25 June 2013
24 June 2013 – Cupid’s Moth.
Smiling then He took his Dart,
And drew her Picture in my Heart.
– John Hughes, The Picture, 1714
![]() |
Heart & Dart (Agrotis exclamationis) |
While the Heart & Dart (Agrotis exclamationis) moth probably isn’t what people think of when it comes to symbols of love, it does get its common name from the heart- and dart-shaped markings on its wings. We get a large number of these in the garden every year, and they are a relatively active bunch, each usually wiggling around or flying a short bit to readjust when I move them from the trap to the cage. Agrotes in Greek can be ‘of the field’ or ‘a countryman,’ depending on the pronunciation, referring to the Heart & Dart’s grassland habitat. Exclamatio ‘an exclamation’ originally described the wing markings, rather than Heart & Dart.
![]() |
Heart & Dart (Agrotis exclamationis) |
– Post by Jane Wu
Recent Moths
- Rise of the AI Naturalist
- Best Moths for a Haunted Abbey
- The Real and Fake Deaths of Moths
- The Colonizers of Yorkshire
- Glamour in the Dark: Two Newcomers Arrive at Shandy Hall
- 25 July 2023 – Collective Noun for Hawkmoths
- MOTH LIST to August 2023 with links
- 28 July 2023 – TRIPLE New Species Alert!
- 18 July 2023 – A Golden…Plusia!
- 13 July 2023 – Arts and Sciences
- 10 July 2023 – Rise of the Yellow Underwings
- 4 July 2023 – Cold-weather Catch