Wednesday 26 June 2024

rainy ringlet

 

21-06-24
It's 4pm Friday afternoon in June: what could be better than a walk round the park taking photos of all the butterflies. Only it's Scotland, so it is raining. And there are very few butterflies. Well, we had some fun but it wasn't the best conditions you could wish for. Another Summer day in Scotland. Does that ringlet actually look really depressed or am I just projecting

first meadow brown of the year avoiding the paparazzi

common spotted orchid

Mary suggested we go through Hunter's Bog. I was more for going round the stone trap below the crags but then the sun wasn't shining and the NBAs would not be there, so Hunter's Bog it was. No sign of dragonflies, but there were pond flies and damselflies. 

might be Hydrophorus
 prob more acurate to say non-specific member of Dolichopodidae

backswimmer

damselfly




Criorhina Cheilosia illustrata

I decided to get more practice with the 90mm macro lens and opted to just use that today, no long lens. The worry is something spectacular happens at a distance, a hovering kestrel or owl flying past, and I miss the whole thing or just get something tiny happening a long way away. However there was nothing spectacular at any point during this walk. Although I did find looking at flies and small things through the macro lens to be very immersive. I was in quite a grump about the weather until I lost myself pointing the camera at anything small and often quite grotty looking which turned up a few gems. Or near-gems which is the most you can hope for as the fucking rain continues to fall.

This for instance is one I haven't seen before. Google lens suggests it is Criorhina, a hoverfly that mimics a bee. Not sure why that would be advantageous. Maybe they anticipated how fashionably popular bees are with people. However a bit more googling and it looks much more like a Bumblebee Blacklet, Cheilosia illustrata. A different hoverfly bumblebee mimic. So many different species.


Dioctria rufipes. Common red-legged robber fly eating a smaller fly

This one seems a nasty piece of work - nearly every time I came across it, it had a smaller fly in its mouth. They have hard piercing mouthparts to dispatch prey and often eat parasitic wasps. Do two wrongs make a right?  It's a dog-eat-dog world.

click beetle maybe Ctenicera cuprea



nymph of Meadow Plant Bug Leptopterna


cheeky face

yellow dung fly

So I was crouched or lying on wet grass, a light drizzle falling, taking portraits of those yellow flies that you see settled on a cowflop or worse. Thinking: I am living the dream! Can things get any better?! 


depressed ringlet - no wonder
on the upside it was so miserable it didn't mind my proximity



I then noticed a thistle with a really black stem. At first I thought it was peacock caterpillars (as further below) but it was something I'm not sure I've seen before. It seemed to be ants attending to, or farming, black aphids. The latter were jammed in tight to the thistle stem and seemed to be extracting the sap, which they extruded out through their back ends. This was being collected by the ants (yeah that's not right!) who seemed to be coaxing and encouraging the aphid workforce. None of this translates well when anthropomorphised. That is, when thought of in a human perspective of exploitation and individual rights. But they are not humans they are ants and aphids. And who are we to say it doesn't all work remakably well. Like a well-oiled machine. 

After a bit of googling it seems that they have a symbiotic relationship where the ants, in exchange for the sugary honeydew the aphids produce, will protect them from predators and parasites. (Ladybirds for instance.) And who are we to question this? It was certainly fascinating to see the ants go round with great enthusiasm, coaxing and encouraging the aphids which were almost impossible to discern as anything other than a black seething mass. If the aphids have any kind of thoughts you might wonder whether they think of the ants as god-like parent figures or tyrants. I doubt they think very much. Or chat to co-workers about conditions. But it is an eye opener when you get down on your knees and poke your nose into the undergrowth what you see!




video of ants farming aphids



cluster fly - Pollenia

common froghopper Philaenus spumarius

these come in a huge variety of colourways


plume moth


There are loads of plume moths many of which look really similar to this. However I can't find one identical to help ID this further. Probably common. 



Next up: peacock caterpillars on nettles. Big clusters of black caterpillars with occasional green jobs inbetween presumably earlier instars. Again seething black masses on the stem of a plant. 



Nettle leaf glued together to form a
tortilla shelter for growing caterpillars. Esp useful in rainstorms.


