| Status:
Resident. Distribution
and Abundance: Common.
Primary Habitat: General
occurrence.
Flight Period: Two
or sometimes three broods from April to September.
Observations: The
caterpillar of the species feeds on the flowers of holly.
As this tree is plentiful in urban gardens in this area
the moth is particularly common at my garden m.v. light
where it is more inclined to rest on walls and fences
than enter the trap. This is a distinctive pug which
presumably would not have been overlooked prior to the
first record in 1945 and therefore must have increased
its range within the county in the second half of the
last century. This was the most common species of pug
moth recorded in the static Pitsford Reservoir light
traps for the five years from 1999 to 2003 with
eighty-eight examples seen overall.
First Record: 1945,
Wallis.
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