Thanks to Maria Düssler for climbing up to this for a photo :)
Found right near Moko on a fallen kohekohe.
Went to Dansey's Pass to look for this moth and was delighted to find one resting on a snow tussock at night near some areas of Sphagnum moss. Discovered by Brian Patrick near Dansey's Pass in 1979. @butterfly4
Caught in c.1 m of tannin-stained water using a minnow trap baited with cheddar cheese. Trap caught 10 individuals in c.30 minutes. Staff working for the Taiko Trust have reported these fish as 'common' in this lake.
Caught by Dr Travis Ingram, University of Otago, in an unbaited minnow trap at 1 m depth in tannin-stained water. Adult, 100 mm long - image taken from viewing box.
Very local on rocky spurs. Rather a stunning Celmisia, with a very restricted distribution.
Another of these undescribed Stathmopoda with the crazy pants; I've collected this one (though it's still alive, just in case) — is there anyone who would like the specimen? I can deposit it into LUNZ but I'm just okay at pinning leps and frankly don't have the appropriate skill or equipment to pin a tiny little guy like this.
Kingfish?
Native Podocarp-broadleaved forest.
Attracted to light, which I placed on a boulder by the river at night. Observed one or two individuals.
Appeared to be flightless.
Not far from these other white flightless moths:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/152040320
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/152040316
Appeared to be flightless.
Not far from these other white flightless moths:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/151999769
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/152040316
Today was a great lesson on how to stay composed as a tour guide in front of 37 paying passengers, but it wasn't hard for them to share my excitement either... 13th record for NZ by my count, including the Chatham bird in a burrow a few years back that wasn't submitted. Interesting too is the single white feather on the upperwing.
Meterana grandiosa (female?) photographed on white paper and host plant Olearia odorata and then released in an odorata shrub. Drawn to light, two individuals coming in at about 7:45 pm. Dark, relatively mild night. About 10 degrees.
amaaaaaazing, what the heck is this. Very long (at least as long as my Nalgene bottle, 21cm), thin, fluro-green planarian. Seems to be at least one prior observation, but identification didn't get very far: https://inaturalist.nz/observations/9506116
Stopped by Denniston Plateau on my way up to Kahurangi NP.
Local on edge of forest-wetland.
Thanks Marley for the tip!
Very slow moving mite found on the underside of a leaf in a native forest remnant. Body length 1.5-2.0 mm.
Another night of Fiordland moths. One more to go after this. I did a lot of mothing there this January whilst in the area working on Awakopaka skink, but I won't be back to Fiordland until March. It will be interesting to see the change in species composition between January and March.
So exciting to finally see this cool, somewhat cryptic little scree plant, and a treat to see it in flower and fruit!
Two ticks seen on a mature female near the entrance to the tuatara enclosure at Zealandia. Note that Zealandia staff are aware of these and are not concerned - even excited - that some ticks had "survived the translocation".
First time I've had this species come to light. Mind you, I had my lights set up on a rock bluff, so likely put my lights right on top of its habitat - waking this diurnal species from its slumber perhaps...
Night 1 of 3 mothing in Fiordland National Park with @Carey-Knox-Southern-Scales. Campsite on Milford Road in a clearing next to beech forest. Drawn to light.
Native mixed podocarp / broadleaf forest, resting on a tree trunk at night.
A few around on some Codium convolutum.
No Placida though.
~5mm long
Lower intertidal
A night on the edge of the beech forest at Manapouri. Merry Christmas all.
My next batch of moths comes from a couple of days/nights in the Piano Flat, Waikaia Bush, and Titan Rocks area. Some stunning moths. I still have a lot of photo-sorting to do, but to start with here are three gorgeous Meterana pauca from the first night. I think I have a new favourite! Absolutely mesmerizing (at least for a moth nerd!).
First with photo obs on inat to go with Brian's 4 without photo obs (3 from Southland). Drawn to light at Rakeahua Hut on the southern circuit, Stewart Island.