While we were looking closely at small things in the long grass next to Salisbury Hill - the grassy slope we often do timed reps on, just below the Commie Pool roundabout, we saw a woman walking and running down the hill several times. We presume she was also running up it but never actually witnessed that part. As we left she was sat atop the large boulder at the bottom of the hill. Her actions - very much like a runner's - were contrary to her outfit. We suspected her of being the spirit of the solstice and this was confirmed when A/ she was wearing a handsome butterfly shawl and B/ she never once let us catch a glimpse of her face. Which just goes to show what can happen if you spend a while on the ground and then stand up too quickly.
A remarkably fun Friday evening 2 hrs even though it was also pretty rubbish.

the spirit of the summer solstice

a suggestion how this sign could be improved for royal garden parties







Tuesday 25 June 2024

wonderful wasps

 

19-06-24
An excellent day out on Wednesday the 19th. I had been waiting for a reasonably sunny day to go hunting ruby-tailed wasps along at Musselburgh Lagoons. Jimmy R had been along to see the new hides and do some bird photography and noticed there were ruby tailed wasps around the new wooden gates at the entrances to the hides. This to me was more interesting than virtually any birds. And could be combined with a trip to the other end of Levenhall to revisit the grassy paths where I'd found large skippers, common blues and burnet moths last year. I waited for a decent forecast. Mary was swithering between a long cycle and chumming me. Happily she opted for the latter. I worried slightly that if we saw very little, her enthusiasm would drop off long before mine, but happily there was so much about that we were both equally enthralled.



It is less than 7 miles to the lagoons. We went up the East side of the Esk estuary (Esktuary?) and then hard right before the cinder track. A small group of birds - starlings and goldfinches - flew up from a corner. I said to Mary that I had to stop and have a look and see what was going on. (Even though it was a distraction from the mission.) On the ground, at the edage of the tarmac path, there were a million tiny ants all scurrying this way and that. At first it looked like the birds had been feasting on them but then I noticed the starlings (we held back and let them return) were rolling and pressing their feathers on the ants. Very much encouraging them onto their feathers, rather than (just) eating them. I presume as some sort of natural pesticide or fumigation. (Ants under attack produce formic acid.) Or maybe just as a massage. (Having googled it seems the experts can't agree on the exact purpose; most think it is either a grooming aid or a pleasurable experience.) The starlings were fairly excited by the process, scratching and jumping about like it was a nippy treat. Even when they flew up into a nearby tree I could still see the silhouette of larger ants on them. (Above photo.)

strut your stuff

ooh, tickly!

ant bath! - click twice

look closely and you can see half a dozen ants covering this bird

cornflower

british racing green bottle


We cycled slowly to the first wooden gate - the entrance to the first hide (or maybe the second if you count the one to the West of the lagoons). The first of the three hides on the South side of the new ponds. It seemed unlikely we would see anything in a hurry but to my amazement there was a ruby-tailed wasp on the unvarnished wood. You have to examine all the flies and bugs as you can't really see the amazing colours until you lean in close. Because of this I have probably walked past them many more times than I have seen them. The only other place I've taken photos of them was Saltoun Big Wood. Again it was Jimmy who let me know they were there. I have never come across them in passing or by accident. Big thanks to Jimmy for flagging them up again. Interestingly Unda and Andrew also found them at the lagoons just days before - but along the sea-wall. They tend to like sandy places and old walls in sunlight. As well as wooden posts. 



We got off our bikes and leaned them on the fence. I still had the long lens on and in case it flew off never to return, I took a couple of record shots, before changing to the new macro lens. In fact there was no problem with it flying off and returning. Every time the sun disappeared so did this fantastic tiny insect. However within minutes of the sun reappearing, so did the wasp. It would patrol over the gate examining and sometimes going into the cracks in the timber. It is parasitic and so might hunt out the eggs and larvae of other insects on which to place its own. I was surprised and delighted to find one so quickly and we probably spent ages there. Just checked my gps output and it was an hour. All of the wasp photos were at this first gate in that hour.

I had been discussing them with Mairi the previous night on facebook and she had mentioned how skittish they are: she had seen some but they wouldn't sit still for a photo. I wondered if anything could be done about this. I thought they could perhaps be bribed with honey. I got a couple of small containers out and put some runny honey in one, and maple syrup in the other. I also packed wet wipes as those substances do not mix well with cameras.

