Scottish Rock Garden Club Forum
General Subjects => General Forum => Topic started by: ronm on March 06, 2012, 08:48:06 PM
-
Please if you find a larvae eating your plants dont kill it, but send it to me with details of numbers and location. Uk only please!! This is to evaluate the extent of damage caused by these species and possibly their rareity . I need the living larva as confusion is rife. Please pack in a small box of regular compost. Send 1st class. I promise I will refund postage and packaging. PM for my address. Thank you in advance. Ron
-
Follow up messages today are reporting hundreds of pounds worth of damage caused to ornamental plants by this Genus. I have sent a message to DEFRA regarding this ( previously unknown ) financial damage, and will await and post their reply.
-
A member has reported the third larva this year. These previous to this thread but photo evidence does seem to be of this genus.
-
Which moth is the main culprit? Pleased (perhaps not the best word?) to see at least one British native moth doing well.
-
We don't really know yet Anthony as this topic has just erupted today. All we have so far is a photograph of a single larva, and as you know these , of the Hepialidae, are most difficult to seperate, especially from photographs. I have / hope members sending me specimens alive as they find them along with relevant data. See thread in Galanthus pests for history. My own UV light records over many years show decline in this genus, but it would appear that it is indeed a pest of Galanthus, for at least a few of forum members. I find this news but must accept everyones views. Have you ever come across host specialization within this genus?
My experience is that once disturbed the larvae of this genus are notoriously difficult to re establish. I'm hoping to do this with specimens sent to me through the post. Any tips Anthony?
-
I've only met them sporadically in the garden. The females seek out the males and bash them to the ground before having their wicked way. Females then broadcast their eggs over grassland as they fly. It would be interesting to compare situations where caterpillars are found. They can be identified by their white body and orange head. http://www.davidkennardphotography.com/photos/2787-Swift-Moth-Hepialidae-caterpillar.xhtml
-
I just browsed swift moth in my email archive and have had many, many hits from a noted gardener in the Dublin area. One email dating back to 1998 during a particularly bad outbreak says "but to tell you the truth I'm driven MAD, by larvae of Swift moth - which definitely like snowdrops more than anything except hellebores". Previous emails from the same person list a host of other plants so affected - Polygonatum, Disporum, Primula, Paeonia. Not a pest I've heard of on this side of the Atlantic - and happy about that thank-you - aside from the Conifer Swift Moth Korscheltellus gracilis which a search says is reported in area of Scranton, Penn.
johnw
-
I don't know if I am being paranoid but my wife noticed this moth on the outside of our kitchen window yesterday evening. I caught it in a jam jar but as I think it is still alive it is difficult to photograph well. Can anyone identify it or do I need better photos?
-
Hi Alan,
Looks like a 'Large Yellow Underwing', Noctua pronuba . Another one thats strongly attracted to light, and therefore quite commonly seen. Larvae feed on a wide range of herbs and grasses etc. You are becoming quite the Lepidopterist, :)
-
Funny I have never seen the moth but we have had terrible trouble with the caterpillars of swift moth in pots of hellebores, even to the extent of some 30 to 40% of pots being affected. The caterpillars are quite aggressive to each other so generally only one or two are found in a pot - they are greatly liked by our resident robins when found. I assume from the high numbers in pots that the garden has a similarly strong infestation, and have put down my losses of snowdrops to this, though don't have unequivocal evidence of this. Would they be more liable to natural controls in the ground? Certainly very interesting to see this thread.
-
Possibly ( after a re look ) the 'Lesser Yellow Underwing' Alan. Noctua comes. Same foodplants for the larvae and very attracted to lights. if you still have it encourage it to open its wings slightly, lovely orange / yellow underwings.
-
Looks more like a chestnut (Conistra vaccinii)? The underwings are summer moths, flying from July to September.
-
No. It is a Noctua I'm sure. Poke it and show us the hind wings please Alan.
Agree the thorax looks hairy enough for a Conistra, but even though they are all very variable I dont think enough patterning on the wings.
-
Some terrific photos here:
Conistra vaccinii
http://www.hmbg.org/index.php?bf=2258&speciescaller=138&pageid=138&nojs=1
Noctua pronuba
http://www.hmbg.org/index.php?pageid=138&bf=2107&nojs=1
Noctua comes
http://www.hmbg.org/index.php?pageid=138&bf=2109&nojs=1
-
Good links Maggi to all interested in the Noctuidae. More variable than Galanthus and only slightly more easily distinguished!
Underwing photo needed please!
-
And of course those Huntingdonshire moths are notoriously wierd!! :o :o
Something to do with the underlying rocks? ??? ???
-
For comparison if Alan gets his open wing shot.....
http://ukmoths.org.uk/show.php?bf=2109 N. comes
http://davesgarden.com/guides/bf/showimage/7734/ N. pronuba
http://www2.nrm.se/en/svenska_fjarilar/c/conistra_vaccinii.html C. vaccinii
-
I'm not panicking ..
what are these caterpillars that I find in the garden when cutting back perennials?
-
Certainly members of the very large family Noctuidae. Never known to reach pest proportions so please dont squish them! They will eat a range of plants but really should not be too destructive. If you find them on a rare plant please just move them away, they'll probably do OK. Some of these are becoming extremely rare, so I urge once again please, identify, evaluate numbers then move away if possible.
There are many similar larvae in this large family Mark. I'll try to get you a species name for each tomorrow. need to consult the books for this family! Unless Anthony can be bothered while we are in bed? :)
-
There are so many comments that last statement could lead to...... but I'll be good and not say any of them. Maggi would have kittens and ban me from the forum. :o :o
-
Maggi's pics confirm chestnut. The other two don't appear until July. One and three are what Noctua pronuba would look like in March.
-
I was alerted to something amiss when the snowdrops in one of my pots began to die back prematurely although they had flowered as normal. Sitting smugly at the bottom of the pot was a huge swift moth larva (if I have identified the critter correctly). There are some interesting observations to make:
- I suspect the larvae are semi-dormant during the colder weather but have now woken up with an appetite. So any snowdrops that suffer a check or die back prematurely after flowering may be being preyed-upon.
- The roots seem to be preferred to the bulb; no bulb has been eaten but retains its roots but some bulbs have lost roots whilst the bulb remains intact.
- The bulbs look "mouldy" where they have been eaten; is this just the standard fungi taken advantage of a wound or could the larva actually carry a fungus that attacks snowdrops?
- If you did not find the larva you might conclude that the problem was disease rather than insect predation.