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Tag Archives: green long-horn moth

Tiny Tree-top Dancers

03 Sunday May 2020

Posted by theresagreen in day-flying moths, Insects, Nature of Wales

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Adela reamurella, black insects swarming around trees, day-flying moths, green long-horn moth, insect behaviour, metallic insects with long antennae, Wych Elm

Every year, from around about the end of the third week of April, I begin to watch out for the arrival and mass gatherings of insects I find particularly enchanting; the strangely beautiful day-flying Green Longhorn Moth. Their arrival and group dancing displays have become one of the highlights of the Spring for me, not just because they are entertaining to watch, which they are, but equally as this is an event that occurs at this same point in time each year. In changing times it’s reassuring to see that some elements of Nature’s complex pattern continue to repeat as and when they should, although each passing year I breathe a quiet sigh of relief when I see them for the first time, then feel the joy.

Green Longhorn Moths around an Oak tree

Seen individually and more closely, you could be forgiven for thinking this is some kind of a fly rather than a moth. Tiny insects; from outstretched wingtip to wingtip they might stretch to about 1½” (14-18mm).They have long black shaggy-looking hairs on their head and thorax, giving them a furry appearance and well-developed eyes. But then they brandish a pair of outlandishly and seemingly disproportionately long, white waving antennae, with those of males being longer than the females. Their beauty though is in their gorgeous iridescent wings. The basic wing colour is usually described as metallic green, hence the moth’s common name, but depending how the light catches them they can appear in a range of shades from bronze, through greens to violet.

There are several spots around Bryn Euryn where I have seen gatherings of the moths most years, that you could say are reliable. One is around Oak trees, which the insects are known to be associated with, and another is over an area at the edge of a Trail which is lined with more scrubby vegetation including blackthorn and gorse. Most noticeable in large groups dancing around the outer leaves of trees, sometimes high up, sometimes lower down, I have also found them in smaller groups in spots on woodland paths and even occasionally alone.

Ready for take off

My own best views though take little effort on my part, as the moths gather and perform in sometimes large numbers directly in front of my kitchen window, dancing in the sunshine around the top of the Wych Elm. I took the following video, which I think gives a much better idea of how the insects look and behave in action than photographs can. My videoing is not the best, but I think anyone that has never seen this little spectacle before will get the general idea! The dancing moths are accompanied by a Blackbird singing, with a few notes thrown in by a passing Herring Gull, plus a few creaks and squeaks from my zooming camera lens which is a tad bent out of shape since I dropped it….! You may also spot the odd hoverfly and a Speckled Wood butterfly.

(you can click on the video to make it bigger to get a better view)

Timeline 2020: This year I spotted my first arrivals in one small group on April 23rd. I think it’s safe to say, all males. Numbers increased over the next few days and I’m sure there have been more than in previous years, but they’d be very difficult to count! Numbers have fluctuated over the last few days, perhaps in connection with the cooler rainy weather we had earlier this week, and yesterday, May 2nd there are only a very few to be seen, in scattered small groups. But this morning they were back in force, with a lot of activity, then by 11am I couldn’t see any at all. I wondered if like with many small insects they need to stay out of the hotter direct sunlight.

Despite some careful watching, I don’t think I saw any females, for whom all of this frenzied displaying is for of course.  I definitely didn’t see any mating happening, but I’m hopeful it will have and that there will be more performances to look forward to this time next year.

 

 

 

 

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Fairy Moths & Sainted Flies

10 Tuesday May 2016

Posted by theresagreen in Bryn Euryn Nature Reserve, day-flying moths, Insects, Nature, Nature of Wales, nature photography

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Adela reaumurella, bibio marci, black fly with long dangling legs, fairy long-horn moth, green long-horn moth, St Mark's fly, swarm of black flies in Spring

I first saw the delightfully strange little Green Longhorn moths on Bryn Euryn on the 13th May last year, where a fairly large number of them were dancing around an oak tree in the sunshine. Initially I thought they may be St Mark’s flies, but as I got closer I could see these insects were much tinier, had ridiculously long white antennae and wings that had a metallic greeny-bronze sheen to them.  It took me a while after that to discover their identity, but finally learnt that they were Long-horn moths, also known as Fairy Long-horn moths and this particular species was the Green Long-horn moth, Adela reaumurella.

150513TGBE-Bryn Euryn woodland path 23-Longhorn Moths

Finding them in the exact same location yesterday (May 9th), was a surprise and a treat, more so as this time they were mixed in with a largish number of St Mark’s flies and were behaving differently. No group dancing today, the combined species, all male, were travelling along rather erratically in a wide ribbon, staying within the cover of the oak leaves and making frequent individual brief stops on leaves. They were maintaining a consistent height above the ground at about my head height (I’m 5′ 3″), and progressing along the band of trees and shrubs that border one side of the meadow. I’d love to know what was happening.

160509-Bryn Euryn-Green longhorn moth (m) 3

GREEN (FAIRY) LONG-HORN MOTH-Adela reaumurella 

DESCRIPTION

Wingspan: 14-18mm; both sexes have rough black hair on their heads and thorax, giving them a furry appearance when seen close-up. Upperwings are a metallic green-bronze and underwings are metallic bronze. Males have extremely long, whitish antennae; the females’ antennae are shorter.

150513TGBE-Bryn Euryn woodland path 24-Longhorn Moths (8)

HABITAT

Open areas such as heathland, moorland, country gardens, parks and wherever the larval foodplant is found.

160509-Bryn Euryn-Green longhorn moth (m) 2

The moths fly in the daytime during May and June, sometimes occurring in swarms and often around the tops of trees and bushes.
160509-Bryn Euryn-Green longhorn moth & St Mark's fly

LIFE HISTORY

The larvae feed on leaf litter of Oak and Birch and make themselves portable cases with leaf fragments. The larvae have no prolegs and pupate in their larval cases.

ST MARK’S FLY – Bibio marci

160509-Bryn Euryn-St Mark's fly 1

The St. Mark’s Fly is a species of true fly, also known as Hawthorn flies and belongs to the family Bibionidae.

160509-Bryn Euryn-St Mark's fly

This jet-black fly is so-named as it frequently appears on or around the feast day of St Mark, which falls on April 25th and is seen in flight in May.  They are found around woodland edges, hedges, rough grassland and wetlands and can be seen throughout the UK in spring. The males are  often encountered in a swarm drifting slowly up and down at about a person’s head height, long legs dangling, trying to attract females. The swarms can be annoying, especially if you have to walk through one, and the insects are not averse to landing on people. However, they are harmless and as insects that feed on nectar, they are important pollinators, particularly of fruit trees and crops.

160509-Bryn Euryn-St Mark's fly 4

DESCRIPTION

Length: The male is about 12 mm and the female 14 mm long. Although appearing black and shiny, this is quite a hairy black insect. Wings: The wings have a black front edge. The compound eyes are large and bulbous and they have a rather tubular segmented body and black legs. The front legs have a stout spine at the tip of the tibia.

The females are larger,  have smoky wings and much a smaller head and eyes.

160509-Bryn Euryn-St Mark's fly 6

LIFE HISTORY

The St. Mark’s Fly has a very short adult life cycle, being in flight for approximately only one week. The majority of their time is spent as larva in the soil. During autumn and winter, larvae feed on rotting vegetation which they chew with their strong mouthparts. In springtime the males emerge first and the females a few days later. After mating, females lay their eggs in the soil and die soon afterwards.

 

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