Crassa unitella. Trapped in Kingswood Glen, 24 July 2012. |
Some of them look like illustrations of alien monsters from the covers of science fiction books (or, for the more classically oriented, something from the corner of a triptych by Heironymous Bosch). Others simply fail to resemble anything you might imagine a living creature could look like, or are just very odd. This one, with its buff body and yellowish head, stripey antennae and curved palps, has six perfectly good legs, some of them looking quite sturdy, but is still resting on its proboscis like a seventh leg. The head-down pose is typical of this species.
Here's the trap we used.
Actinic Skinner-type moth trap in Kingswood Glen, 24 July 2012. |
The mug shot of the Six-spot Burnet and the profile of Crassa Unitella make all apologies for interest in moths unnecessary. It is like studying subatomic particles and the Phoenix Galaxy cluster side be side to enjoy and wonder at (no, not "mystically") the usually unseen appearance of these tiny creatures. Thanks to your photos.
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