My first moth of the year

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Those moth-ers who run nightly moth traps have been reporting, on social media and despite the often detrimental weather, that small numbers of moths have begun appearing in their traps during the past couple of weeks. As I don’t trap, I’ve just been keeping an eye out in the places I sometimes see moths, usually on walls near where outside lights are on at night. And, finally, last Thursday, I spotted my first moth of the year, a new species for me, an Early moth (Theria primaria). As you might guess from its name, this is one of the first species to be seen each year, appearing in January and February. Though the UK Moths website says it’s usually found in woodland margins and hedgerows, this one was on the panelling around a building site, though the opposite side of the path is full of trees and scrub.

Three Common sandpipers

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During the past few winters those of us who bird Cardiff Bay have been privileged to enjoy regular sightings of two Common sandpipers that are spending the winter foraging those areas around the water’s edge that might provide the tiny creatures they like to eat: insects, spiders, and small crustaceans.

This year the number of wintering Common sandpipers has increased to three.

As most Common sandpipers simply pass through the Cardiff Bay area, moving to their breeding grounds in the spring, and to over-wintering locations further south in the autumn, I like to think that this third bird is the offspring of the original two, introduced to the concept of spending the winter in our area by its parents … but this is pure speculation.

Beetle: Athous bicolor

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This is the last of my new invertebrate finds from 2025, and it may or may not be the beetle Athous bicolor, found in shrubs around the edge of a local recreation field last July.

My specimen appears to have the features described on the Naturespot website – ‘quite an elongated species’, ‘elytra are brown in colour with ridges and pits running down their length’, ‘pronotum is slightly darker’, ‘legs and antennae are unicolourous with the rest of the insect and the antennae are very long’ – but their identification difficulty indicator is red, meaning the features are not as clear as the description indicates and/or there are other very similar species.

Still, it was an interesting beetle to find and photograph. This species is generally found in grassy, shrubby areas, sometimes feeding on umbellifer flowers or just sitting in the sun on long grass stems. Good luck if you find one and want to identify it!

Crocus flower power

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Though we did have a blue-sky day yesterday, it’s been a long, grey, wet winter; earlier this week one Scottish city, Aberdeen, was celebrating seeing the sun after 21 days of its absence! The weather’s not been that dismal here in south Wales but it’s been dreary enough to make the sight of spring flowers even more heartwarming than usual. So, today here’s some multi-coloured flower-power Crocuses to brighten your day!

Delightful doves

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Britain is home to five members of the Pigeon family: Rock dove (which manifests for most of us in the form of the domesticated Feral pigeon, though there are still thought to be wild Rock dove populations in north-west Scotland and the south and west of Ireland), Stock dove, Woodpigeon, Collared dove, and Turtle dove. Though I haven’t seen wild Rock doves, I have been lucky enough to have seen all these species, including, just once, the very rare Turtle dove.

The Stock dove (Columba oenas) is not that easy to see in my area. According to my RSPB bird book, the historic expansion of their population was a benefit of the expansion of arable farming but the use of chemical seed dressings in the 1950s and 1960s led to a huge decline in the Stock dove’s population, a decline the species is still recovering from. Fortunately for those of us who want to see these handsome birds, at Forest Farm Nature Reserve in north Cardiff there are at least two Stock doves that have taken advantage of the food people leave for the local birds and are now quite confiding, if you’re careful.

Back in April 2017, I explained in my blog post, Genetic mutation leads to immigration, about the arrival in Britain in the 1950s of the Collared dove (Streptopelia decaocto). Now they’re a common sight in my local area, and, I think, a lovely addition to Britain’s avian population. They seem to have set territories, and the bird shown here is one of a pair I see quite often when I’m walking by the River Taff in Cardiff.

Fan-like fungi

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I found these Split gill fungi (Schizophyllum commune) last November but had so many other things to share at that point that these didn’t make the cut.

I’d found the same species on another tree in this Cardiff Park once before but this fallen Oak and the huge colony of Split gill fungi growing on it were more than I’d ever seen before. It’s a fungus that always intrigues me, with its bland furry upper side that gives no hint of the stunning sculptural structure beneath.

Moorhen mimic

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I’m sure you all know I love birds. My passion for them is not just because they’re beautiful creatures – I also find them endlessly fascinating. Take these two Moorhens, for example.

They were poking around the grassy slope in front of one of the bird hides at Forest Farm Nature Reserve, hoping to discover a morsel or two of the seeds, nuts and assorted bird food that people had thrown through the hide’s windows to help bring in the birds. As I watched the second bird began to mimic exactly the movements of the leading bird. It resembled a kind of land-based synchronised swimming, or perhaps a dance. Was this some kind of pre-mating behaviour, a way of reinforcing their pair bond? I’d never seen this type of behaviour before, and it only lasted a few minutes but it’s experiences like this that keep me watching, and listening, and learning.

And, let’s face it, Moorhens are also very handsome birds.

Bug: Capsus ater

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This is another of my new bug finds from last year, found while leaf-turning wildflowers and scrub along a path in a wild area of a local park. Meet Capsus ater, from the Miridae family of British plant bugs.

I found this little fellow in early June, when the adults first appear; they can be seen from June right through till September. I was lucky to spot it higher up in the vegetation as they usually feed low down on plant stems, according to the British Bugs website.

Firecrests galore!

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I’m lucky if I see one Firecrest each year, as they tend only to be seen in my area during the winter months and can be extremely elusive. So, when one of our expert local birders let me know that he’d seen five (!) in a nearby park, I was optimistic – surely, I could find at least one. Four park visits later, with zero Firecrest sightings, I was beginning to despair but I figured I’d give it just one more try before I gave up. And I’m so glad I did as that one day I saw four Firecrests, two in one area and two on the other side of the park, more than I’ve ever seen in one day before.

Getting good photographs of the Firecrests was another matter. These are tiny birds, and very active, flitting constantly through the vegetation in search of food. I did actually manage images of all four birds, most blurry, two with only partial views of the birds, but one, the one shown above, where you can actually see the whole bird and recognise it. Phew!

Weevil: Sitona species

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Here’s another of last year’s new finds, which I think is a Sitona lineatus weevil but that hasn’t yet been confirmed, hence today’s blog title of Sitona species. I found this little creature on the local park railings at the end of April last year but had been holding off posting about it pending verification, or not. It seems, however, that no one is currently checking weevil records.

If this is, in fact, Sitona lineatus, its common name is Pea leaf weevil, and the Naturespot website says it is the most common of the Sitona species. Although the website provides a list of features to look for to identify this species – straight sides to the wing cases, moderately bulging eyes, alternating light and dark longitudinal stripes, etc., some of those features, like ‘flat bristles on the front half of the wing cases and slightly raised in the rear half’, are shared by other Sitona species. Naturespot reports that ‘dissection is often necessary to confirm’ which species you have found, and I prefer to leave all the lovely little creatures I find alive and plodding along.