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earthstar

~ a celebration of nature

earthstar

Yearly Archives: 2021

The stars of the fungi world

22 Friday Oct 2021

Posted by sconzani in autumn, fungi

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

British fungi, collared earthstar, earthstar, Earthstar fungi, Geastrum triplex

It’s that time of year when stars appear, as if by magic, from the earth and delight those of us lucky enough to find them with their outlandishness.

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And so I made my annual pilgrimage to the location I found a few years ago in a Cardiff cemetery, where I was absolutely delighted to see a very healthy profusion of these beauties.

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There were at least 40, with more still emerging from their ‘shells’. I am, of course, referring to the fungi for which this blog is named, the Earthstars, in this case Collared earthstars (Geastrum triplex).

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Zorro comes to Wales

21 Thursday Oct 2021

Posted by sconzani in insects, leaves, trees

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Aproceros leucopoda, British sawflies, Elm zigzag sawfly, sawfly feeding marks on elm leaves, sawfly on Wych elm

‘Yes it’s definitely Zorro’, confirmed Andy, a county sawfly recorder, when he took a look at these photos on Twitter on Tuesday. Andy was not, of course, referring to the legendary fictional character of book, television series and movie, but to the creature that created, in the leaves of Wych elm, these characteristic feeding marks that resemble the trademark ‘Z’ signature the big screen version of Zorro left at the scene of his adventures.

211021 elm zigzag sawfly (1)

Zorro, in this case, is the Elm zigzag sawfly (Aproceros leucopoda) and my photos are the first records for this species in Wales. The find is a double-edged sword (see what I did there?), as this sawfly is considered an invasive species, though I am assured by those who have been following its spread in England that the damage it does is not as considerable as first feared. I hope to spot the larvae that do this damage sometime next year.

211021 elm zigzag sawfly (2)
211021 elm zigzag sawfly (3)
211021 elm zigzag sawfly (4)
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A Moth fly

20 Wednesday Oct 2021

Posted by sconzani in insects

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

British flies, Drain fly, Moth fly, Owl fly, Owl midge, Psychodidae

Meet a Moth fly, or an Owl midge, or a Drain fly, or an Owl fly, a tiny creature that has a multitude of common names but whose 99 British species are so difficult to identify that I can’t give you an exact scientific name for this particular one, except to say that it’s a member of the Psychodidae family.

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I was actually amazed that it stayed relatively still long enough for me to get so many photos – perhaps the cooler temperature this day had reduced its ability to flit actively about. Not so good for the fly, but a bonus for the photographer.

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Sowbread

19 Tuesday Oct 2021

Posted by sconzani in autumn, flowers, wildflowers

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Tags

autumn-flowering Cyclamen, British wildflowers, cyclamen, Cyclamen hederifolium, naturalised Cyclamen

What a fabulous sight these flowers were during a recent meander around one of Cardiff’s cemeteries!

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These are Cyclamen (Cyclamen hederifolium), which may once have been a single bulb planted on a loved one’s grave by a grieving relative that have now spread and become naturalised, a common occurrence in the churchyards of southern Britain. They certainly brighten up the autumn landscape with their gorgeous subtle shades of lilac and purple.

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Why Sowbread? Well, according to the National Records Scotland website, ‘It is often referred to as sow bread because the corms looked like small loaves and were thought to have been favoured by pigs in the wild.’ The website is worth a look for the other interesting information it provides.

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Leafmines: Coleophora peribenanderi

18 Monday Oct 2021

Posted by sconzani in autumn, insects, plants

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

British leafminers, British moths, case-bearing moths, Coleophora peribenanderi, leaf-mining larvae, leaf-mining moth, moth larvae on thistles, Pale Thistle case-bearer

Searching for leafmines on thistles is not for the faint-hearted, writes she with multi-punctured fingers. But it has been worth every drop of blood to find these mines (and I must be a masochist, as, having found them in one place, I then went determinedly searching in other locations – two successes so far, which I’m rather pleased about as there are very few records in south Wales).

211018 Coleophora peribenanderi (1)

The larvae of the moth Coleophora peribenanderi, also known as the Pale Thistle case-bearer (you can see the adult on UK Moths here), builds itself a tube-like case to live in and ventures out of said case to munch happily on the leaves of whichever species of thistle its mother laid her eggs on (in the three I’ve found so far, Creeping thistle). The marks this feeding makes on the plant’s leaves are quite distinctive but, to clinch the identification, you need to look under the leaf and find the case.

211018 Coleophora peribenanderi (2)

Interestingly, the larva feeds up for a couple of months, from July to September, then suspends its development (the scientific word is diapause, a new one for me) through the winter until either feeding up a bit more in April or passing straight to pupation in May. Fascinating stuff!

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Seed heads, Autumn 2021

17 Sunday Oct 2021

Posted by sconzani in autumn, flowers, plants, wildflowers

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Tags

autumn seeds, British wildflowers, seed heads, seedheads, seeds

A celebration of seed heads, plant life of the future . . .

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Shoveler

16 Saturday Oct 2021

Posted by sconzani in autumn, birds

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, British ducks, Cardiff Bay birding, shoveler, Shoveler plumage

The highlight of yesterday’s stomp around Cardiff Bay was this male Shoveler quite close to the boardwalk at the wetlands reserve.

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He was standing on a submerged log, body up out of the water, so he could preen. As you can see, he was looking a bit scruffy, only part way through the moult to winter plumage (shown below in a photo taken in December a couple of years ago), and was mostly still wearing his breeding colours. He was having a good scratch and preening with that large beak, shedding several feathers during the time I watched him.

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Coral slime

15 Friday Oct 2021

Posted by sconzani in autumn, trees

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

British slime moulds, Ceratiomyxa fruticulosa, Coral slime, slime mould, slime mould on dead tree

While out walking on Wednesday I spotted this large expanse of something white on the side of a huge old fallen tree and, of course, I had to investigate.

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As I got closer, I realised it was the slime mould Ceratiomyxa fruticulosa, a mass of tiny translucent white tubes, often branched, clustered together like terrestrial coral or sea anemones.

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As this plasmodium stage of a slime mould often only lasts a day or two, the timing of my walk was very lucky indeed.

211015 Ceratiomyxa fruticulosa (3)

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Busy buzzing

14 Thursday Oct 2021

Posted by sconzani in autumn, insects

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Tags

bees on Ivy flowers, British bees, Colletes hederae, Ivy bee

Every year I look out for them. Every year I share photos of them, and 2021 is no exception. Here, then, are some of this year’s cohort of Ivy bees, at their burrows and feasting on Ivy flowers.

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Iridescent Starlings

13 Wednesday Oct 2021

Posted by sconzani in birds

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, starling

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Wire-dotter, pylon-swarmer, dusk-dancer, aerial-clinger … these are just some of author and poet Rob Cowen’s descriptions of these shimmering birds, the Starlings, in his poem ‘Starling’ from his recently published book The Heeding (Elliott and Johnson, London, 2021). I’m not a great reader of poetry but this work is magical, and includes the stunning illustrations of Nick Hayes – I highly recommend their work.

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And Starlings are also magical: musicians that entertain with their broad repertoire of trills and whistles, flutes and warbles; murmuraters that fly en masse with remarkable precision; fashionistas that dazzle with the greens, purples and blues of their iridescent plumage.

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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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