
✮∘˙☮︎︎She/her, 18, polish🇵🇱, atheist, pacifist, metalhead, 70s lover, horror fan, goth, likes dark literature, vampires, evil Dead, Halloween 1978, autumn, writer, editor,genderfluid🩷🤍💜🖤💙, aroace 🧡💛🤍🩵💙, autistic ♾️🌈, introvert, likes dinosaurs and moths,☮︎︎˙∘✮ ✿∘˙☯___________________________☯˙∘✿ ☮︎︎✞∘˙☠︎︎Sea and nature lover. On this blog I will post: sea life and nature fun facts, information, pictures and some fun things like mems. There will be lots interesting fish types, sharks, moths, bugs, insects and other things. hope you will all enjoy it here. have fun☠︎︎˙∘✞☮︎︎
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Hello. This Is Deathmoth-blog And This Is My New Blog For Sea Life And Nature. I Will Post Sea Life And

𓆉˚✞hello. This is deathmoth-blog and this is my new blog for sea life and nature. I will post sea life and nature pictures here, some fun facts and other things. I will definitely post more moths and bugs but also different fish types and mostly interesting sea life creatures. Come and join me in lovely sea life and nature journey and enjoy being here✞˚𓆉
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And now I think it's time to introduce myself. Hi I'm deathmothblog but you can call me patty. I'm polish, 18 and I go by she/her. I'm a pacifist, metalhead and romantic goth, bisexual, autistic and atheist. I like music like Oingo Boingo, Metallica, talking heads, Joost Klein, The kills, Kiss, Tv girl and many more. I also like horror movies such as Halloween 1978, evil Dead, silence of the lambs, jaws and cube. I also like tv shows like doctor who, doctor house, the office, friends, parks and recreation, Torchwood, Ash vs evil dead, good omen, gravity Falls, smiling friends and wonder over yonder. My hobbies are reading, learning about different moths and sea creatures, I also like dinosaurs, sometimes I paint and draw, I write, I edit sometimes, create things, post on my blog, I'm interested in fashion and I like meeting new people. I talk a lot. I also like autumn and cozy clothes.
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More Posts from Deathmoth-blog









Graellsia isabellae, the Spanish moon moth, is in the silkmoth family Saturniidae. It is the only species in the monotypic genus Graellsia. The species was first described by Mariano de la Paz Graells y de la Agüera in 1849 and the genus was erected by Augustus Radcliffe Grote in 1896
This moth is native to Peninsular Spain. They live high up in the Pyrenees and other mountain ranges where the climate is cold. There is a small representation in some places located in France and Switzerland where they are not native but instead further generations of captive moths through repopulation attributed to human action with specimens from Spain.
They are relics originating from the Ice age or beyond as It is thought that their habitat is a refuge location. This means that for the past few millions of years, while the climate of Europe has drastically changed, the conditions in the small areas in Pyrenees have remained stable, and never changed, allowing the small remnant populations of this moth to survive for thousands of years in these small habitats. They are split off from the lineage of 'Moon Moths', genus Actias
At the end of April and beginning of May the moth begins to hatch after overwintering in the cocoon. Normally moths from the same parental line won't copulate, so it is necessary to take this into account when the moth is bred in captivity. After copulation the female lays about 100 to 150 eggs on the favoured food plant, pines. The larva hatch after 1 to 1+1⁄2 weeks and begin to eat the very hard pine needles. It takes about one and a half months for the caterpillars to reach the last instar. In the last instar the caterpillars go down from the tree to pupate under leaves on the ground. In this stage the pupae in the cocoon overwinter until the next spring.
By the way did I mention that I accidentally deleted everything from my old Tumblr and now I have nothing. It's stupid because I only wanted to delete one thing. Anyway that blog is mine and I will probably take some things from my old blog because I can still see it.




