View allAll Photos Tagged Privet
My good friend Clare yesterday found this beautiful half grown Privet Hawk-moth caterpillar in her garden feeding on Forsythia.
For such a large caterpillar they are so rarely found and is I believe only the 3rd one that I have seen, despite searching over the years.
Hopefully I will get a few more shots of this lovely creature as it grows up.
The only one I found was a couple of years ago when I came across a fully grown one whilst gardening. That one is in the comments column below.
Sphinx ligustri is the UK's largest resident hawk-moth. Adults fly between June and July.
This magnificent bright green caterpillar is 80mm long and is 22 days old. It has white and purple stripes and a black curved tail. It will overwinters as a pupa, 30cm or more underground.
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Ligustrum obtusifolium (border privet or Amur privet) is a species of privet, native to Japan, Korea and northeastern China (Heilongjiang, Jiangsu, Liaoning, Shandong, Zhejiang). The species is considered invasive in parts of the United States. It has become very common in southern New England, the mid-Atlantic States, and the Great Lakes regions, with scattered occurrences in the South, the Great Plains, and Washington state. With Ligustrum ovalifolium it is a parent of the widespread hybrid Ligustrum × ibolium. Ligustrum obtusifolium is a deciduous shrub growing to 3 metres (9.8 ft) tall. The leaves are 1 to 6 centimetres (0.39 to 2.36 in) long and 4 to 25 millimetres (0.16 to 0.98 in) broad. 30113
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More than a month after publishing I've been made aware that there's a little bug/moth (?) photobombing this picture. It's really cute!
Ligustrum vulgare (wild privet, also sometimes known as common privet or European privet) is a species of Ligustrum native to central and southern Europe, north Africa and southwestern Asia, from Ireland and southwestern Sweden south to Morocco, and east to Poland and northwestern Iran.
It is a semi-evergreen or deciduous shrub, growing to 3 m (rarely up to 5 m) tall. The stems are stiff, erect, with grey-brown bark spotted with small brown lenticels. The leaves are borne in decussate opposite pairs, sub-shiny green, narrow oval to lanceolate, 2–6 cm long and 0.5–1.5 cm broad. The flowers are produced in mid-summer in panicles 3–6 cm long, each flower creamy-white, with a tubular base and a four-lobed corolla ('petals') 4–6 mm diameter. The flowers produce a strong, pungent fragrance that many people find unpleasant. The fruit is a small glossy black berry 6–8 mm diameter, containing one to four seeds. The berries are poisonous to humans but readily eaten by thrushes, which disperse the seeds in their droppings.