Today brought very difficult weather conditions in which to work Emperors, especially late in the flight season: cloudless, calm and hot from early.
In such conditions, late on in the season, Emperors tend to stick to the vicinity of their feeder trees, which are usually sap bleeds. Sap runs are never easy to find, and can switch on and off from day to day. This year, they have been even scarcer than usual - Patrick's Tree, normally Knepp's No 1 feeder tree, has hardly functioned...
I was in a new part of Savernake today, and quickly learnt that weather conditions weren't right for surveying. The one sap run there, the best I've seen anywhere this year, attracted half a dozen male Red Ads, and briefly this old male Emperor (and it is male, it's completely lost its purple iridescence) -
The signs of an ageing season were everywhere, including this pupal case remnant, from two weeks ago -
and the next generation of larvae is advancing. Here's a late 1st instar larva, soon to change to the 2nd instar, and gain its horns - this early, rather begging the question of whether we'll see some 2nd brood Emperors on the wing this autumn???