Showing posts with label sawfly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sawfly. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 28, 2024

Birch sawfly


 At first glance I thought this was a bee, resting on a gorse flower - then I noticed those club-tipped antennae, the un-beelike way it held its wings and its lethargic behaviour. It's a dark birch sawfly Trichiosoma lucorum, one of the club-horned sawflies. Its larvae feed on birch leaves.


I found it in this gorse thicket, with birches nearby, on the north bank of the river Derwent at Blanchland in Northumberland.



Friday, June 27, 2014

Bugs at Low Burnhall

Low Burnhall is a Woodland Trust reserve just south of Durham city, with new tree planting to link up fragments of ancient woodland. It will take a while to produce a continuous woodland canopy but in the meantime the existing woodland and large areas of open grassland are home to a wide range of interesting insects species.




































Our best find on this visit was this handsome wasp beetle, Clytus arietis, an amazing example of mimicry. It not only looks like a wasp, it moves like a wasp too, with the same jerky walk. No sting, perfectly harmless. Breeds in decaying wood - we found it close to the rotting fallen branches of an old willow.























Our visit coincided with the hatching of scores of five-spot burnet moths.



































Unhatched .....



































..... and hatched five-spot burnet cocoons















Newly emerged five-spot burnets mating



































Possibly the shortest courtship ever - these two five-spot burnets emerged simultaneously from the upper and lower cocoon and mated immediately






















There were plenty of newly-emerged ringlet butterflies around. They even fly in light rain.



































A very unlucky large skipper, caught by a spider. Maybe the two froghoppers will be luckier when they emerge from their cuckoo spit.



































The caterpillar of the Timothy tortrix moth Aphelia paleana, which feeds on a wide range of plants including docks and plantains, as well as Timothy grass. Thanks to Colin Duke for identifying this for me, via the excellent iSpot web site



































A capsid bug - I think this is the cock'sfoot bug Leptopterna dolobrata























A sawfly, which I think is a Tenthredo species , feeding on buttercup nectar
















Forest shieldbug, Pentatoma rufipes, on an oak leaf.




















Kentish snail Monacha cantiana, found inside a curled-up hogweed leaf. Thanks to Martyn John Bishop and Steve Gregory for identifying this for me, also via the excellent iSpot web site



Monday, June 9, 2014

Exploring the undergrowth


I spent a couple of hours last week, on a warm, humid afternoon, exploring the undergrowth at Deepdale Nature Reserve in Barnard Castle. The boggy ground on either side of the footpath was overgrown with butterburr leaves, meadowsweet, vetches, red campion and docks and was seething with insects and spiders.  These are a few that I managed to capture on camera. 



































Earwig  - for more about earwigs click here



































Female scorpionfly


Male scorpionfly - for more about scorpionflies click here


















The beautifully iridescent green dock leaf beetle  - for more about this species click here
















A sawfly that I haven't managed to ID for sure yet - for more sawflies click here 



A spider, Tetragnatha extensa, with a golden abdomen. For more spiders click here.



































A very bug-eyed mayfly - possibly Ephemera danica. For more on mayflies click here.



































A common green capsid bug Lygocoris pabulinus - for more on capsid bugs click here
















A staphylinid beetle stretching its wings....


















..... curling up its tail in characteristic defensive mode ....
















..... and with its wings packed away, showing the extremely short wing cases. For more staphylinid beetles click here



Saturday, June 7, 2014

Garden visitors

Some recent garden insect visitors during the last week. Thanks to Africa Gomez, author of the always fascinating BugBlog for IDing some of these for me.























I think this hoverfly, that had a conspicuously loud buzz and frequently returned to the same sunny spot when disturbed, is a narcissus fly Merodon equestris. Probably its larvae are even now feeding on our daffodil bulbs.


I think this is a small cuckoo bee (Nomada sp.?) visiting a Welsh poppy




An azure damselfly that hatched from our garden pond - didn't know until then that they were breeding there
























A large hoverfly, identified for me by Africa Gomez as Myathropa florea



































A sawfly Arge ustulata, whose larvae feed on the leaves of various hedgerow trees and shrubs


Two froghopper larvae that were inadvertently separated from their frothy 'cuckoo spit' when I was weeding the garden. They quickly blew some more bubbles.



































An exquisitely metallic hoverfly soldier fly with interference colours in its eyes (thanks to Africa Gomez for the ID)























The solitary bee Osmia rufa collecting pollen and nectar from the poached egg plant Limnanthes douglasii. You can see here how they collect pollen on the underside of their abdomen. Thanks to Africa Gomez for the correct ID.

























Thursday, May 29, 2014

Sawfly larva


Twitter can be a wonderful resource. Within half an hour of posting a request for help in identifying this sawfly larva, it had been identified by @SK53onOSM and Colin Perkins (@PershoreColin) as Apethymus serotinus.

For pictures of the adult insect, visit this blog




It exhibited typical sawfly larva behaviour when I gave it a gentle prod ....




........ curling itself up into a spiral.
























The key distinction between a lepidopteran (butterfly or moth) caterpillar and a sawfly caterpillar lies in the number of legs: both have three pairs of true legs at the front but lepidopteran larvae only have four pairs of prolegs behind, whereas sawfly larvae have six or more pairs of prolegs. 

Friday, July 16, 2010

Gooseberry sawfly


A few weeks ago, when I photographed these little hymenopterans - each about five millimetres long - I knew the pattern of events that was about to unfold in our garden.


These are gooseberry sawflies that were busy mating and looking for somewhere to lay their eggs.


 They're attractive little insects, but when they hatch their larvae....
  

... have a phenomenal ability to defoliate gooseberry bushes. These six bare leaf stalks were fine healthy leaves the day before this photo was taken...... 


 ....before the gooseberry sawfly larvae got to work.


Last year I posted on the Solomon's seal sawflies that breed in the garden and lay their eggs on their host plant in early May. They're back this year and here are their larvae at work. They are highly organised defoliators, perhaps sticking together for mutual safety. When they are tiny they just strip layers of tissue from the understide of leaves and so pass unnoticed, but when they get to this size you can almost see the leaves disappear as you watch.


 This is insect teamwork in action.

I could, I suppose, follow the advice in gardening books and take drastic measures to wipe them out but the Solomon's seal sawfly population has been established in the garden for about a decade or so and the larvae only make serious inroads into the plants long after they have finished flowering. They haven't prevented the Solomon's seal from thriving and spreading a little further every year. As for the gooseberry sawfly, well that only gets into its stride once the fruits are well on the way to ripening - and there are only so many gooseberries that it's wise for a human to eat anyway. And as the old saying goes, 'it's an ill wind that blows nobody any good' - the sawfly larvae provide a food source for many of the garden birds.

Friday, July 2, 2010

Scorpion Without a Sting in its Tail



This, above and below, is a male scorpion fly Panorpa communis, with the characteristic turned-up tail that gives it it's name - but which is a piece of equipment for mating rather than defensive armament.





........ and here's the female, the object of his desires. Sadly, he never got the chance to consummate the relationship, because as I watched ....


...... she was grabbed and eaten by this predatory sawfly, which I think is Rhodogaster viridis.

A small everyday tragedy in the undergrowth.