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~ a celebration of nature

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Category Archives: insects

275/366 Another hitchhiker

01 Thursday Oct 2020

Posted by sconzani in insects

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British bugs, Common Green Shieldbug, Green shieldbug, Palomena prasina, shieldbugs

Another day, another hitchhiker, another shieldbug. Last time, it was a Hawthorn shieldbug, this time it was a Common green shieldbug (Palomena prasina). I have no idea where I picked this one up but sometime during today’s meander, it chose to fly or drop on to my backpack and hitched a ride home with me.

201001 common green shieldbug (3)
201001 common green shieldbug (4)

I popped it inside a glass – I knew those shot glasses would come in handy for something – and took a few photos of its underside, which I don’t usually get to see, before opening the window and letting it fly off into the sunset.

201001 common green shieldbug (1)
201001 common green shieldbug (2)
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274/366 Another extra brood

30 Wednesday Sep 2020

Posted by sconzani in autumn, insects

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Aricia agestis, British butterflies, Brown argus, butterfly, butterflying, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Lavernock Nature Reserve, second brood Brown argus

This year I saw my first Brown argus butterfly (Aricia agestis) on 11 July and thought I’d seen my last on 26 August, a short but very sweet season of sightings. Then, to my astonishment and absolute delight, I discovered two more on the same day, 16 September, one at Lavernock Nature Reserve and the other at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park.

200930 brown argus (1)

These had to be the product of the first brood of butterflies breeding and so were a second brood, not something I’d seen before with this butterfly. As the local populations of Dingy skippers have also produced a second brood and the Small coppers a third brood this year and nothing has changed in their environments, I can only assume this has been caused by the warmer climate.

200930 brown argus (2)

I haven’t managed to find the Lavernock Brown argus again but the Cosmeston butterfly was still in the same spot last week. A late summer-early Autumn treat!

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273/366 Dock bugs young and old

29 Tuesday Sep 2020

Posted by sconzani in insects

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Dock bug, Dock bug nymph, Late instar dock bug

On recent sunny days, Dock bugs, both young and old, have been out basking in the sunshine.

200929 dock bug (1)

I often find them on Bramble leaves and, occasionally, on the berries, though, according to the British Bugs website (which also has a helpful chart showing their different stages of development), they don’t eat these (not surprisingly, their main food source is Dock, as well as other plants in the Polygonaceae family).

200929 dock bug (2)
200929 dock bug (3)

200929 dock bug (4)

Though their brown colour is quite obvious on Bramble leaves, that same non-descript colour and their ragged shape mean Dock bugs (Coreus marginatus) can be very inconspicuous. I only spotted the one below because it moved.

200929 dock bug (5)

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270/366 Going down

26 Saturday Sep 2020

Posted by sconzani in insects

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British butterflies, butterfly, butterflying, Small copper

200926 small copper

I love the peculiar habit Small coppers have of walking head first down the stems of grasses.

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268/366 Gone galling

24 Thursday Sep 2020

Posted by sconzani in insects, trees

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Common spangle gall, gall wasps, galls on oak trees, Knopper gall, Marble galls, oak galls, Oyster gall, Silk button galls, Smooth spangle galls

I wanted a relatively short walk between rain showers so headed to a small local green belt where Oak saplings were planted a few years ago, and my wander turned into a challenge to see how many different types of gall I could find in just this one small copse of young Oaks. The answer? Six!

200924 oak galls (1)

First up, Knopper galls, caused by the wasp Andriscus quercuscalicis. For more on that gall, see my August 2017 post Oak galls: knoppers and artichokes.

200924 oak galls (2) knopper

Next, Marbles, which I covered in Oak galls: marbles and apples, August 2017.

200924 oak galls (3) marble

Then, I found some Common spangles (below left), caused by the wasp Neuroterus quercusbaccarum. More on that mouthful in Oak galls: currants and spangles, August 2017.

200924 oak galls (4a) common spangle
200924 oak galls (4b) smooth spangle

You may have noticed my photo of Marble galls also had something else on the leaves. These were Smooth spangles (above right), a product of the wasp Neuroterus albipes.

200924 oak galls (5a) oyster
200924 oak galls (5b) oyster

I covered both Smooth spangles and this next gall, the Oyster, in the same blog: Oak galls: spangles and oysters, September 2017. The photo on the left above shows Oysters just beginning to form on the spine of the leaf; the one on the right shows two more developed examples, both on the same tree.

