae_, 129
- _eremita_ (_Lymantria_), 105
- _erythrostigma_ (_Hydroecia_), 294
- _euphorbiae_ (_Acronycta_), 197
- _euphorbiae_ (_Deilephila_), 36
- _euphorbiae_ (_Hyles_), 36
- _exclamationis_ (_Agrotis_), 208
- _exigua_ (_Laphygma_), 319
- _extrema_ (_Tapinostola_), 301
- _exulis_ (_Crymodes_), 262
-
- _fagi_ (_Stauropus_), 64
- _falcataria_ (_Drepana_), 133
- _familiaris_ (_Lasiocampa_), 116
- _fascelina_ (_Dasychira_), 97
- _fasciata_ (_Macrothylacia_), 121
- _fasciata_ (_Spilosoma_), 152
- _fasciuncula_ (_Miana_), 275
- _fasciuncula_ (_Oligia_), 275
- _favicolor_ (_Leucania_), 304
- _festiva_ (_Noctua_), 224
- _fibrosa_ (_Helotropha_), 293
- _ficklini_ (_Dianthoecia_), 247
- _fimbria_ (_Triphaena_), 233
- _finmarchia_ (_Polyploca_), 92
- _flammea_ (_Meliana_), 300
- _flammea_ (_Rhizotype_), 290
- _flammatra_ (_Noctua_), 221
- _flava_ (_Lithosia_), 181
- _flavago_ (_Ochria_), 295
- _flavicincta_ (_Polia_), 286
- _flavicornis_ (_Polyploca_), 192
- _flavida_ (_Arsilonche_), 199
- _fluctuosa_ (_Palimpsestis_), 90
- _fraterna_ (_Nonagria_), 297
- _fuciformis_ (_Hemaris_), 53
- _fuliginosa_ (_Phragmatobia_), 155
- _fulva_ (_Tapinostola_), 300
- _furcula_ (_Cerura_), 61
- _furuncula_ (_Miana_), 277
- _furva_ (_Hama_), 271
-
- _gaelica_ (_Palimpsestis_), 89
- _galii_ (_Celerio_), 38
- _galii_ (_Deilephila_), 38
- _gemina_ (_Apamea_), 272
- _geminipuncta_ (_Nonagria_), 297
- _genistae_ (_Mamestra_), 241
- _glandifera_ (_Bryophila_), 200
- _glareosa_ (_Noctua_), 218
- _glauca_ (_Mamestra_), 245
- _glaucata_ (_Cilix_), 138
- _gonostigma_ (_Orgyia_), 94
- _gothica_ (_Taeniocampa_), 326
- _gothicina_ (_Taeniocampa_), 326
- _gracillis_ (_Taeniocampa_), 331
- _graminis_ (_Cerapteryx_), 256
- _graminis_ (_Charaeas_), 256
- _griseo-variegata_ (_Panolis_), 324
- _griseola_ (_Lithosia_), 181
- _gueneei_ (_Luperina_), 268
-
- _harpagula_ (_Drepana_), 134
- _haworthii_ (_Celaena_), 269
- _hebridicola_ (_Agrotis_), 214
- _hellmanni_ (_Tapinostola_), 301
- _helvetina_ (_Agrotis_), 218
- _hepatica_ (_Xylophasia_), 280
- _hera_ (_Callimorpha_), 164
- _hethlandica_ (_Dianthoecia_), 249
- _hibernica_ (_Celaena_), 270
- _hibernicus_ (_Cerapteryx_), 257
- _hispidus_ (_Heliophobus_), 267
- _hoegei_ (_Gastropacha_), 127
- _hospita_ (_Parasemia_), 157
- _hybridus_ (_Smerinthus_), 22
- _hyperborea_ (_Agrotis_), 215
- _Hypsidae_, 167
-
- _ianthina_ (_Triphaena_), 234
- _ilicanus_ (_Sarrothripa_), 147
- _ilicifolia_ (_Epicnaptera_), 125
- _immaculata_ (_Taeniocampa_), 330
- _impar_ (_Bryophila_), 200
- _impudens_ (_Leucania_), 307
- _impura_ (_Leucania_), 305
- _incerta_ (_Taeniocampa_), 330
- _infuscata_ (_Acronycta_), 192
- _infuscata_ (_Xylophasia_), 280
- _innuba_ (_Triphaena_), 232
- _interjecta_ (_Triphaena_), 234
- _intermedia_ (_Celerio_), 41
- _inversa_ (_Smerinthus_), 22
- _irregularis_ (_Dianthoecia_, 252
- _irrorella_ (_Endrosa_), 177
-
- _jacobaeae_ (_Hipocrita_), 171
