Tag Archives: Dark Green Fritillary

A Walk in Aston Rowant

Burnet Moth on Scabious
Dark Green Fritillary … in Motion … come on, you take the camera, and see if you can get a better shot of one … they’re very flighty. But you can certainly see the green underwing coloration, with big rounded white spots, in the third photo. The High Brown Fritillary is very similar but vanishingly rare…. mind you, this species could well be called the High Velocity Fritillary, so there.
Rattling a Yellow Rattle – yes, really, play the video and listen! The plant is important in flowery meadows, as it parasitises the tougher and taller grasses, weakening them and letting in the smaller and prettier wild flowers. An old farmers’ name for it is accordingly “Poverty”: guess they preferred money to beauty and diversity in them there days.
A gloriously shiny and iridescent green leaf beetle, Cryptocephalus hypochaeridis, on Hawkweed
Chiltern Gentian, probably
Pyramidal Orchid
Dark Mullein

Insects (and Flowers) of Chalk Grassland at Aston Rowant

6-Spot Burnet Moth side view with proboscis nectaring on Marjoram, antennae iridescent blue. Extremely flighty on a really hot day!
6-Spot Burnet Moth on Marjoram, Red on Iridescent Green (like the related Forester Moth, which flies here earlier in the year)
6-Spot Burnet Moth on Marjoram, same insect, looking Red on Black. The brilliant conspicuous coloration is evidently aposematic, more or less honestly warning that the insects are toxic, containing cyanogenic glucosides. A recent article finds, however, that the most toxic burnet moths are not more aposematic, i.e. there is no quantitative relationship. (But wouldn’t the less toxic moths evolve to look like the most toxic ones, as it’s safer…)
Moulting Grasshopper
Hoverfly on St John’s Wort
A magnificently large Parasitic Wasp on Hogweed
Soldier Beetle on Hogweed
Pyrausta nigrata: a beautiful chocolate-brown Micro Moth of downland with a wavy wing bar, among the wild Thyme (that’s how small it is)
Common Blue butterfly on Self-Heal
Marbled White on Scabious
Dark Green Fritillary (with quaking-grass above). Not only rare, but very flighty! I was happy to get this long shot through the grass.

There were also Small Whites, Meadow Browns, Gatekeepers, Small Skippers, and possibly Chalkhill Blues about.

A magnificently short, gnarly Beech getting a good toe-hold on the Chalk
Well this probably is a Chiltern Gentian, the flowers are large, and showier than the Autumn Gentian; pinker than the camera has made it look, too

Highland Heat Wave: Butterflies at Insh Marshes and Feshiebridge

Dark Green Fritillary at Insh Marshes
Dark Green Fritillary at Insh Marshes

Ringlet Butterfly
Ringlet Butterfly at Insh Marshes

on Tormentil
Cimbicid Sawfly on Tormentil. It’s a different species from the Trichiosoma sorbi shown on InsectsofScotland.com, a useful website, but looks to be in that genus, Trichiosoma.

Hoverfly cf Volucella pellucens on Meadowsweet
The large, shiny, bumblebee mimic Hoverfly Volucella pellucens on Meadowsweet. The specific name refers to the pellucid (semi-transparent) white band at the front of the abdomen.

Chimney Sweeper Moth at Insh Marshes
Chimney Sweeper Moth at Insh Marshes – common, but difficult to approach!

Meadow Pipit with food waiting to fly to nest
Meadow Pipit with food waiting to fly to nest

Insh Marshes panorama with Ruthven Barracks
Insh Marshes panorama with Ruthven Barracks

Empid fly with long beak on Scabious
Empid fly with long beak on Scabious at Feshiebridge

Conops wasp mimic fly on Scabious
Conops wasp mimic fly on Scabious at Feshiebridge

Bilberry Bush at Feshiebridge
Bilberry Bush at Feshiebridge

Foxglove Pug moth on bracken
Foxglove Pug moth on bracken at Feshiebridge

Hoverfly Chrysotoxum bicinctum
Hoverfly Chrysotoxum bicinctum (the specific name refers to the two yellow belts) at Feshiebridge