VIDEO: Mega moth invasion could see palm-sized creatures winging their way to our county
![The Hawk-moth has a huge wing span and can hover over plants with precision to drink nectar](https://www.northamptonchron.co.uk/webimg/legacy_oak_75445221.jpg?crop=3:2,smart&width=640&quality=65&enable=upscale)
![The Hawk-moth has a huge wing span and can hover over plants with precision to drink nectar](/img/placeholder.png)
Moth-lovers are hoping to catch the massive Convolvulus Hawk-moth using ornamental tobacco plants, planted earlier this year, and wine soaked ropes.
With a 12cm wingspan, the moth is one of the largest moths found in Europe, yet it is capable of pin-point precision flight.
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Hide AdIt hovers to drink nectar from deep tubular tobacco plant flowers using its amazingly long 7.5cm proboscis - tube-like mouth.
![The Hawk-moth has a huge wing span and can hover over plants with precision to drink nectar](https://www.hemeltoday.co.uk/webimg/legacy_oak_75445221.jpg?crop=3:2,smart&width=640&quality=65)
![The Hawk-moth has a huge wing span and can hover over plants with precision to drink nectar](/img/placeholder.png)
Arranged by Atropos and Butterfly Conservation, it is hoped that sightings of the giant insect across the county will help build a clear picture of moth migration into the UK on Moth Night.
With a tongue longer than its body, one way to attract the giant moth is by hanging ropes out soaked in alcohol, preferably wine, in a practice known as wine roping.
Another moth-attracting technique, known as sugaring, involves painting a mixture of sugar, syrup and beer onto a post or tree trunk.
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Hide AdAlong with the Convolvulus Hawk-moth, 40 other species of immigrant moths have been spotted in the UK for the first time in 15 years, including the Black-Spotted Chestnut and Flame Brocade.
![Palm-sized moths from the continent are being carried over on warm winds](https://www.hemeltoday.co.uk/webimg/legacy_oak_75445220.jpg?crop=3:2,smart&width=640&quality=65)
![Palm-sized moths from the continent are being carried over on warm winds](/img/placeholder.png)
The apparent increase in migrant records could reveal important information about the effects of climate change on UK moth populations.
The Convolvulus Hawk-moth migrates from southern Europe with a few hundred spotted in the UK annually, mainly during late summer and early autumn.
Richard Fox, head of recording at Butterfly Conservation, said: “It has already been an amazing year for moth immigration and such activity usually peaks in early autumn.
“With migrants such as the massive Convolvulus Hawk-moth mixing with beautiful home-grown autumnal species.”
Have you spotted a Hawk-moth? Send us your pictures by emailing [email protected]