Showing posts with label empid fly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label empid fly. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 1, 2016
Flies that might have come from the Garden of Earthly Delights
I'm sure I've seen some of the flies below amongst the nightmare monsters in a Hieronymus Bosch's Garden of Earthly Delights .......
You know the painting?
By Hieronymus Bosch (circa 1450–1516) - GalerĂa online, Museo del Prado., Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=45147809
A vision of hell, with all sorts of weird creatures from the medieval imagination, like this .....
... and this .......
... so some of these would fit in well in this improbably bestiary
Empid fly Empis digramma. Preys on other flies using those piercing, downward-pointing mouthparts
Snipe-fly Rhagio scolopaceus. rests head-down, then catches other flies in mid-air
Snipe-fly eyes
Scorpion-fly Panorpa germanica
Crane-fly
Drone-fly
Photographed along a short stretch of riverbank at Wolsingham in Weardale
Friday, June 15, 2012
Teesdale in early June.........
In early June the meadows in the middle part of the dale, around Middleton-in-Teesdale, are full of buttercups, while...
... the hawthorn blossom beside the riverbank footpaths is just past its peak.
In the middle of the river this fledgling dipper has been parked on a stone by its parents that are away collecting food, though it looks like it could feed itself.
This young rabbit was using a coltsfoot leaf for cover but ....
... it would have done better to run for the dense stand of butterbur leaves that could hide a hundred rabbits.
Upstream of Middleton-in-Teesdale, on the way to Bowlees, there are globe flowers blooming on the riverbank, alongside the white umbels of pignut.
You can hear a spotted flycatcher's beak snap shut when it catches a fly ..... and there are plenty of those around, including .....
... dungflies that are plentiful wherever there is livestock grazing in the fields and ....
..... empid flies that use nectaries of wood crane'sbill flowers are fuel stations.
The wet weather hasn't been kind to bees and this little solitary bees resting on an oak leaf looked bedraggled. Can anyone help with an ID?
Hay rattle is coming into bloom in the hay meadows .....
..... and mountain pansy Viola lutea is flowering well. The epithet lutea means yellow but pure yellow pansies are in the minority - most have variable amounts of purple in their petals and this has a hint of it in the petal tips.
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