Friday, August 4, 2017

Harlequin Ladybird on the Breakfast Menu - Lackford Lakes

It was a windy day for macro shots and I had forgotten replacement batteries for the flash so difficult to get close-up shots. Here a couple of spiders wrapping their prey, Speckled Bush Crickets (very difficult to accommodate those antennae and two different wasp mimics from two very different families - first a Soldier Fly and, lastly, a Hoverfly.



Thursday, August 3, 2017

Heron, Kingfisher and Friends at Lackford Lakes

The small birds were sheltering on a very blustery day at Lackford Lakes yesterday but made up for by being able to photograph Kingfisher among the summer flowers, grumpy Heron, Great Crested Grebe with fish, pursued by its young(look at its huge paddle yellow feet) and Cormorants who didn't keep to the odd number rule for good composition.


 

Tuesday, August 1, 2017

Bee-Wolf Wasps and Other Hymenoptera at Sandy Bedfordshire

Beewolf Wasps (Philanthus triangulum) paralyse Honey Bees and bring them back to their burrows for the larvae to feed on. Various views with Bees in flight etc. There were a lot of Pantaloon Bees around digging and provisioning burrows and also large numbers of restless males buzzing around and resting on flowers. Also found the Common Spiny Digger Wasp Oxybelus uniglumis with impaled prey, Red-legged Spider Wasp with a Spider prey, an Astata boops and Epeolus spp with beautiful pink eyes.
For details of all the strange interactions see last year's post. Additional notes on these strange interactions: the Spider wasp excavates a nest burrow in loose sand. After capture, the spider is temporarily buried whilst a suitable nest burrow is excavated. The spider recovers partially after interment and wanders across the surface of the closed cell until it is finally killed by the wasp larva feeding on its abdomen. The silk laid down by the spider during this period binds together the sand grains and maintains the structure of the cell in the loose sand.





Sunday, July 30, 2017

Butterflies at Barton, Cambridgeshire: Brown Argus versus Common Blue

We enjoyed an early morning walk at Barton yesterday and was surprised by the numbers of butterflies active on the flower bank. The Common blues were busy mating and feeding in very large numbers. It was great to see the minute Brown Argus in fair numbers. Always good to confirm the ID from photographs when back.  The Brown Argus lacks any blue scales and has figure of eight spots on the hind wing; also tend to be smaller. Small Coppers and Six-spot Burnet Moths added colour to the banks. A few dragonflies were active and the two Buzzards flew over constantly.






Friday, July 28, 2017

Confiding Sedge Warbler at Rye Meads RSPB

This Sedge Warbler was busy feeding young - beaks full of crane flies and Episyrphus balteatus hoverflies were delivered along with earwigs. Other noteable sightings - five Green Sandpipers and two Little Egrets