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Garden Tiger moth, Dundreggan
18284
391
Dundreggan moth traps
The Garden Tiger (Arctia caja) is a moth from the family Erebidae. The garden tiger has a fluffy red/orange body, brown-and white-patterned forewings, and bright red hindwings with four or five large black spots. Once quite a common moth over most of Britain, it seems to have suffered considerable declines in many places since the 1980s. Photo taken by David Palmar as part of a moth trapping session at the Scottish Entomologists' Gathering in Dundreggan.
24 June 2023
Garden Tiger moth, Dundreggan
18282
391
Dundreggan moth traps
The Garden Tiger (Arctia caja) is a moth from the family Erebidae. The Garden Tiger has a fluffy red/orange body, brown-and white-patterned forewings, and bright red hindwings with four or five large black spots. Once quite a common moth over most of Britain, it seems to have suffered considerable declines in many places since the 1980s. Photo taken by David Palmar as part of a moth trapping session at the Scottish Entomologists' Gathering in Dundreggan.
24 June 2023
Garden Tiger moth, Dundreggan
18281
391
Dundreggan moth traps
The Garden Tiger (Arctia caja) is a moth from the family Erebidae. The Garden Tiger has a fluffy red/orange body, brown-and white-patterned forewings, and bright red hindwings with four or five large black spots. Once a quite common moth over most of Britain, it seems to have suffered considerable declines in many places since the 1980s. Photo taken by David Palmar as part of a moth trapping session at the Scottish Entomologists' Gathering in Dundreggan.
24 June 2023
Garden Tiger moth, Dundreggan
18280
391
Dundreggan moth traps
The Garden Tiger (Arctia caja) is a moth from the family Erebidae. The Garden Tiger has a fluffy red/orange body, brown-and white-patterned forewings, and bright red hindwings with four or five large black spots. Once quite a common moth over most of Britain, it seems to have suffered considerable declines in many places since the 1980s. Photo taken by David Palmar as part of a moth trapping session at the Scottish Entomologists' Gathering in Dundreggan.
24 June 2023
Garden Tiger moth, Dundreggan
18278
391
Dundreggan moth traps
The Garden Tiger (Arctia caja) is a moth from the family Erebidae. The Garden Tiger has a fluffy red/orange body, brown-and white-patterned forewings, and bright red hindwings with four or five large black spots. Once quite a common moth over most of Britain, it seems to have suffered considerable declines in many places since the 1980s. Photo taken by David Palmar as part of a moth trapping session at the Scottish Entomologists' Gathering in Dundreggan.
24 June 2023
Garden Tiger moth, Dundreggan
18277
391
Dundreggan moth traps
The Garden Tiger (Arctia caja) is a moth from the family Erebidae. The Garden Tiger has a fluffy red/orange body, brown-and white-patterned forewings, and bright red hindwings with four or five large black spots. Once quite a common moth over most of Britain, it seems to have suffered considerable declines in many places since the 1980s. Photo taken by David Palmar as part of a moth trapping session at the Scottish Entomologists' Gathering in Dundreggan.
24 June 2023
White Ermine moth & Garden Tiger moth, Dundreggan
18276
391
Dundreggan moth traps
A White Ermine Moth (Spilosoma lubricipeda) (left) and a Garden Tiger Moth (Arctia caja) (right) can be seen holding on to the side of an eggbox after being removed from a moth trap. Photo taken by David Palmar as part of a moth trapping session at the Scottish Entomologists' Gathering in Dundreggan.
Cinnabar Moth caterpillars (Tyria jacobaeae) feeding from Common Ragwort (Jacobaea vulgaris) at Kelvindale. Cinnarbar Moth caterpillars can often be spotted on ragwort, their most preferred food source. The bright colouring of the Cinnabar Moth caterpillar acts as a warning to potential predators by indicating that they are poisonous. The poison can only build up in the caterpillar by feeding from ragwort.
19 July 2024
Cinnabar Moth caterpillar, Kelvindale
18946
371
Glasgow - Kelvindale moths
Cinnabar Moth caterpillars (Tyria jacobaeae) feeding from Common Ragwort (Jacobaea vulgaris) at Kelvindale. Cinnarbar Moth caterpillars can often be spotted on ragwort, their most preferred food source. The bright colouring of the Cinnabar Moth caterpillar acts as a warning to potential predators by indicating that they are poisonous. The poison can only build up in the caterpillar by feeding from ragwort.