Old Lady

Mormo maura

"Mormo maura", the old lady or black underwing, is a species of moth of the family Noctuidae. It is found in the Palearctic realm, from north-western Africa through all over southern Europe. It reaches its northern border in the west in northern Ireland and central Scotland, in central Europe, in northern Germany and Poland.
Old Lady (Mormo maura) This was my first ever Old Lady moth, a species noted as 'local' and for its habit of hiding out in old buildings, sheds, garages and the like.

So far, so normal.

What I didn't expect was what followed:

I first noticed her perched on the inside of my garden gate/doorway on the evening of 25th June and took this photo the same day.
It's a fairly dark space and protected from the elements.
I thought it had flown away that same evening and I thought nothing more of it.

However, it was there again, in a different place on the door, the next morning. 
I assumed I'd made a mistake and that it must have been there the whole time?

Not so!

For the last 10 days and possibly even longer, given it might have been there a while before I noticed it, the Old Lady has flown away every evening, only to reappear on the same doorway the next morning.

It was back again this morning - July 6th.

It might be my ignorance, but I've never witnessed anything like it.

I've submitted adoption papers.... Black Underwing,Geotagged,Mormo maura,Summer,United Kingdom

Appearance

The wingspan is 55–65 mm. The length of the forewings is 30–36 mm. Forewing dull fuscous blackish, the median area usually darker; the paler ground colour being really ochreous grey, thickly dusted with fuscous; subbasal line double, forming two series of groups of black scales across basal area; inner and outer lines double, filled in with pale, both oblique basewards below vein 1; median vein and its branches pale; subcostal space with five black blotches above median area; orbicular stigma large, oblique, pale with dark dusting; reniform dark with pale outline, widened outwards on both sides below; submarginal line pale preceded by a dark fuscous shade, angled outwards above and below middle; apical area above vein 6 pale grey; hindwing dull fuscous, with a straight pale band beyond middle, followed by a broad black striata, subterminal border, outwardly edged by a pale submarginal line; in the form "striata" Tutt the transverse lines as well as the median vein and veinlets are conspicuously pale.

Naming

The species was first described by Carl Linnaeus in the 10th edition of his Systema Naturae.

Distribution

In some Nordic countries, there are single finds. The other occurrence areas include Turkestan, Anatolia, the Middle East and Iraq. The name "old lady" refers to the fact that the wing pattern was said to resemble the shawls worn by elderly Victorian ladies.

Behavior

The moth flies in one generation from mid-June to mid-September.

The larva are pale ochreous, clouded with darker; dorsal and subdorsal lines whitish, irregular, with oblique pale darker-edged streaks between; spiracles reddish above a yellow line above the feet; on the 11th segment, there is a yellowish-white black-edged transverse stripe. The larvae feed on various herbaceous plants in the early stages later it feeds on various deciduous trees and shrubs.

Habitat

It mostly lives near water, in river valleys, meadows, bogs, as well as in the shore areas of streams, ponds and lakes.

References:

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Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionArthropoda
ClassInsecta
OrderLepidoptera
FamilyNoctuidae
GenusMormo
SpeciesM. maura
Photographed in
United Kingdom