Moths are flying later in the year than a century ago, study finds
South of Fall Creek by the edge of the woods, the moths would gather. They were, of course, drawn by light—set out by a researcher working in Cornell University's old Insectory building. In 1889, t...

Source: phys.org
South of Fall Creek by the edge of the woods, the moths would gather. They were, of course, drawn by light—set out by a researcher working in Cornell University's old Insectory building. In 1889, the lure came from a kerosene lantern, the pan underneath collecting the samples. In 1919, a researcher set up another light trap, baited by the orangish glow of an early tungsten bulb. A team of biologists used datasets both old and new to discover how flight periods of moths in Ithaca, N.Y., have changed over the past century.