-
- _l-album_ (_Arctornis_), 94
- _lacertinaria_ (_Drepana_), 136
- _lacteola_ (_Lithosia_), 185
- _lanestris_ (_Eriogaster_), 114
- _lapponica_ (_Pterostoma_), 80
- _Lasiocampidae_, 106
- _latruncula_ (_Miana_), 275
- _leucographa_ (_Pachnobia_), 325
- _leuconota_ (_Hecatera_), 254
- _leucophaea_ (_Pachetra_), 257
- _leucostigma_ (_Helotropha_), 293
- _lichenea_ (_Epunda_), 285
- _ligustri_ (_Craniophora_), 198
- _ligustri_ (_Sphinx_), 33
- _lineata_ (_Deilephila_), 41
- _literosa_ (_Miana_), 276
- _lithargyria_ (_Leucania_), 312
- _Lithosiinae_, 173
- _lithoxylea_ (_Xylophasia_), 279
- _littoralis_ (_Leucania_), 308
- _littorali_s (_Prodenia_), 264
- _livornica_ (_Deilephila_), 41
- _livornica_ (_Phryxus_), 41
- _loreyi_ (_Leucania_), 311
- _lubricipeda_ (_Spilosoma_), 151
- _lucernea_ (_Agrotis_), 213
- _lucipara_ (_Euplexia_), 291
- _luneburgensis_ (_Aporophyla_), 282
- _lunigera_ (_Agrotis_), 205
- _lurideola_ (_Lithosia_), 182
- _luteago_ (_Dianthoecia_), 247
- _lutescens_ (_Callimorpha_), 164
- _lutulenta_ (_Aporophyla_), 282
- _Lymantriidae,_ 94
-
- _maillardi_ (_Crymodes_), 262
- _margaritosa_ (_Agrotis_), 212
- _marginata_ (_Lasiocampa_), 116
- _maritima_ (_Senta_), 299
- _matura_ (_Cerigo_), 269
- _maura_ (_Mania_), 292
- _megacephala_ (_Acronycta_), 193
- _melaleuca_ (_Xylomania_), 259
- _melanocephala_ (_Acronycta_), 191
- _mendica_ _(Diaphora_), 153
- _menthastri_ (_Spilosoma_), 149
- _menyanthidis_ (_Acronycta_), 196
- _mesomella_ (_Cybosia_), 178
- _meticulosa_ (_Phlogophora_), 291
- _micacea_ (_Hydroecia_), 294
- _miniata_ (_Miltochrista_), 176
- _miniosa_ (_Taeniocampa_), 327
- _molybdeola_ (_Lithosia_), 184
- _monacha_ (_Lymantria_), 105
- _monoglypha_ (_Xylophasia_), 280
- _montivaga_ (_Acronycta_), 197
- _mori_ (_Bombyx_), 106
- _morpheus_ (_Caradrina_), 316
- _morrisii_ (_Petilampa_), 320
- _munda_ (_Taeniocampa_), 330
- _mundana_ (_Nudaria_), 174
- _muralis_ (_Bryophila_), 200
- _muscerda_ (_Pelosia_), 187
- _musculosa_ (_Oria_), 302
- _myricae_ (_Acronycta_), 197
-
- _nana_ (_Taeniocampa_), 328
- _nebeculosa_ (_Brachionycha_), 288
- _nebulosa_ (_Aplecta_), 238
- _neglecta_ (_Noctua_), 219
- _nerii_ (_Daphnis_), 45
- _nerii_ (_Chaerocampa_), 45
- _neurica_ (_Nonagria_), 298
- _neustria_ (_Malacosoma_), 107, 111
- _nictitans_ (_Hydroecia_), 294
- _nigra_ (_Aporophyla_), 282
- _nigricans_ (_Agrotis_), 207
- _nigricans_ (_Nonagria_), 297
- _nigristriata_ (_Senta_), 299
- _nigrocincta_ (_Polia_), 287
- _nigrocostata_ (_Senta_), 299
- _Noctuidae_, 189
- _Nolidae_, 139
- _Notodontidae_, 56
- _nubilata_ (_Asphalia_), 91
-
- _obelisca_ (_Agrotis_), 208
- _oblonga_ (_Hama_), 270
- _obscura_ (_Apamea_), 272
- _obscura_ (_Bombycia_), 263
- _obsoleta_ (_Leucania_), 307
- _occulta_ (_Euoris_), 236
- _ocellatus_ (_Smerinthus_), 22
- _ochrea_ (_Dianthoecia_), 249
- _ochreola_ (_Lithosia_), 180
- _ochroleuca_ (_Eremobia_), 263
