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earthstar

~ a celebration of nature

earthstar

Category Archives: nature

37/366 My first hoverfly larva

06 Thursday Feb 2020

Posted by sconzani in insects, nature

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

British hoverflies, dormant hoverfly larvae, hoverfly, hoverfly larva, Platycheirus larva, Platycheirus species

When I first saw this creature, I thought it might be a butterfly or moth larva but I was wrong – nothing new there!

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Thanks to a Twitter pal, I now know it’s a hoverfly larva and, with some excellent help from an entomologist who specialises in flies, I also now know it’s one of the Platycheirus family of hoverflies but not which of their 25 British species.

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Apparently, little is known about the larvae of some species of hoverflies: their larvae have not yet been fully examined or described, so you really need to rear a dormant larva through to adulthood to be sure. Not knowing that, I left this one in the woodland where I saw it, but next time …

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36/366 Lovey-dovey

05 Wednesday Feb 2020

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Collared dove, lovely-dovey

It’s been a glorious day, with blue skies and sunshine aplenty. And everywhere I went, the birds were singing out their pleasure, announcing their availability, staking their claims on territories, and canoodling!

200205 collared dove (1)

In the churchyard at St Augustine’s, two pairs of Collared doves were coo-coo-cooooing from their chosen trees.

200205 collared dove (2)

One pair was hiding shyly in amongst the greenery but the other two were sitting on bare branches, basking in the sunshine, preening each other, and being lovey-dovey. I guess that’s where the expression comes from.

200205 collared dove (3)

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35/366 A flowering saxifrage

04 Tuesday Feb 2020

Posted by sconzani in nature, spring, wildflowers

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

British wildflowers, Chrysosplenium oppositifolium, Opposite-leaved golden saxifrage

Today’s walk produced yet more evidence of our changing climate in the form of another very early Spring flower, this time Opposite-leaved golden saxifrage (Chrysosplenium oppositifolium), which my wildflower guide tells me shouldn’t be flowering for at least another month.

200204 opposite-leaved golden saxifrage (2)

Today’s location was typical of this plant’s favoured habitat: in woodland, along the edges of a well-shaded small stream. Its liking for damp conditions is perhaps one of the reasons it grows best in western parts of Britain and is less common in the eastern counties.

200204 opposite-leaved golden saxifrage (3)

It can be confused with its cousin Alternate-leaved golden saxifrage (Chrysosplenium alternifolium) – the key thing, as the names suggest, is to check the arrangement of the leaves. In the first photo and the one below you can see how the pairs of leaves are growing opposite each other along the stem. You can only see its slightly odd flowers – they have no petals, just eight yellow stamens.

200204 opposite-leaved golden saxifrage (1)

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34/366 Clever tit

03 Monday Feb 2020

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cogan Wood, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Marsh tit

My walk through Cogan Wood this afternoon was punctuated by stops, at tree stumps, a sculpted dead tree known locally as the dragon tree, by benches, and at particular shrubs and bushes, where I dispensed seed to the hungry small birds that immediately mobbed me.

200203 Marsh tit (1)

I was delighted that one of those hungry small birds was the resident Marsh tit, as I hadn’t seen it for a few weeks. And I was very impressed with its intelligence – whereas the myriad Great and Blue tits flit in, grab a single seed, and flit away into the bushes to eat it, the Marsh tit has learnt to grab at least two, once three seeds in its tiny beak before flying quickly off. What a clever little tit!

200203 Marsh tit (2)

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33/366 This week in wildflowers

02 Sunday Feb 2020

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, wildflowers

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

#WildflowerHour, British wildflowers, winter colour, winter wildflowers

These are the blooming wildflowers I was able to find during yesterday’s and today’s local meanders, an impressive total of 21, due to the continuing mild weather we have been experiencing this winter.

