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~ a celebration of nature

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Tag Archives: Brynna Woods

Black oil beetles

12 Thursday May 2016

Posted by sconzani in insects, nature

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

beetles, black oil beetles, Brynna Woods, BugLife, Meloe proscarabaeus, oil species recovery programme

I went to Brynna Woods in search of bluebells and found beetles instead, the black oil beetle no less, Meloe proscarabaeus.

160512 Black oil beetle (3)

I was extremely lucky as oil beetles are an endangered species in Britain, with three native species already declared extinct and the remaining five under threat. The main reason for this is because their lifecycle depends on the solitary bee and changes in the way the environment is managed means bee numbers are also declining.

160512 Black oil beetle (1)

You see, oil beetles are most peculiar little critters. Their larvae strategically position themselves on flowers awaiting the arrival of solitary bees out collecting pollen and nectar. Then, using special hooks on their feet, they hitch a ride on the bees when they depart. Back in the bees’ nests, the larvae feed on the bees’ supplies of nectar and pollen, and also the bees’ eggs. The larvae continue to develop inside the bees’ nests until they emerge as adult beetles, ready to mate, lay their eggs, and begin the lifecycle all over again. No bees, no beetles!

160512 Black oil beetle (2)

With the support of Natural England, Buglife are working with the National Trust and the Oxford University Museum of Natural History on an oil beetle species recovery programme. You can read more here.

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Ancient oak in Brynna Woods

25 Thursday Feb 2016

Posted by sconzani in nature, nature photography, trees

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Ancient Oak, ancient tree, Brynna Woods

160225 brynna ancient oak (4)

Brynna Woods was once a busy coal-mining area, with up to three shafts operating and as many as 400 men toiling underground, a tramway trundling away coal and spoil, coke ovens carbonising coal, and an engine house belching out smoke. Fortunately for today’s visitors, those processes had all ceased by 1934 and the woodland has been allowed to regenerate, becoming a tranquil area for walking and wildlife watching.

160225 brynna ancient oak (2)
160225 brynna ancient oak (3)

Adjacent to the main trail in the woods there sits an old man of the forest, the aptly named Ancient Oak. Its actually age is the subject of much speculation – some say it’s 400 years old, I read in a Cardiff Naturalists’ newsletter that it’s 300, and was told by a local that it’s more likely 250 years old. And there is also speculation about whether it is one single tree or two trees that have grown together. Certainly, when you look at its trunk, you can see where the two-tree theory arose as there is a dark line of vertical bark seemingly separating the two halves of the tree. Whatever the truth, it is a stately representative of nature’s majesty that deserves to be cherished and admired and protected for future generations to enjoy.

160225 brynna ancient oak (1)

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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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