Green Silver-lines
Green Silver-lines
Green Silver-lines
Scorched Wing
Peppered Moth Normal & f. insularia
Peppered Moth
Buff-tip
Buff Arches
Schreckensteinia festaliella
Nice Little Bug Has Name
Hoverfly
Is The Coast Clear
24-spot Ladybird Larva
Burnet Companion
Ladybird Eggs
Large Skipper
Peacock Butterfly Caterpillar
Spiked Shieldbug Nymph
Hoverfly
Platyptilia pallidactyla
True Lover's Knot
Varied Coronet
Broad-barred White
Yellow Rattle
Orchid And Ribwort
Meadow
Four-spotted Chaser
Cryptocephalus moraei
Meadow-ness
Common Spotted Orchid
Sorrel and Wasp
Marsh Thistle Across Valley
Common Blue
Buff-tip Face
Little Emerald
Alder Kitten Tucking In
Alder Kitten Warming Up
Alder Kitten
Figure of Eighty 80 Side
Figure of Eighty 08 Side
Green Oak Tortrix
Evarcha falcata Female
Enoplognatha sp.
Evarcha falcata
Heliophanus cupreus
1/250 • f/8.0 • 55.0 mm • ISO 100 •
Canon EOS 500D
EF-S55-250mm f/4-5.6 IS II
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As with most moths the Victorians, whom were very interested in nature and I suspect in claiming some discoveries for themselves, named most of the moths we see in the UK today. There are some great names like Footman, Daggers, Spectacle, and Wainscot. The latter being called after the common wainscot panelling, which was used to make stone walls and rooms more comfortable, because of the lines (veins) running in lines down the wing.
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