The way I have been updating this blog seems to have become just an annual thing these days. However, I do still visit the woods at every possible opportunity to soak up the undoubted mental lift it offers.
It's funny though, how as my eyesight worsens with creeping senility, I am seeing more and more bugs!
Here's an example...
Yes! This Comma butterfly was actually nothing more than dead plant matter.
And then there are the times when you miss your target altogether...
Missed the bugger! |
Well at least I still have most of my faculties: I keep them locked away in a box at home!
Let's then swing from the ridiculous to the sublime; after decades of photographing and recording the invertebrates of Comfort's Wood, it is a rare thing to be able to add a new species to the long list.
But...on the 25th of May this year, I spotted something very exciting. I'll share its scientific/Latin name first, and while you are figuring out how to pronounce it, I'll add a few images.
'Agapanthia villosoviridescens'
It's just possible that they are closer to emerging, or that they are a different species; but I don't like the colour of this clutch. When I have found them looking like this previously, it has been the work of a parasitic wasp.
And a large, female Horsefly...
Then an Oak bush-cricket (Meconema thalassinum}
Finally, I think this is a Pea-weevil. But it was smaller than any I have found before.
My next visit to the woods was on Friday May 30 when I found this Vapourer moth larva...
And this Oak leafhopper nymph (Lassus lanio)
My final visit to Comfort's Wood for this update took place just a few days ago on June 11th.
Another Vapourer larva was my first sighting this time. In a different part of the woods, and so not the same one that I saw on May 30
Swiftly followed by this Coxcomb-prominent larva...
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