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The nationally rare reed leopard moth is common at the site.
Production of the Leopard Moth ended in 1936.
Leopard Moth may refer to:
Hypercompe scribonia , giant leopard moth
May 27 - De Havilland Leopard Moth
1939-1940 de Havilland Leopard Moth
The larvae of some Lepidoptera species also use them as food plants, for example the giant leopard moth (Hypercompe scribonia).
Magnolias are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species, including Giant Leopard Moth.
DH.85 Leopard Moth
He also flew a Leopard Moth and an Arrow Active which caught fire while he was performing aerobatics.
Giant Leopard Moth, or Ecpantheria scribonia
The first machine purchased for the force was a de Havilland DH.85 Leopard Moth that entered service on 9 October 1940.
De Havilland Leopard Moth, a 1933 three seat de Havilland plane
Sesioidea are considered to be the sister group of Cossoidea[1] which contain the also internal-feeding Goat and Leopard moths.
Mills was also among the early South African aviation pioneers, owning a Leopard Moth based at Oribi airfield.
The success of the three-seat, high-wing de Havilland Leopard Moth, introduced in 1933, had proved that there was a market for this class of aircraft.
A collector of classic aeroplanes, he wrote a vivid account of flying a DH Leopard Moth across the Atlantic.
Cossidae Goat moths, Leopard moths or Carpenterworm moths
44 Leopard Moths were impressed into military service in Britain and others in Australia during World War II, mostly as communications aircraft.
My son Casey and my nephew Alexander fly the Tiger Moth and the Leopard Moth.
In 1937 he was awarded the CMG and died in a de Havilland Leopard Moth plane crash the following year on his way to receiving the award.
The Giant Leopard Moth or Eyed Tiger Moth (Hypercompe scribonia) is a moth of the family Arctiidae.
Learning to fly in the 1930s, Nancy flew all over Australia in her Gipsy Moth and Leopard Moth and this book chronicles some of her escapades.
The de Havilland DH.85 Leopard Moth is a three-seat high-wing cabin monoplane designed and built by the de Havilland Aircraft Company in 1933.
The Pobjoy Pirate was a three-seat, high-wing monoplane designed to compete with the de Havilland Leopard Moth using a low power but light Pobjoy radial engine.
Zeuzera pyrina, a member of the family Cossoidea
The Leopard Moth or Wood Leopard Moth (Zeuzera pyrina) is a moth of the family Cossidae.