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They are: Bramble; Comfrey – a nice surprise; Common ragwort (with a bonus Marmalade hoverfly, my first for 2020); a Crocus (probably planted, now wild); Daisy; one of the Dandelions; Gorse; Groundsel; Hairy bittercress; a female Hazel flower – a tree, I know, but I couldn’t resist the dash of pink; Herb Robert; Ivy-leaved toadflax; Lesser celandine – quite a lot of these flowering now; perhaps one of the Hawkweeds; Primrose; Red valerian; Snowdrop; one of the Sowthistles; a Speedwell species, possible Field Speedwell; an umbellifer; and the pretty pink of Winter heliotrope.

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32/366 Grey wagtails

01 Saturday Feb 2020

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cardiff Bay, Ely embankment, Grey wagtail, wagtails

Grey wagtails are tough little birds. It was blowing a gale here today, yet these small creatures were still out foraging along the water line of the Ely embankment, poking their needle-thin beaks between pebbles and, sadly, amongst the human detritus, to find the tiny invertebrates they feed on.

200201 grey wagtail (1)200201 grey wagtail (2)

It amazes me that such small birds can fly so well in gusty conditions yet, with a flash of their bright yellow underbellies and a blast of their cheery call, they seemed to move further along the stony shore with ease.

200201 grey wagtail (3)

Two of the birds pictured here are from today, the other three are photos taken during recent walks along this same path, as I’m always happy to pause and watch these cheery little bobbers.

200201 grey wagtail (4)200201 grey wagtail (5)

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31/366 Empty pincushions

31 Friday Jan 2020

Posted by sconzani in insects, nature, plants

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Bedeguar gall wasp, British galls, Diplolepis rosae, gall on dog-rose, gall wasps, galls, Robin's pincushion

Robin’s pincushions are the amazing gall structures created on Dog roses by the larvae of Diplolepis rosae, the Bedeguar gall wasp.

200131 Robins pincushions (1)

I’ve seen the bright red galls many times during the summer months but I’ve not looked for them in the winter, so it was interesting today to find these and to see the very obvious holes where the adult wasps have hatched out. If it hadn’t been raining, I would have broken one off and brought it home for a closer look inside … maybe next week.

200131 Robins pincushions (2)

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30/366 Fascinating fasciation

30 Thursday Jan 2020

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, wildflowers

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

British wildflowers, dandelion, dandelion flower, fasciated, fasciation, wild words

I’ve posted about this phenomenon before (see Wild word: fasciated, back in July 2018) but, as some of you may not have been following me back then, I thought it was worth repeating, especially as I’ve found such a magnificent example.

200130 fasciation (1)

So, this Dandelion stem and flower are fasciated, i.e. both parts of the plant exhibit an abnormal fusion which has resulted in a flattening of their structure. In this particular case, it almost appears as if three separate stems and flowers have fused into one.

200130 fasciation (2)

I couldn’t resist the alliteration in the title as my spellchecker kept changing fasciated to fascinated – what a difference an ‘n’ makes!

200130 fasciation (3)

 

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29/366 Cladonia lichen

29 Wednesday Jan 2020

Posted by sconzani in lichen, nature

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

British lichen, Cladonia lichen, Cladonia species

One of the Cladonia lichen species is the food of Reindeer but I doubt this is it, though I don’t actually know which Cladonia species this is. As you can perhaps guess from the snippet of sign showing in my photo, the lichen was growing well on a signpost at the Wildlife Trust reserve I visited today. The brownish blobs on the tops of some cups are where the spores of these attractive lichen develop.

200129 cladonia lichen (1)

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28/366 Blossoming Blackthorn

28 Tuesday Jan 2020

Posted by sconzani in flowers, nature, winter

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

blackthorn, Blackthorn blossom, Cosmeston, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Spring blossom

Despite being caught twice in freezing hail showers, I had a lovely walk today, and part of the reason is because I saw my first Blackthorn blossoms for 2020. As Blackthorn flowers appear before the leaves (in contrast to Hawthorn, where the leaves appear first), this hedge along the roadside at Cosmeston Lakes Country Park still looks lifeless and barren.

200128 blackthorn (1)

In fact, the brown branches and twigs were dotted here and there with white buds and occasional fully open blossoms. Spring is coming!

200128 blackthorn (2)
200128 blackthorn (3)
200128 blackthorn (4)
200128 blackthorn (5)
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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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