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~ a celebration of nature

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Tag Archives: beetle

Beetle: Grammoptera ruficornis

30 Wednesday Jul 2025

Posted by sconzani in insects

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Tags

beetle, British beetles, British insects, British longhorn beetles, Grammoptera ruficornis, Longhorn beetle

This is one of two new longhorn beetles I’ve found recently, not because I was specifically searching for them, just pure happenstance. (The second species will appear here on Saturday.)

This first is quite small for a longhorn beetle, is a dull brown and has wing cases covered in silken hairs, which, as you can see, make it look quite shiny. Adult longhorn beetles feed on the pollen and nectar of flowers, in the case of Grammoptera ruficornis, the flowers of Hogweed and Hawthorn in particular. The Naturespot website entry for this beetle warns that there are three similar-looking longhorns but, fortunately, the other two species are rarely seen and there are particular features of their antennae that can be used to separate the species.

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A Wasp beetle

03 Saturday May 2025

Posted by sconzani in insects

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beetle, beetle that mimics a wasp, British beetles, Clytus arietis, Wasp beetle

Some of the creatures I encounter when leaf fossicking are off in the blink of an eye and I get no more than a tantalising glimpse of something intriguingly colourful disappearing into the undergrowth. For a horrible moment this morning, I thought that was going to be the case when I spotted the stripey underbelly of this Wasp beetle (Clytus arietis) heading behind a leaf.

Luckily for me, it re-emerged on the other side, then proved remarkably tolerant of me and my camera as I took lots of photos. I’ve only seen this wasp-mimicking beetle once before and that was back in 2016, so I was particularly pleased it proved co-operative for me today.

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Flea beetle

01 Friday Sep 2023

Posted by sconzani in insects

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

beetle, British beetles, Flea beetle, Sphaeroderma species

This ruddy creature is my first ever Flea beetle but, just as with my recent new leafhopper, I haven’t been able to put a specific name to it. There are two very similar species, Sphaeroderma rubidum and Sphaeroderma testaceum, and, though the UK Beetles website maintains that ‘they are easily distinguished, with a little experience, by sight; the colour and shape being unique’, I don’t have the necessary experience.

230901 flea beetle (1)

The website explains:

Body strongly rounded, often almost circular, pronotum very strongly narrowed from the base and very finely punctured. 2.3-3.5 mm.  –  S. rubidum
Body less strongly rounded, slightly but distinctly elongate, the pronotum less strongly narrowed from the base and more strongly punctured, especially towards the basal margin. 2.5-4.2 mm.  –  S. testaceum

230901 flea beetle (2)

Without seeing the two beetles side by side or, perhaps, knowing in advance specifically what to look for, I find myself unable to identify the beetle I found.

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As busy as a beetle

19 Saturday Mar 2022

Posted by sconzani in insects

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beetle, British beetles, busy as a beetle

An idiom we often use to describe someone who has a lot to do is ‘as busy as a bee’ but have you ever watched a beetle going about its everyday chores? They can be just as busy as bees.

220319 beetle

With over 4000 species of beetle in Britain, it’s almost impossible to identify them with examining their genitals (!), so I haven’t even tried to put a name to this little one. I simply enjoyed watching the sun catch its glimmering carapace as it beetled busily along.

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181/366 Spot the beetle

29 Monday Jun 2020

Posted by sconzani in insects, nature, wildflowers

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

beetle, British beetles, Rutpela maculata, Spotted longhorn beetle, umbellifer flowers, umbellifers

This Spotted longhorn (Rutpela maculata) was happily minding its own business, feeding on the umbellifer flowers growing along the edge of a woodland ride, as is its wont, when …

200629 spotted longhorn (1)

Incoming!

200629 spotted longhorn (2)

And so the necessity of life as a beetle takes over, the need to reproduce, to continue the species. Lunch might have to wait.

200629 spotted longhorn (3)

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The peace of wild things

29 Thursday Jun 2017

Posted by sconzani in nature, plants

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beetle, beetle in equisetum, Equisetum, Peace of wild things, Wendall Berry poem

170629 Peace of wild things

When despair for the world grows in me
and I wake in the night at the least sound
in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be,
I go and lie down where the wood drake
rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.
I come into the peace of wild things
who do not tax their lives with forethought
of grief. I come into the presence of still water.
And I feel above me the day-blind stars
waiting with their light. For a time
I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.

~ Wendell Berry (1934 – ), American poet, novelist and environmental activist

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The photo-bombing beetle

03 Sunday Jul 2016

Posted by sconzani in fungi, insects, nature

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

beetle, fungus, inkcap, insect photobomber, mossy log, Red-headed Cardinal beetle, Rhydypennau Wood

During yesterday’s walk to the stunning wildflower meadows neighbouring Cardiff’s Llanishen Reservoir, I detoured through Rhydypennau Wood to see what fungi might be about. There wasn’t a lot but I spotted some inkcaps sprouting amongst the moss on a fallen log so thought I’d get some photos.

160703 photobombing beetle (1)

The camera was out, I was kneeling in the leaf litter, leaning on the log, and had just taken my first shot when …

160703 photobombing beetle (2)

‘Oi, lady photographer leaning all over MY mossy log, I’m coming through!’, squeaked the Red-headed cardinal beetle.

160703 photobombing beetle (3)

It tootled along the log, through my shot, over MY inkcaps, and on its merry way.

160703 photobombing beetle (4)

And it left me laughing in its wake. Best photo bomb ever!

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The Cardinal wears red

29 Sunday May 2016

Posted by sconzani in insects, nature

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

beetle, Pyrochroa serraticornis, Red-headed Cardinal beetle

160529 Cardinal beetle (1)

May I respectfully introduce to you His Eminence the Red-headed Cardinal beetle (Pyrochroa serraticornis), gloriously clad in his scarlet attire – no green camouflage for this prominent member of the insect congregation. He’s clever: the bright red colour is a ruse to fool potential predators into thinking he’s toxic. He’s a predator himself: he snacks on flying insects not herbage. Unlike his Christian counterpart, he’s common: he can be found throughout Britain. His diocese is the woodland edge, where he has a particular liking for rotting stumps, though he’s also partial to long periods of sunbathing on large leaves.

160529 Cardinal beetle (2)
160529 Cardinal beetle (3)
160529 Cardinal beetle (4)
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The blood spewer

07 Sunday Feb 2016

Posted by sconzani in insects, nature, nature photography

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

beetle, Blood spewer beetle, Bloody-nosed beetle, British beetle, Brynna Woods

With a name like blood spewer, you might expect this post to be about some gigantic ravaging beast, but no! This is a beetle, large for a beetle at 2cm long, but nevertheless slow and bumbling and flightless and harmless, and really rather delightful, with body parts of a very pretty, slightly metallic-looking blue-purple-black. We found it amongst the bracken during a walk through Brynna Woods, in East Glamorgan, earlier this week.

160207 bloody nosed beetle (6)

Timarcha tenebricosa, or the bloody-nosed beetle, as it is more commonly known, gets its gruesome name from a defence strategy it has developed in response to predators. When threatened, it discharges small globules of unsavoury red fluid from its mouth. It seems we weren’t perceived as threatening, as this little creature didn’t perform its party trick for us.

160207 bloody nosed beetle (4)

This is a leaf beetle, most often seen during the spring and summer months in grassy areas, in hedgerows and on heathland in Britain and in southern and central Europe. It is particularly partial to nibbling on the plant Lady’s bedstraw, and has the most amazing-looking segmented antennae and lower legs, as you can see in my photos. Ours was a charming and colourful encounter on a rather grey day.

160207 bloody nosed beetle (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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