A stunning male Emperor moth attracted to a pheromone impregnated capsule. Note the huge feathered antennae which it uses to "smell" the scent. |
Many creatures give off Pheromones (including us!), which
can be used to trigger a number of types of behaviour, including attracting a
mate, sexual arousal, bonding (mother to baby), claiming territories, raising
an alarm and even as a warning to “back-off”!
I have just acquired a pheromone which (hopefully) attracts male
Emperor moths. (If any pretty girls turn up, I won’t be that upset!) This particular
group of scents are called Bombykol pheromones and are secreted by female moths
to attract their male counterparts.
Male Emperor moths fly by day and the females fly by
night. Female Emperor moths have a gland at the end of the abdomen
which emits a pheromone scent to attract the male moths, who use their large
feathery antennae to detect the pheromones drifting past them on the wind.
Unbelievable, when you think how many other scents there must be blowing around
at any given time (farm animals, flowers, pollutants etc), it is believed that male
Emperor moths can detect the pheromones from several kilometres away and then home in on the female.
So at the weekend, Rosie (my Lurcher) and I set off for the New
Forest, which has plenty of suitable heathland/moorland habitat particularly favoured
by Emperor moths. I parked up in a likely looking spot and we walked away from the
road for a short while, Rosie gambling around pleased to be on a brand new
walk, while I rather excitedly clutched my little phial of scent.
I took the little pheromone impregnated capsule out of the
sealed bag and placed it on a piece of dead wood at about waist high. I stood
and waited, slightly self-consciously, imagining the invisible scent drifting off
across the scrubby heather landscape. Rosie sat down close by, hoping that this
was not going to be a long stop. A couple out walking their dog, passed by a short distance away and I prayed that they would
not come over to ask me what I was up to!
After what could only have been a couple of minutes at the
most, a large insect flew rapidly past me – was it a peacock butterfly, or
could it have been an Emperor? Having
obviously overshot – it came fluttering noisily back, a wonderful male Emperor
moth, stunning! But wait, there are two! No, three!
Over the next half an hour or so, I moved the phial a couple
of times and must have attracted a dozen or so different male Emperors. They
were not the easiest subject to photograph as they never really settled for any
length of time at all, but instead frantically flew around trying to locate the
“female”. Even when they did briefly land near to the phial, their wings
vibrated excitedly and then they were soon off again.
I then began to feel rather guilty that I had caused such a
frenzy of excitement amongst these beautiful creatures - all of which was obviously to no avail.
Meanwhile, Rosie lying patiently nearby had acquired a very bored expression
and so I popped the phial back into the sealed bag and continued on my walk.
As I looked out across the wide open landscape, I realized
that I had briefly tuned into just one of the many amazing species that inhabit
this country, and yet so secretly go about their fascinating lives, completely unbeknown
to the vast majority of us.
Rosie with a very bored expression! |
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