I made several visits to the low Salix bushes in a wide open
strip (maintained underneath electricity cables) in the forest near
Miskolctapolca in mid April but only on three nights did I find any moths feeding
on their flowers. Flowering started (anthers emerged) on about the 10th and by
the 20th most catkins were looking spent and many plants were leafing. The best
night was the 12th when the rain poured down and every bush was busy with
noctuids. I couldn't reach many of the catkins in the best clump of bushes because
they were so tangled up in very tall brambles. It was good to see the
overwinterers, Conistra rubiginea, Conistra erythrocephala and Lithophane
ornitopus feeding as well as the common Orthosia species, cruda, gothica and
cerasi. The next night I was armed with secateurs and though the conditions
were dry and much more pleasant for a human to be out in, there was no throng
of moths, just a few Orthosia gothica, Conistra vaccinii and a very nice couple of
fresh Cerastis rubricosa.
Változékony Őszibagoly Conistra vaccinii Chestnut enjoying a meal at a female Sallow catkin after a long winter. |
There are a good number of tall Salix caprea trees along the
edges of the rides and firebreaks on the north sides of the hills near
Miskolctapolca. These of course produce hundreds of times more catkins than the
small bushes under the pylons. Unfortunately they are mostly too high to really
look at well. One night I tried the technique recommended in old books of laying
a sheet on the ground beneath the crown of a tree and giving the branches a sharp
tap with a long stick. This didn't bring down a large number of moths but it
did produce two species not found on the
low bushes in the open (where it is palpably much cooler half an hour after
dusk): Conistra rubiginosa and Orthosia munda.
Vörös Őszibagoly Conistra
rubiginea Dotted Chestnut freshly arrived at this male plant. |
At the end of March someone had cut down one of these
Sallows, a male, presumably to use or sell the catkins for Easter decorations.
They had left some scraps behind on the floor so I took a few of the sticks home and put them
in a bucket of water. These opened about the same time as the still growing
plants but, although they attracted bees during the day didn't seem to be
attractive to noctuids. On the 15th however I was pleased to find a Triphosa dubitata feeding on a catkin that was by then passed its best. We've
encountered this a few times on our south facing slope where its food-plant,
Rhamnus cathartica, grows. I suspect it might not often have the opportunity to
feed on Salix nectar after its hibernation.
The sudden change in conditions from snow and ice to
temperatures in the mid 20s this spring has caused some early flowers to be
over very quickly. My particular patch of Salix bushes are now finished as far
as adult moths feeding goes. Another shrub native here which flowers early,
before its leaves appear, and when there are few other nectar sources around, is
Cornus mas (Cornelian Cherry or Húsos Som). Its flowers seem to be used by
Lacewings (Neuroptera) after dusk but so far I have only witnessed one
lepidopteran visitor to them - a Hypena rostralis.
These are the 12 species recorded feeding at Sallow 10th to 17th April 2013 , Miskolctapolca:
Conistra rubiginea Dotted Chestnut Vörös Őszibagoly
Conistra erythrocephala Red-headed
Chestnut Vörösfejű Őszibagoly
Conistra vaccinii Chestnut Változékony
Őszibagoly
Emmelina monodactyla Morning-glory
Plume Moth Közönséges Tollasmoly
Orthosia cruda Small Quaker Kis Fésűsbagoly
Orthosia gothica Hebrew Character Foltos Fésűsbagoly
Orthosia cerasi Common Quaker Közepes Tavaszi-fésűsbagoly
Cerastis rubricosa Red Chestnut Vörhenyes
Tavaszibagoly
Lithophane ornitopus Grey Shoulder-knot Közönséges Fabagoly
Conistra rubiginosa Black-spot Chestnut Télibagolylepke
Orthosia munda Twin-spotted Quaker Tölgyes-fésűsbagoly
Triphosa dubitata The Tissue Kutyabenge
Araszoló
Compensations on the blank Sallow nights were a Brachionycha
nubeculosa netted on the ride and an Agonopterix pallorella flitting about
amongst dead Knapweed stems.
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