The ocean sunfish or common mola (Mola mola) is one of the largest bony fish in the world. It is the type species of the genus Mola, and one of five extant species in the family Molidae. It was once misidentified as the heaviest bony fish, which was actually a different and closely related species of sunfish, Mola alexandrini. Adults typically weigh between 247 and 1,000 kg (545 and 2,205 lb). It is native to tropical and temperate waters around the world. It resembles a fish head without a tail, and its main body is flattened laterally. Sunfish can be as tall as they are long when their dorsal and ventral fins are extended.
Its common English name, sunfish, refers to the animal's habit of sunbathing at the surface of the sea.[citation needed] Its common names in Dutch, Portuguese, French, Spanish, Catalan, Italian, Russian, Greek, Hungarian, Norwegian, and German (maanvis, peixe lua, Poisson lune, pez luna, peix lluna, Pesce luna, рыба-луна, φεγγαρόψαρο, holdhal, månefisk and Mondfisch, respectively) mean "moon fish", in reference to its rounded shape. In German, the fish is also known as Schwimmender Kopf, or "swimming head". In Polish, it is named samogłów, meaning "head alone" or "only head", because it has no true tail. In Swedish and Danish it is known as klumpfisk, in Dutch klompvis, in Finnish möhkökala, all of which mean "lump fish". The Chinese translation of its academic name is 翻車魚; fān chē yú, meaning "toppled wheel fish". Many of the sunfish's various names allude to its flattened shape.
It was originally classified in the pufferfish family as Tetraodon mola, its epithet mola is Latin for "millstone", which the fish resembles because of its gray color, rough texture, and rounded body. It is now placed in its own genus Mola and family name Molidae as the type species with two other species: Mola tecta and M. alexandrini (previously known as Mola ramsayi). Extinct relatives of Mola mola lived in the Oligocene and Miocene epochs. However, the earliest known fossil remains of Mola mola itself were found in archaeological middens dating to the Holocene epoch.
The common name "sunfish" without qualifier is used to describe the marine family Molidae and the freshwater sunfish in the family Centrarchidae, which is unrelated to Molidae. On the other hand, the name "ocean sunfish" and "mola" refer only to the family Molidae.







Thysania agrippina is a species of moth in the family Erebidae. It was described by Maria Sibylla Merian in her 1705 publication Metamorphosis insectorum Surinamensium, and Pieter Cramer provided the formal description of the species in 1776. The most commonly accepted English name is the white witch. Other common names include the ghost moth, great gray witch and great owlet moth. Thysania agrippina is of interest as a competitor for title of "largest insect". This may be true by the measure of wingspan—a Brazilian specimen with a wingspan of almost 30 cm (12 in) appears to hold the record. The Atlas moth and Hercules moth, however, have greater wing areas. The white witch occurs from Uruguay to Mexico, and appears as a stray as far north as Texas in the U.S.[2] Collection dates shows no discernible pattern with respect to location or season.
One story of the derivation of the common name: early naturalists collected specimens of birds and bats with shotguns. An enormous darting flyer high in the canopy was a tempting target. Firing a cloud of pellets at a white witch moth did not necessarily bring it down, however, because the body is small relative to the wing area. The moth would sail along, an unkillable witch. This moth is of historical interest as the subject of a well-known painting by the artist Maria Sibylla Merian. Merian was an insightful naturalist who advanced the 18th-century understanding of insect life cycles; however, her depiction of the white witch life cycle does not match the actual biology of this species, as it depicts the larva of an unrelated moth.
Given the enormous geographic range of the adult, and observations that date back 300 years, it is striking that the immature life stages of this species have never been documented (notwithstanding the erroneous Merian painting). Long migratory flight is likely, given that the close relatives Thysania zenobia (the owl moth) and Ascalapha odorata (the black witch) are known for flights that reach far north of the host plant distributions. Based on the larval host plants recorded for the owl moth and black witch, the larval host plants for the white witch are probably also woody members of Fabaceae (subfamily Caesalpinioideae), possibly Senna or Cassia.