Chaetocnema - insect book says 2mm or less - ie TINY

In the unsunlit gaps (maybe 50% of the time we were there?) I took photos of the other species sitting on the gate. The coarse wood was a good flat platform on which to get in close with the macro lens. I also got the honey and maple syrup out and put a couple of small drops on the timber. I expected a rush, a tiny whirlwind of bugs queuing up to feast on the sweetness but almost everything ignored it. It went undiscovered for the largest amount of time.

some sort of leaf hopper

google lens says housefly (must've been on holiday)



Then the star of the show would return and Mary and I would move in for a photo. Sometimes it ignored our approaches, other times it would fly off. They are only about 10mm long so I had to get in close to get macro shots, and I was surprised it didn't fly off as I got to within a few inches. We never saw more than one specimen at a time. I thought there was maybe 2, one seemed shy and one seemed bolder, but they are solitary wasps and not found in groups. 

I was glad of the wet wipes. I didn't spill the honey or syrup but I did lean my hand on the maple syrup droplet while I was zooming in on the RTW. Managed not to get it all over the camera. Wet wipes to the rescue!

The big insect book prefers the term Cuckoo wasps for these beasties. Chrysididae: 11 gen. 35spp. Though it admits they are sometimes known as jewel or ruby-tailed wasps. They are mostly only available down south but about 3 might happen in Scotland, the most common being Chrysis ignita which you can tell by it having 4 large evenly spaced teeth on its bum. I kid you not. I wouldn't have called them teeth so much as spikes or points but there you go. These are most likely the ones in the pictures.

4 back teeth!

someone finds the maple syrup


meanwhile this buff-tailed bumble does a Tony Montana impression



This Ectemnius wasp was also about 10mm long and had very cute big eyes. Unfortunately it wasn't keen on having its photo taken or holding still. I saw it crawl into the gap between gate timbers and waited till it came back out. Gotcha!


At this point the RTW returned and was crawling along near to the honey droplet. It found it and started eating it. Wow, success! It was there for about 20 seconds and still enough to shoot a load of photos and some stacked shots. Regular readers will know I have been practising this dark art on dead beasties at home and had set my camera to access focus bracketing should such a need arise in a hurry. Shooting hand held focus stacking outdoors is tricky as the tiniest movement will have the RTW out the frame. I think I leaned my hand on the gate and slid in for the multiple shots. It fires off 36 shots with the focus starting at the nearest point and moving in small increments to the back of the shot or the 36th, whichever comes first. I cancelled the process after about 15 as it had reached the wood at the back of the shot. In the end there wasn't a significant difference between the stacked shots and the single shots as it was bright and I could crank the aperture to f22 meaning there was a good depth of field. However it was great practise for hand held stacking with a live insect when conditions are worse and I don't have a gate to lean on. 

ruby-tailed wasp at honey drop



single shot at f22
quality lens means minimal diffraction even at f22

about 10 shots stacked - not much difference

another stacked composite image done in Helicon

single image

Ectemnius again



I was on the wrong side of the gate (shooting into the sun) when the RTW returned and rather than chase it away going through the gate, took a couple shots of it back at the honey. 

single shot

stacked image

this image gives more of an idea of what you see
when you lean in to confirm it is a RTW - they are not big

After more than an hour with our new bestie, we decided to explore elsewhere. Firstly we checked the other 2 gates to the other 2 hides along the South edge of the lagoons. Within minutes of visiting them we found another solitary wasp at each. I think we stopped for pics at gate 2, but they weren't as successful as the first lot, so moved onto gate 3. Again we were intrigued to find yet another wasp. Since we had achieved more than hoped for at the first gate we didn't hang about, as there was a feeling the sun may not either. The rest of our wish list could be waiting for us along at what I have called Levenhall in the past. The grassy trail just South East of the most Easterly lagoon. We were hoping to see large skippers, common blues and burnet moths. (And admirals, meadow browns, ringlets and anything else normally found in June.)

tiger crane fly

pupa and eggs
(ladybird or shieldbug?)



