Saturday, May 04, 2024

Moths Galore

The last lodge I stayed at in Costa Rica was Bosque de Paz Reserva Biologica. One of the unexpected features here were the moths. The lodge is in the middle of the forest, and its lights were the only ones around, so they attracted all kinds of moths. They had a white sheet on the wall of the main building with a light shining on it to attract even more. Most of the guests were there for the birds, but there was one other couple that were also photographing the moths. We pointed out the good ones to each other.

We're more familiar with butterflies because we see them during the day. And we think of moths as drab gray things. But there are far more kinds of moths, about 160,000 compared to only 11,000 kinds of butterflies (worldwide). And some moths are just as pretty as butterflies. I identified some of them on iNaturalist, but most of the id's haven't been confirmed. Too many kinds of moths, and not enough people that are interested in them.

Here is the largest, most impressive moth I saw. It was bigger than my hand. That's someone's rain jacketed arm that it's sitting on.

Orizaba Silkmoth ?

While the big moths are impressive, some of the little ones are just as attractive close up.

Tiger Moth

Tiger Moth

Tiger Moth

Tiger Moth

Flannel moth

Tiger Moth

Pearl Moth ?

Tiger Moth

Geometer moth ?

moth

Geometer moth

moth

Slug moth ?

That's probably more than enough moths for most people. If you want more, they're in the Flickr album.

The light also attracted other kinds of insects. Weevils are funny looking beetles with their long snouts.

weevil

weevil

beetle

Crane fly ?

Earwigs are also odd looking.

earwig

The lodge was in the hills/mountains at about 5000 ft (1500 m) so thankfully there weren't many mosquitos. I found this one perched on a moth.

mosquito on moth

I was using my usual macro setup - OM-1 camera, 60mm macro lens, and a small led panel light. I usually held the light in one hand and the camera in the other. It's harder to hold the camera steady one handed but it allows adjusting the light much better. When the moths were on a window, it was tricky to avoid reflections. The little led panel doesn't provide a lot of light, so I had the ISO cranked up to 3200. A flash would be a lot brighter and that's what most people use. But it's also much trickier to get good results. One downside of the led panel is that it also attracts the moths.

I thought I did well photographing about 70 different kinds of moths. But recently I read about an insect photographer at a lodge in Borneo that photographed 600 different kinds in a similar period of time!

See all 94 photos in this batch

No comments:

Post a Comment