Wednesday 10 October 2012

Rare moth reintroduced into Cotswolds

Partnership project culminates in rare moth reintroduction in the Cotswold Water Park
October 2012. During September 2012 ecologists striving to secure the future of the nationally endangered Barberry Carpet moth, established a new population of this species near Ashton Keynes in the Cotswold Water Park.
The Barberry Carpet moth is so-named because it depends upon the scarce Barberry bush to thrive. Barberry is a hedgerow bush similar to Hawthorn or Sloe, but with yellow flowers and yellowy-orange fruits. The adult moth lays eggs only on the Barberry bush and without this species the moth cannot complete its life cycle. Barberry is now a scarce hedgerow plant; during the nineteenth century it was found to be a host of wheat rust, a fungal disease of wheat. Consequently, it was uprooted across much of the UK and today Barberry plants, and other species relying upon it, are now very rare.

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