- _octogessima_ (_Palimpsestis_), 88, 89
- _oculea_ (_Apamea_), 274
- _oleagina_ (_Valeria_), 266
- _oleracea_ (_Mamestra_), 241
- _olivacea_ (_Lasiocampa_), 116
- _olivacea_ (_Polia_), 286
- _olivaceo-fasciata_ (_Lasiocampa_), 126
- _ophiogramma_ (_Apamea_), 274
- _opima_ (_Taeniocampa_), 320
- _or_ (_Palimpsestis_), 88
- _orbona_ (_Triphaena_), 230
- _orion_ (_Diphtera_), 189
- _oxyacanthae_ (_Miselia_), 289
-
- _pabulatricula_ (_Apamea_), 273
- _pallens_ (_Leucania_), 304
- _pallida_ (_Aplecta_), 238
- _pallida_ (_Trichiura_), 112
- _palpina_ (_Pterostoma_), 80
- _paludis_ (_Hydroecia_), 294
- _palustris_ (_Hydrilla_), 321
- _papyrata_ (_Spilosoma_), 150
- _pascuea_ (_Aporophyla_), 284
- _passetii_ (_Eurois_), 236
- _pavonia_ (_Saturnia_), 131
- _peregrina_ (_Mamestra_), 246
- _perfusca_ (_Noctua_), 226
- _perla_ (_Bryophila_), 200
- _persicariae_ (_Mamestra_), 239
- _petasitis_ (_Hydroecia_), 295
- _phoebe_ (_Notodonta_), 72
- _phragmitidis_ (_Calamia_), 303
- _pigra_ (_Pygaera_), 84
- _pinastri_ (_Hyloicus_), 34
- _pini_ (_Dendrolimus_), 106
- _pini_ (_Eutricha_), 106
- _piniperda_ (_Panolis_), 324
- _pisi_ (_Mamestra_), 244
- _plaga_ (_Agrotis_), 209
- _plantaginis_ (_Parasemia_), 157
- _plecta_ (_Noctua_), 228
- _plumigera_ (_Ptilophora_), 79
- _polyodon_ (_Cloantha_), 282
- _Polyplocidae_, 95
- _popularis_ (_Tholera_), 255
- _populeti_ (_Taeniocampa_), 329
- _populi_ (_Amorpha_), 20
- _populi_ (_Poecilocampa_), 113
- _populi_ (_Smerinthus_), 20, 22
- _porcellus_ (_Chaerocampa_), 48
- _porcellus_ (_Metopsilus_), 48
- _potatoria_ (_Cosmotriche_), 123
- _praecox_ (_Agrotis_), 211
- _prasina_ (_Euoris_), 235
- _prasinana_ (_Hylophila_), 145
- _primulae_ (_Noctua_), 224
- _pronuba_ (_Triphaena_), 232
- _protea_ (_Eumichtis_), 264
- _psi_ (_Acronycta_), 195
- _pudibunda_ (_Dasychira_), 98
- _pudorina_ (_Leucania_), 307
- _pulchella_ (_Deiopeia_), 169
- _pulverulenta_ (_Taeniocampa_), 328
- _punctina_ (_Leucania_), 306
- _puta_ (_Agrotis_), 204
- _putrescens_ (_Leucania_), 310
- _putris_ (_Axylia_), 229
- _pygmaeola_ (_Lithosia_), 184, 185
- _pyramidea_ (_Amphipyra_), 323
-
- _quadra_ (_Oeonestis_), 179
- _quadripunctaria_ (_Callimorpha_), 164
- _quadripunctata_ (_Caradrina_), 318
- _quercifolia_ (_Gastropacha_), 126
- _quercus_ (_Lasiocampa_), 115
-
- _radiata_ (_Spilosoma_), 152
- _radiola_ (_Agrotis_), 205
- _ramosana_ (_Sarrothripa_), 147
- _ravida_ (_Agrotis_), 215
- _rectilinea_ (_Hyppa_), 265
- _remissa_ (_Apamea_), 272
- _renigera_ (_Agrotis_), 213
- _reticulata_ (_Neuria_), 254
- _revayana_ (_Sarrothripa_), 144, 146
- _rhomboidea_ (_Noctua_), 223
- _ridens_ (_Polyploca_), 93
- _ripae_ (_Agrotis_), 210
- _roboris_ (_Aplecta_), 238
- _roboris_ (_Lasiocampa_), 116
- _rosea_ (_Agrotis_), 214, 218
- _rossica_ (_Callimorpha_), 166
- _rubi_ (_Macrothylacia_), 121
- _rubi_ (_Noctua_), 226
- _rubricollis_ (_Atolmis_), 173
- _rubricosa_ (_Pachnobia_), 326
