June 2025

Pine Processionary - garden, 20 Jun 25

June was all about the moths. A few really hot, sticky nights producing some superb catches and a number of rarities. My current policy of only setting the trap when the conditions look really good meant that I only put it out on four occasions, but on those four night I caught 1074 moths in total of exactly 200 species!

The first night was 12th June and a new species for me was the pied micro moth Parachronistis albiceps (Hazel Bud Moth). This has only been recorded once previously on the island but Hazel is not a common tree here so it might be resident in low densities. More spectacularly was only my second Lesser Puss Moth. Other good species were Acrobasis repandana, European Corn-borer and an Ash-bud Moth (Prays fraxinella).

Lesser Puss Moth - garden, 12 Jun 25 - showing off its black saddle which a normal Puss Moth lacks.

Parachronistis albiceps - garden, 12 Jun 25 - a new species for me.

20th June was an even more exciting night with some absolutely corking species, the most spectacular was almost a near miss when I walked towards the trap early morning to see a Striped Hawk-moth just taking flight and buzzing away past my head. only my second sighting of this species. However, I managed three new moth ticks in this collection, starting with a fine Pine Processionary, a rare species in Guernsey and an immigrant from the continent. The second was Holly Tortrix (Rhopobota naevana) which I may have overlooked in the past. The third was a slightly unfamiliar smallish plume moth, which eventually turned out to be Stenoptilia zophodactylus (Dowdy Plume) which looks to be only the second for Guernsey. These new species have brought my garden lepidoptera list to more than 700 species! That’s a lot, but this is from 22 years of trapping and there’s still plenty to go for. Other species that night were two more Lesser Puss Moths, a European Corn-borer, a Small Mottled Willow, Elegia similella and the first Langmaid’s Yellow Underwing of the year.

Pine Processionary - garden, 20 Jun 25

Rhopobota naevana (Holly Tortrix) - garden, 20 Jun 25

Stenoptilia zophodactylus (Dowdy Plume) - garden, 20 Jun 25

Stenoptilia zophodactylus (Dowdy Plume) - garden, 20 Jun 25 - detail of the wing

Elegia similella - garden, 20 Jun 25 - one of my favourite species, I don’t know why

The nights of 28th and 30th did not produce any ticks but there were even more species than before with over 100 species both nights. There weren’t many things surprising, but I was getting lots of teeny tiny Nepticulid moths with an estimated 300+ of them on 30th. Identifying these tiny 2mm creatures is probably not so likely but I would probably go for something like an Ectoedemia sp. The 28th saw a Radford’s Flame Shoulder (my first early record of this species) and six Spiny Hook-tips. The best moth of 30th was a Small Marbled, but there was also a Bordered Straw, Small Mottled Willow, Blair’s Mocha, two Bright Waves and a True Lover’s Knot.

a trap full of tiny nepticulids - garden, 30 jun 25

Out in the field I managed to find a few new plant species, but it was mostly finding things for some microscope work later on.

Dichrorampha petiverella - Portinfer, 6 Jun 25 - these were common along the banking by the clay pigeon range

Australian Fern Weevil (Syagrius intrudens) - Garenne, 7 Jun 25 - the second time I’ve found it at this reserve, but still nowhere else.

Sharp-leaved Fluellen - LBHS, 26 Jun 25 - found in the inside courtyard at school, only the second time I’ve seen it.

May 2025 part ii

The bird of the second half of May was bumped into whilst in the car on a family outing. There were lots of birds of prey in the sky on the sunny afternoon of 18th May and, as well as plenty of Buzzards, I had already seen 3 different Marsh Harriers during the journey. As we climbed the hill along Pleinmont Road, about level with Mont Herault, I noticed yet another Marsh Harrier flying low over the fields to my right. After passing it, my brain clicked into gear and I had a sudden thought it was not a harrier at all. I asked Rosie to stop the car and I jumped out to look back. Straight away, I saw a Black Kite gaining height and moving easterly towards me.

Black Kite - near Mont Herault, 18 May 25

It carried on soaring for a wee while and I managed to get my camera out and fire off a few shots. It was only then I realised I was standing in the middle of the main road over a blind summit, and I really should move. The family thought so too with their frantic gestures. There had been a Black Kite seen 48 hours prevuisly but not at all the day before so I was considering whether this may be a new bird in. However, when I compared my photos with those taken on Friday, the nicks and gaps in the flight feathers matched the pattern exactly so it was the same bird as before. Black Kite is still a surprisingly rare bird here as we thought records would increase and it would become a regular visitor. This is only the 14th in Guernsey and only the second since 2020.

Black Kite - near Mont Herault, 18 May 25

The rest of May was quiet for birds with just the regular passage species noted. On 30th May I managed to get out in perfect conditions to look for insects on the cliffs, warm, dry and not very windy. The cliffs in Spring are full of insects in these conditions and I saw lots of interesting species. There were four lifers seen with Scarce 7-spot Ladybird being the one I was especially looking for and wasn’t hard to find in the end as they are nearly always by the large ants’ nests. The large Honeysuckle-feeding sawfly Abia fasciata (or Banded Clubhorn) was photographed. The other two new species were Spiked Shieldbug, of which I only saw a tiny nymph which was predating springtails, and the Broom-feeding weevil Polydrusus confluens.

Evacanthus interruptus - Corbiere, 30 May 25 - a pleasing photo of a distinctive leafhopper

Scarce 7-spot Lapybird - Corbiere, 30 May 25 - It looks pretty much like your standard 7-spot, with the main difference being a couple of extra white spots on the underside.

Abia fasciata - Corbiere, 30 May 25 - one of the larger sawflies

Pammene aurana - Corbiere, 30 May 25 - a very typical moth on the spring on the cliffs which is more or less the only place I see it

Grey Bush-cricket nymph - Corbiere, 30 May 25

Violet-winged Mining Bee - Corbiere, 30 May 25

Spiked Shieldbug nymph - Corbiere, 30 May 25

Corizus hyoscyami - Corbiere, 30 May 25