I've had my eye on this patch of small looking Corybas leaves for a few years & 2 days ago saw some out in flower for the first time - they're not Corybas sulcatus but that's as far as I can get - maybe C. rivularis? They're growing close to the Tuku River & probably get flooded regularly
[Great night of spring mothing on the Maniototo. About 45-50 species seen in total. A lot of species that I had not seen since last spring turned up e.g. Meterana exquisita (7!), Orophora unicolor, and Ichneutica paracausta. First Physeticas and porinas for this spring. Also another location recorded for Theoxena scissaria]
Unusual small crayfish-like moths all found inside Muehlenbeckia complexa shrubs. I can't find a match easily.
@dr_robert and @nhudson Looks like Theoxena scissaria(?), but would be great to get confirmation. Drawn to light. Base of the southern Hawkdun Range
Meterana grandiosa photographed on white paper and host plant Olearia odorata and then released in an odorata shrub. Drawn to light, two individuals coming in at about 7:45 pm. Dark, relatively mild night. About 10 degrees.
Mahogany skink (O. aff. inconspicuum "mahogany"). A species that is part of the unresolved northern group of the Oligosoma inconspicuum (cryptic skink) complex. Long toes and tail. The later of which is fully keeled. Adapted to climbing around on vertical (or near vertical) rock walls.
Extraordinary colours!, but I think the pattern looks like callichlora. Making a start on a large batch from the upper Sinbad Gully, Fiordland. Drawn to light.
Day-flying on wetlands. Very small. Two individuals pictured. Burgan skink monitoring in a remote part of the Lammermoor Range provided good opportunities for a little mothing. First of 3 uploads. Moths starting with 'A' (lots of moths seem to start with 'A').
These area very rare plants. Two specimens found immediately and then no more after 2 1/2 hours of searching... =)
Drawn to 10W UV LED light at Moturau Hut on the Kepler Track. Beautiful large moth - several bombed me, this was the only one of them captured. Blue tinge and distinctive hindwings. Not alpine and not particularly bouldery.
Drawn to 10W UV LED light at Moturau Hut on the Kepler Track. Several of these extraordinary moths seen, only one captured to photograph.
10 mm long. Sporting the 'desert cammo' attire. Sitting on a pine log in abandoned wood heap. Drizzly night.
Thanks to @christopherstephens and @emmarowell_214 for initially finding these wee gems and being kind enough to share. After a good scratch around about 100 specimens were found growing mostly in isolation with just a few in clumps as recorded by Christopher. The association is not clear as there was Rimu, Kohekohe, Tawa, and nearish mature Nikau, but only seedlings amongst the orchids, as well as a lot of Icarus filiformis on the ground and Metrosideros perforata... Plants were fruiting, flowering and budding, suggesting a very much staged maturity in this location... very cool!!! =)
Pretty excited to find this butterfly if indeed it is a forest ringlet!
Reared from the encrusting fungus on which it is so happily seated, and which was on the underside of a dead log.
In the process of being formally described. A distinct and separate species from the black eyed gecko. This sub adult is the 22nd of the species recorded. Found at 1500m in a rough boulder field. Assisting Mr Knox on a herpetological survey.
On the underside of pigeonwood leaves (Hedycarya arborea).
A pair on patrol, continually coming back to a nest site. Photos taken over about 3 hours of observing.
Mokopirirakau "Southern Forest" or Tautuku gecko. Juvenile. In mixed podocarp forest. Assisting Mr Knox.
About 70-80 mm long, wandering around (peripatetic-like) on a mahoe tree trunk. First time I have seen one out in the open.
It's a kākāpō! No, wait, it's a moth that looks like a kākāpō!
Fishing with a friend at Loganburn when this McCann's Skink paddled past. Seemed quite happy.
In the sunlight portions of the shaded forest, on the western track.