- _rufa_ (_Coenobia_), 299
- _rufa_ (_Taeniocampa_), 326
- _rufescens_ (_Taeniocampa_), 332
- _rumicis_ (_Acronycta_), 198
- _runica_ (_Diphtera_), 190
- _rurea_ (_Xylophasia_), 278
- _russula_ (_Diacrisia_), 158
- _rustica_ (_Diaphora_), 153
-
- _salicis_ (_Acronycta_), 198
- _salicis_ (_Stilpnotia_), 102
- _sanio_ (_Diacrisia_), 158
- _Sarrothripinae_, 146
- _satura_ (_Eumichtis_), 260
- _Saturniidae_, 131
- _saucia_ (_Agrotis_), 212
- _scabriuncula_ (_Dipterygia_), 281
- _schaufussi_ (_Malacosoma_), 111
- _scincula_ (_Drepana_), 137
- _scolopacina_ (_Xylophasia_), 281
- _scotica_ (_Acronycta_), 196
- _scotica_ (_Palimpsestis_), 89
- _scotica_ (_Polyploca_), 92
- _secalis_ (_Apamea_), 274
- _sedi_ (_Aporophyla_), 283
- _segetum_ (_Agrotis_), 201 (_segetis_)
- _semivirga_ (_Acronycta_), 191
- _semivirgata_ (_Hyppa_), 265
- _senex_ (_Comacla_), 175
- _serena_ (_Hecatera_), 254
- _sericea_ (_Lithosia_), 184
- _sexstrigata_ (_Noctua_), 227 (_umbrosa_)
- _signata_ (_Endrosa_), 177
- _similis_ (_Porthesia_), 100
- _simulans_ (_Agrotis_), 214
- _sinelinea_ (_Leucania_), 308
- _sobrina_ (_Noctua_), 227
- _sororcula_ (_Lithosia_), 187
- _sparganii_ (_Nonagria_), 296
- _Sphingidae_, 17
- _sphinx_ (_Brachionycha_), 288
- _spinula_ (_Cilix_), 132
- _stabilis_ (_Taeniocampa_), 328
- _steinerti_ (_Acronycta_), 193
- _stellatarum_ (_Macroglossa_), 52
- _stigmatica_ (_Noctua_), 223
- _straminea_ (_Leucania_), 181
- _striata_ (_Coscina_), 167
- _strigilis_ (_Miana_), 274
- _strigosa_ (_Acronycta_), 194
- _strigula_ (_Agrotis_), 210
- _strigula_ (_Nola_), 140
- _suasa_ (_Mamestra_), 242
- _subfusca_ (_Noctua_), 203
- _subsequa_ (_Triphaena_), 231
- _sublustris_ (_Xylophasia_), 278
- _subrosea_ (_Noctua_), 217
- _suffusa_ (_Polia_), 286
- _sundevalli_ (_Craniophora_), 199
- _superstes_ (_Caradrina_), 317
-
- _taraxaci_ (_Caradrina_), 317
- _tenebrosa_ (_Rusina_), 322
- _templi_ (_Dasypolia_), 285
- _testacea_ (_Luperina_), 267
- _thalassina_ (_Mamestra_), 243
- _thompsoni_ (_Aplecta_), 238
- _thulei_ (_Noctua_), 224
- _Thyatiridae_, 85
- _tincta_ (_Aplecta_), 236
- _tiliae_ (_Dilina_), 17
- _tiliae_ (_Mimas_), 17
- _tityus_ (_Hemaris_), 55
- _torva_ (_Notodonta_), 73
- _tragopogonis_ (_Amphipyra_), 324
- _tremula_ (_Pheosia_), 69
- _trepida_ (_Notodonta_), 74
- _triangulum_ (_Noctua_), 223
- _tricuspis_ (_Cerapteryx_), 256
- _tridens_ (_Acronycta_), 195
- _trifolii_ (_Lasiocampa_), 119
- _trifolii_ (_Mamestra_), 245
- _trifolii_ (_Pachygastria_), 107
- _trigrammica_ (_Meristis_), 314
- _trimacula_ (_Drymonia_), 67
- _tritici_ (_Agrotis_), 207, 208
- _tritophus_ (_Notodonta_), 72, 73
- _trux_ (_Agrotis_), 205
- _turca_ (_Leucania_), 314
- _typhae_ (_Nonagria_), 297
- _typica_ (_Naenia_), 293
-
- _ulmifolia_ (_Gastropacha_), 126
- _umbrosa_ (_Noctua_), 227
- _unanimis_ (_Apamea_), 273
- _unicolor_ (_Lithosia_), 180
- _unipuncta_ (_Leucania_), 310
- _urticae_ (_Spilosoma_), 150
