Midsummer wildflowers

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I’ve made it my mission since the start of July to photograph as many blooming wildflowers as possible as I walk all the various habitats within my local patch, from coastal path to country park, former farm fields to city pavements. When I’ve tried this before I’ve counted over 50 species so even I am amazed at the total shown in today’s video – 126, and I’m sure I’ve missed some along the way. I was originally going to compile a collage of flower close-ups, hence the portrait-shaped photographs of each but, when the numbers kept on growing, I decided this slideshow video was the easiest option. I hope you enjoy the cacophony of colour!

Endangered Graylings

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When Butterfly Conservation published the last butterfly Red List for Great Britain in 2010, the Grayling (Hipparchia semele) was listed as vulnerable but, unfortunately, this butterfly experienced a 52% decrease in distribution between 2010 and 2019, and its status has now been reclassified as endangered.

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I feel privileged, then, to have enjoyed watching several of these gorgeous butterflies atop the Aberbargoed coal spoil tip last week, but also saddened to know that they too are threatened.

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Spoil tips can be dangerous places, as I’m sure many of you are aware – the horrific collapse, on 21 October 1966, of the tip at Aberfan, not very far from Aberbargoed, which resulted in the deaths of 116 school children and 28 adults, is a well known, annually commemorated tragedy.

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Though Aberbargoed’s spoil tip is mostly well anchored by the planting of trees, and a robust series of drainage channels efficiently remove rain water from the artificial hill, some bare areas remain and show the damage of heavy rain scouring their surfaces. And, though the authorities have tried to prevent it, the stability of some areas has also been undermined by the irresponsible actions of dirt-bikers using the tip as a race track.

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Judging by a series of wooden pegs dotted around the area where the Grayling colony lives, some additional stabilisation work is planned there, which could destroy the butterflies. Seeing this, I made contact with a local group trying to promote the importance of the biodiversity of colliery spoil tips, and they are following up with local authorities to try to prevent any damage to the colony. Hopefully, a compromise can be reached between the necessity of ensuring the safety of the tip and the need to conserve an endangered species of butterfly.

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Herring gull baby

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Having picked up a bottle of milk, I was coming out of my local shop when I heard the plaintive calling: ‘Feed me! I’m starving! Feed me!’

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A pair of Herring gulls seems to breed on the shop rooftop every year; last year’s single chick fledged successfully, thanks in part to the titbits of food donated to its cause by both shoppers and the shop owners feeding the parents.

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This year’s chick is already well grown, though it looked to be suffering from the heat during our mini heat wave. Let’s hope it continues to thrive.

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Alder leaf beetles

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Much to my surprise, my record of Alder Leaf Beetle (Agelastica alni) was the SEWBReC (South East Wales Biodiversity Records Centre) record of the week for week ending 12 July. I had thought these beetles were common so was a little surprised to read in SEWBReC’s social media post that ‘It is expanding its range, so any records help track its spread.’ So, I took a look at the NBN Atlas map, which shows there are few records so far in south Wales, and I also checked the UK Beetles website, which notes

It was formerly considered extinct in the UK; it was recorded a few times from widely scattered localities across England during the mid-20th century but following its rediscovery in 2004 in northwest England it has spread rapidly and it is now locally common and often abundant across the south of England and the midlands and it seems to be increasing in range and abundance.

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As well as several of the shiny blue adult beetles, my leaf-bothering had turned up lots of larvae. The UK Beetles website also gives interesting details about these tiny creatures:

females oviposit during May and June …attach groups of eggs to the underside of host foliage, usually between 50 and 70 eggs in each batch and each will lay between 200 and 250 … Larvae emerge 10-12 days later, they pass through 3 instars and are fully grown within 25-30 days; they feed communally but in the last instar disperse throughout the host plant, they are very distinctive and easily recognized; elongate and pale grey when small and shiny black as final instars.

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Brightening up the hedgerows

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Brightening up the hedgerows with the vivid orange of their upper wings, Gatekeepers (Pyronia tithonus) are a summer delight for nature-lovers.

