Things are set to become a bit cooler tomorrow but the forecast has now changed to where the heat wave conditions will resume later this week - if this keeps up it will be challenging to keep everything alive here.
Anyway the great insect conditions continue and also looks like things have picked up a bit on the migrant front. Temperatures up to 25 C but back down to the low 20 mark tomorrow. There were 111 species of about 300+ moths this morning which is reduction from about 150 species from earlier on in the week. Seems like prolonged heat conditions begin to have diminishing returns?
It's been a great week- after being a long way behind last year's moth tally for the same time, we've now more or less caught up thanks to the weather.
Spent the day around the Lodge in between two performances of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat that Jacob was in at St Peter's. A great show.
Marbled Grass Moth, Catoptria verellus- according to the Sussex Moth Group website only 10 previous county records. A new for garden, now on 670. Other potential migrant species included Four-spotted Footman, a few Rusty-dots, Diamond-backs, Rush Veneer and Silver Y and two Small Mottled Willow
Small Rivulet-a NFY, now on 358 for the year, so 16 new ones last night
Chamomile Straw
Oak Nycteoline- not a common moth round here and everyone is uniquely patterned
Plenty of Festoons recently- always a pleasure to see
Jacob helped out this morning processing the traps including the 5 Privet Hawkmoths
The juvenile Great Spotted Woodpecker is still around
Did a bit more invert and plant recording today. Red-spotted Plant Bug (above) were feeding on the Ox-eye Daises. Now logged 308 species on the I-Nat garden project
HEREThe back garden meadow is coming along well with Ox-eye daisy, Wild Carrot and Black Knapweed all beginning to become established. There were about 5-6 Meadow Browns this morning, Essex Skipper, Comma, a few Small Whites and a couple of Gatekeepers along the edges with Red Admiral about. An Emperor dragonfly was flying around and a Common Darter emerged from the pond.