200924 oak galls (6) silk button

And, last but most certainly not least, as there were thousands of these on all the Oak trees I looked at, Silk button galls, caused by the wasp Neuroterus numismalis. I wrote about those in Oak galls: ram’s-horns and silk buttons, September 2017.

Not a bad haul for an hour turning over leaves and peering amongst branches. I didn’t find examples of all the Oak galls I’ve found before but I was very happy with this sampling.

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267/366 A hitchhiker

23 Wednesday Sep 2020

Posted by sconzani in insects, trees

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Tags

British insects, Hawthorn, Hawthorn shieldbug, insects on Hawthorn

When I got home from today’s walk, I discovered I had a hitchhiker, tucked up snugly in the hood of my jacket. I presume this Hawthorn shieldbug got brushed off its bush and on to me as I pushed through the snagging branches of some young Hawthorns earlier in the day. After a couple of quick photos, I placed it on the window ledge and off it flew in search of the nearest Hawthorn.

200923 hawthorn shieldbug

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266/366 A sweet necessity

22 Tuesday Sep 2020

Posted by sconzani in insects

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annoying wasps, apples, wasp, wasp eating apple, wasp seeking sweet food

As I sat enjoying the coastal view, sipping my water, eating my apple, this wasp came a’visiting, buzzing annoyingly around the hand holding the apple, seeking sweet food, as they do on the fine days of late summer and early autumn. And, until I read this article on The Conversation website, I had no idea why. Take a look – it’s really interesting and well written. Oh, and my solution? I broke off a small piece of the apple and put it on the bench arm rest, so the wasp could help itself. As you can see, that worked a treat.

200925 wasp

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265/366 Hutchinsoni

21 Monday Sep 2020

Posted by sconzani in insects

≈ 2 Comments

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British butterflies, butterfly, Comma, Comma variation hutchinsoni, Polygonia c-album, Polygonia c-album var. hutchinsoni

If you happen to see a Comma butterfly on one of our fine autumnal days, have a good look at the colour of its wings. You may notice that both the upper and the undersides of its wings are quite dark, particularly when compared to some of the Commas you saw in the summer months. Why is that?

200921 comma (1)
200921 comma (2)

It may be that your paler summertime Comma was a hutchinsoni. The splendid Life Cycles of British & Irish Butterflies explains:

The Comma is known for a particular form named hutchinsoni that is much paler in appearance on both upperside and underside that the nominate form. This form is found throughout the butterfly’s range and is normally attributed to individuals that go on to produce a second brood in the same year. Its name is a tribute to Emma Hutchinson, a renowned Victorian entomologist … who ultimately discovered its double-brooded nature and the corresponding variation between broods. The name was announced by J.E. Robson in 1881 in The Young Naturalist: ‘The Summer form is so different, and so constant in its appearance, that it ought to have a distinctive name, and we suggest it be called var. Hutchinsoni, in compliment to the lady … whose knowledge of the species is not exceeded by that of any one living.’

200921 comma (3)
200921 comma (4)

In my photos, the Comma on the left, Polygonia c-album var. hutchinsoni, was photographed on 24 June, the Comma on the right on 17 September, both in the same location and on fine, sunny days. I think you can see how marked the difference in their colouring is.

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263/366 The Ivy is buzzing

19 Saturday Sep 2020

Posted by sconzani in insects, plants

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

One of the highlights for me at this time of year is finding Ivy bees feasting, as you might expect, on the newly opened flowers of Ivy. I blog about these little beauties every year so I won’t go in to their details again, just share my latest photos.

200919 ivy bees (1)
200919 ivy bees (2)
200919 ivy bees (3)
200919 ivy bees (4)
200919 ivy bees (5)
200919 ivy bees (6)
200919 ivy bees (7)
200919 ivy bees (8)
200919 ivy bees (9)
200919 ivy bees (10)
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262/366 Webs

18 Friday Sep 2020

Posted by sconzani in autumn, insects, weather

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cobwebs, fog, spiders' webs, water droplets on webs

It was early Tuesday morning and the landscape was muffled by a dense layer of fog but there was magic happening in the fields, amongst the plants, as the power of fog droplets illuminated the industrious efforts of the spider kingdom.

200918 cobwebs (1)200918 cobwebs (2)200918 cobwebs (3)200918 cobwebs (4)200918 cobwebs (5)200918 cobwebs (6)200918 cobwebs (7)

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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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