-
- _variegata_ (_Ptilophora_), 79
- _versicolor_ (_Endromis_), 129
- _vestigialis_ (_Agrotis_), 202
- _villica_ (_Arctia_), 162
- _viminalis_ (_Bombycia_), 263
- _vinula_ (_Dicranura_), 62
- _vitellina_ (_Leucania_), 311
- _v-nigrum_ (_Leucoma_), 94
-
- _walkeri_ (_Spilosoma_), 149
- _wismariensis_ (_Senta_), 299
- _w-latinum_ (_Mamestra_), 241
-
- _xanthographa_ (_Noctua_), 228
- _xanthomista_ (_Polia_), 287
-
- _ypsilon_ (_Agrotis_), 209
-
- _zatima_ (_Spilosoma_), 152
- _ziczac_ (_Notodonta_), 70
- _zollikoferi_ (_Xylophasia_), 279
-
-A LIST OF THE FAMILIES OF BRITISH MOTHS described in this volume.
-
- SPHINGIDAE, 17-55
- NOTODONTIDAE, 56-84
- THYATIRIDAE, 85-93
- LYMANTRIIDAE, 94-105
- LASIOCAMPIDAE, 106-128
- ENDROMIDIDAE, 129, 130
- SATURNIIDAE, 131, 132
- DREPANIDAE, 132-138
- NOLIDAE, 139-142
- CHLOEPHORIDAE, 143-146
- SARROTHRIPINAE, 146
- ARCTIIDAE, 148-188
- ARCTIINAE, 148-172
- LITHOSIINAE, 173-188
- NOCTUIDAE, 189-331
- ACRONYCTINAE, 189-201
- TRIFINAE, 201-331
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-A LIST OF THE VOLUMES IN THE WAYSIDE AND WOODLAND SERIES
-
- * * * * *
-
-WAYSIDE AND WOODLAND BLOSSOMS A Pocket Guide to British Wild Flowers, for
-the Country Rambler. (First and Second Series.) With clear Descriptions of
-760 Species. By EDWARD STEP, F.L.S. And Coloured Figures of 257 Species by
-MABEL E. STEP.
-
-WAYSIDE AND WOODLAND TREES A Pocket Guide to the British Sylva. By EDWARD
-STEP, F.L.S. With 175 Plates from Water-colour Drawings by MABEL E. STEP
-and Photographs by HENRY IRVING and the Author.
-
-WAYSIDE AND WOODLAND FERNS A Pocket Guide to the British Ferns, Horsetails
-and Club-Mosses. By EDWARD STEP, F.L.S. With Coloured Figures of every
-Species by MABEL E. STEP. And 67 Photographs by the Author.
-
-THE BUTTERFLIES OF THE BRITISH ISLES A Pocket Guide for the Country
-Rambler. With clear Descriptions and Life Histories of all the Species. By
-RICHARD SOUTH, F.E.S. With 450 Coloured Figures photographed from Nature,
-and numerous Black and White Drawings.
-
-THE MOTHS OF THE BRITISH ISLES (First and Second Series). A Complete Pocket
-Guide to all the Species included in the Groups formerly known as
-Macro-lepidoptera. By RICHARD SOUTH, F.E.S. With upwards of 1500 Coloured
-Figures photographed from Nature, and numerous Black and White Drawings.
-
-THE BIRDS OF THE BRITISH ISLES AND THEIR EGGS (First and Second Series). A
-Complete Pocket Guide with descriptive text. By T. A. COWARD, M.B.O.U.,
-F.Z.S., F.E.S. With 455 accurately Coloured Illustrations by ARCHIBALD
-THORBURN and others, and 134 Photographic Reproductions by RICHARD KEARTON,
-F.Z.S., Miss E. L. TURNER, M.B.O.U., and others.
-
- * * * * *
-
-AT ALL BOOKSELLERS. _Full Prospectuses on application to the Publishers_--
-FREDERICK WARNE AND CO., LTD. LONDON: Chandos House, Bedford Court, Bedford
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