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Over the centuries, Gatekeepers have enjoyed a range of common names, most attempts to provide a definite description of their appearance: the ‘Lesser double-eyed butterfly’ (James Petiver, Musei Petiveriani, 1695); the ‘Large heath’ (Adrian Haworth, Lepidoptera Britannica, 1803); the ‘Small meadow brown’ (George Samouelle, The Entomologist’s Useful Compendium, 1819); and ‘Hedge brown’, a name used by many since the 1800s. The name ‘Gatekeeper’ was bestowed on this beautiful butterfly by Moses Harris in his publication The Aurelian in 1766. (Naming details come from Peter Eeles’s Life Cycles of British & Irish Butterflies, 2019.)

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Two longhorns

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I’m sure many of you will have seen this first longhorn beetle, the Spotted longhorn (Rutpela maculata). Though the patterns may vary, its colourful yellow-and-black colouring is quite distinctive, and it is our most common longhorn beetle, though it doesn’t frequent the more northerly parts of Britain. Look for it along the edges of woodland rides and in hedgerows, particularly on the flowers of Hawthorn and various species of umbellifer, throughout the summer months.

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My second longhorn was a new discovery for me, once again from my recent visit to Slade Wood: this is Stenocorus meridianus (no common name). The fragmented broadleaf woodland of Slade Wood – where a lot of non-native trees have been felled in recent years to make way for native species – is the ideal habitat for this beetle, as it likes to feed on the flowers growing in sunny locations along woodland rides and on the edges of clearings. It is a large beetle, between 15 and 25mm, quite triangular in shape with its broad shoulders tapering to a more narrow apex. Its head and thorax are black (though that’s not so obvious when it’s covered in white pollen like this beastie), and the colour of its electra (wing covers) can vary from pale brown to black.

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The spinnings of Depressaria radiella

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I had found this once before, in a Cardiff Park back in July 2016, but was reminded by a post on Twitter/X to start once again checking the flower heads of Hogweed (Heracleum species) and Wild parsnip (Pastinaca sativa) for the larvae of the bland-looking little moth Depressaria radiella, the Parsnip moth.

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I wasn’t checking very thoroughly but still found two examples during my recent visit to Slade Wood, where they were living in Hogweed growing along the side of the lane that leads to the woodland. The larvae spin silk to bind parts of the flower heads together, making themselves a cosy little home amongst their food source. The UK Moths website reports that the larvae will eventually insinuate themselves into the plant stem to pupate, hatching in early Autumn and overwintering as adults, before beginning the whole lifecycle once again the following Spring.

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Heather or Ling

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Many of you will, I’m sure, be familiar with this plant, with the way it paints hillsides, heaths and moorlands in subtle shades of pink, lilac and purple when flowering, but have you looked more closely at its flowers? They are really quite beautiful. This is, of course, Calluna vulgaris, commonly known as Heather, and also Ling. As the Wildlife Trusts website reminds us

Historically, heather has been used for many purposes, such as fuel, fodder, building materials, thatch, packing and ropes. It was also used to make brooms, which is how it got its Latin name – Calluna is derived from the Greek word meaning ‘to brush’.

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An Ichneumon wasp pupa

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I was standing in front of a tall patch of nettles, moving from side to side, searching intently through the plant stems, hoping to find the chrysalis of one of the fat Peacock butterfly caterpillars I’d seen munching here just a few days previously (didn’t) when I spotted this black-and-white ‘thing’. It looked almost like a blob of poop but, when I edged cautiously closer (those bl**dy nettles sting!), I could see that it looked a bit furry. At home, some careful googling quickly turned up an identification – it’s the pupa of an Ichneumon wasp, which may well have parasitized one of those lovely fat caterpillars I had been admiring.

Parent bug mother and babies

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Leaf-bothering is quickly becoming one of my favourite things, especially when the weather isn’t good for bird-watching or spotting beautiful insects like butterflies and dragonflies. And it is most special when I turn over a leaf to see scenes like this, of a Parent bug (Elasmucha grisea) and her many babies (according to the British Bugs website, the male bug dies soon after mating while the female lives on to brood her eggs and young offspring). And these weren’t all of the Parent bug’s nymphs, as a neighbouring leaf held even more – I stopped counting at 80! At least she doesn’t have to feed them all.

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