The new lagoons and hides are spectacular. The planting has bedded in nicely and with all the rain has exploded into a wilderness of wildflowers and perfect cover for a ton of biodiversity. We can't believe the council has chosen this and not opted for 400 student flats as has happened elsewhere. It makes a beautiful place to walk or cycle. The water at the lagoons was a bit scummy - that algae stuff - but otherwise it was all looking fantastic.



ringlet

I spent ages chasing a very frustrating ringlet which kept looking like it was going to land but never resting for half a second while staying in as deep grass as possible. Very frustrating! Usually after I get a half decent photo I forget about them for the rest of the season. Not a spectacular butterfly but like meadow browns, good to see and record. Especially in a year when everything has been reluctant to come out to play. 



We parked our bikes at Levenhall and began to quarter the ground, looking for butterflies. Mary headed in the opposite direction from myself. I had been super excited to see the RTWs and might have been a bit full of it and not very relaxing company. So while she disappeared over the western horizon I went East and almost immediately came upon a medium sized yellow dragonfly in the grass. It didn't zoom off which suggested it was recently emerged and drying its wings. I got a few photos but just could not work out what species it was. It was too large for a common darter and wasn't one of the local species I was familiar with. I actually got it on my hand but before I could take a photo it upped and flew off, not stopping before it cleared the horizon heading for the lagoon.

 

It is rare I am completely stumped about dragonflies because there are just not that many types flying locally. Once I got home I looked it up and worked out it was a black-tailed skimmer, an immature male before it gets a blue pruinescence very much like the broad-bodied chasers, and black tail. A species I'd never seen before. A real red letter day. Checking records for the area I see they have been recorded by Alan Brown and others at Seton ponds and maybe one or 2 other spots last year but not at the lagoons, and not this year. I was very pleased to have this appear in front of me when least expecting it.


even though many species are suffering this season, yellow shell moths have
had a bumper crop and continue to fly at near plague proportions!

a smart new large skipper (m)

when disturbed they zip around like orange darts
but will often to return to the same or nearby perch

there was just one common blue as far as we could tell
but it was in great condition







a distant hunter

 female large skippers tend to have more pronounced wing markings








There was no shortage of beautiful and exotic insects, but some of my favourite images today were of this common greenbottle. The light reflecting off its shiny back revealing 2 layers of bristles; larger and smaller, and the compound eyes. Just stuff you (meaning I) can't see without magnification. I wouldn't want them in my house but they are fabulous creatures to photo. And this one was very unfazed by my proximity, letting me get right in its face. (I took the flash off after the RTWs. It was quite a bright day and so everything at Levenhall, from the dragonfly onwards, is with the macro lens but without additional lighting. Which explains the large dark areas. When you zoom into very small things the flash fill becomes more imperative.)

The Lucilia Caesar is the most common of the greenbottles but you'd need to get out a microscope to tell with any certainty (by looking at the bristles). (This goes for all my previously (foolishly) confident IDs of Marsh Greenbottles etc. Because they all look the flippin same.) This is one of the things that is both fascinating and frustrating. It would be handy to be able to apply a label and say well that's definitely that, but so often, with 25,000 species of insect in the UK, there are going to be a few that look very similar. And (as I have proved) a little knowledge is a dangerous thing. The more I learn, the more the gaps in my knowledge seem to expand. I shall move forward, confident that I am making a complete bollocks of it, but that most people won't know the difference or care. The art background in me shouts its the pictures! Nobody cares about the names! (Except maybe the scientists and geeks?)


Tiger cranefly - Nephrotoma flavescens
not even in the big insect book!



What a day! Ruby tailed wasps, starling's antics, (thanks Mary), a brand new dragonfly, a dozen large skippers and the sun shining. Mary was nearly as excited about the insects as I was, and we were both ready to return home at the same point (not me saying oh can I just have another 15 minutes?!) I have seen RTWs at Saltoun since the 19th and they were not on good behaviour - they just flew off when I went anywhere near. So I think we got very lucky with them on the gates at the new hides. 17miles cycled and out for 5hrs. It flew by! Having so much fun I forgot to mention the homemade sandwiches. 

common spotted orchid

Platycheirus

Musselburgh Lagoons and Levenhall
Venue 1 was directly South of the most westerly lagoons
Venue 2 was S. East of the furthest East pond.