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Six-spot Burnet, Zygaena filipendulae stephensii. High Elms Country Park, 2 August 2012. |
This is a day-flying moth that many people take for a butterfly, and one can see why. It's brightly coloured. The antennae are neither feathery not whip-like, as moth antennae usually are, and are not far from some butterfly types. It flies areound in the day and feeds from the same flowers that butterflies like.
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Six-spot Burnet, Zygaena filipendulae stephensii, in flight. High Elms Country Park, 2 August 2012. |
This one is probably a male, searching for unmated females. It zoomed around for as long as I watched it without stopping to feed. Others were happily perched on flowers, mostly Common Knapweed, sticking their probosces deep into the florets.
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Six-spot Burnet, Zygaena filipendulae stephensii. High Elms Country Park, 2 August 2012. |
This one has been feeding - I have the photos - but now has curled its proboscis twice around a single floret of Knapweed. I have no idea why it is doing this.
Interesting, though .. that proboscis is more maneuverable than I thought. And look at those matt black eyes!
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