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Kilteevan is home to the rarely seen Goat Moth

 

On the 24th and 28th of August 2014, while walking in Cloonlarge, Kilteevan, Eileen Fahey spotted something she had never seen before.  The stranger was photographed both days.

Eileen showed the photographs to a few people whom she thought might be able to assist with identification but to no avail. Nine months later, Eileen was still bugged by the nameless creature in a computer file, so she contacted Eye on Nature in the Irish Times seeking support.  A very prompt reply came from Ethna Viney identifying the unknown, as a Goat Moth Caterpillar.

Since the identification was made last weekend Eileen has been researching the Goat Moth and has learned the following.

Eggs are laid usually in small batches in the crevices or on the bark of living trees. Young larvae enter the tree, at first remaining under the bark, later boring deep into the wood on which they feed. The larvae spend 2-4 years inside the trunks and branches of various deciduous trees including; birch, alder, ash, oak and willow. Birch appears to be a favourite host tree. Trees that already host larvae are frequently utilised again by egg-laying females.

The larvae are a deep purple-red along the back with a more orange colour along the sides and below. The head is black and there are a few fine white hairs along the whole body. Larvae can reach up to 10cm in length. Goat Moths get their name from the strong goat-like smell they emit during this larval stage.

In the final year of development they leave the tree to find a suitable pupation site on the ground.  The large larvae spotted moving across the road in Cloonlarge, last August was most likely, in search of a suitable pupation site and will hopefully emerge as a Goat Moth in Kilteevan in June 2015.

The Goat Moth (Cossus cossus) is a moth of the family Cossidae and is a large heavy moth with a wing span of 68–96 mm.  The wings are greyish brown and marked with fine dark cross lines.  This pattern supports camouflage on tree trunks. Females are slightly larger than males.

The distribution map on Moths Ireland website indicates that Goat moths are scarce and distributed sporadically mainly over the southern half of the country.

Eileen extends sincere thanks to Ethna Viney and Eye on Nature in The Irish Times for her help in identifying the caterpillar.

Eileen has now been registered the find with Moths Ireland and the National Biodiversity Data Centre.

We welcome additional information , amendments or corrections to this information at [email protected]

12th May 2015

 

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Lady’s Smock / Cuckoo Flower in bloom in Kilteevan.

Lady's Smock /Cuckoo-flower /or in Irish Biolar gréagáin (Cardamine pratensis)

These beautiful large white to pinkish flowers are plentiful in Kilteevan's damp meadows this week

( 27th. April 2015).

It’s amazing how the Lady’s Smock and the cuckoo bird arrive together annually.

It is a native plant and belongs to the large family Brassicaceae.

It is a larval foodplant of the Orange-tip butterfly below photographed in Kilteevan in June 2014.

We look forward to his return in a few weeks time.

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Guess who is calling in Clooncraff this morning?

 

The Cuckoo!

Yes, heard loud and clear on the Ciorcal Cluain Creamha (Clooncraff Circle Walk).

Hearing the cuckoo is a cause of celebration as it is becoming an increasingly rare sound. Cuckoo numbers in Ireland have dropped 50% in the past 30 years.

The cuckoo comes to Kilteevan from central and southern Africa from mid April onwards and leaves again at the end of summer.

Adult cuckoos head south from late July onwards while the young birds follow in August and September. It’s one of nature’s mysteries how the young birds know where to go when they head off on their long journey.

The cuckoo’s diet is mainly caterpillars and insects

Only the male makes the distinctive “cuc koo cuc.koo” call.

The female call is a distinctive “pupupupu” call.

The Burren and Connemara hold the highest density of breeding pairs.

So open your windows in Kilteevan,  be still, listen and celebrate our natural heritage and the wonderful biodiversity we enjoy by living here.

19th April  2015

 

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KILTEEVAN COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT GROUP LIMITED
Kilteevan, Roscommon, Co. Roscommon
[email protected]

 

KILTEEVAN TIDY TOWNS
[email protected] 

http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/index_en.htm
http://www.environ.ie/en/Community/RuralDevelopment/EURuralDevelopment/

This project received grant aid from Roscommon LEADER Partnership Rural Development Programme which is financed by the Irish Government under the Rural Development Programme Ireland 2007-2013 and by the European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development: Europe investing in Rural Areas.sponsors