You"re forgiven if this is the first you"re hearing of National Moth Week, even though it"s been going strong for eight years as a global call to learn about and observe the fuzzy little insects. All too often dismissed as pesky, drab counterparts to our brightly fluttering friends the butterflies, moths seem to hog every light but the spotlight. But they don"t need flashy marketing to win the numbers game: With an estimated 160,000 moth species (though some estimates go up to half a million), they vastly outnumber their swaggering butterfly cousins in the Lepidoptera order.
The moth wonderful time of the year
Today in History
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Big sky at Big Bend
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Seonam Temple, South Korea
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Life goes on at the Beatles Ashram
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May we have this dance?
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Till the cows come home
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Cool water in the Quinault
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Glacier cave in Iceland
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Handmade gnomes at a Christmas market
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A glimpse of the Blue Forest
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Young black caiman, Tambopata National Reserve, Peru
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Where can you find a red fox?
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The Big Blue of the Sierra
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Wat Sri Sawai in Sukhothai Historical Park, Thailand
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Spine-cheeked anemonefish in Milne Bay, Papua New Guinea
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National Moth Week
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International Roller Coaster Day
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The Battle of the Bulge 75 years later
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A little blue
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Gray days ahead in Monterey
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Kawachi Fuji Garden
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Spring comes to the Palouse
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Behold the perfect cone
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International Literacy Day
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Mount Rainier National Park
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River Quoich in Aberdeenshire, Scotland
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Mute swan
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Lavender fields on the Valensole Plateau in Provence, France
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Deep in the North Woods wetlands
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In the Highlands for Saint Andrew s Day
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Crested caracaras
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