November 14th, 2010

Remarkable photo from the BBC’s Autumnwatch a few years back of spindle trees and bushes (Euonymus europaeus) in a Dorset hedgerow infested with the silk webs of the spindle moth or spindle ermine (Yponomeuta cagnagella). More here with a video.
Spindle ermines weave silk webs to protect themselves from birds and wasps, allowing them to gorge on leaves for six weeks before transforming into the moth.
Not known for being bright sparks, they sometimes mistake other objects for spindle trees such as this car in Rotterdam
(Image: Daily Mail).
butterflies of Britain, insects of Britain, Trees of Britain | Tags: Euonymus europaeus moth, Facts about British moths, spindle moth, Unusal British moths, Yponomeuta cagnagella, Yponomeuta cagnagella web|