
Chalk downland herbs
You've saved me some typing!Hoggers wrote:Great day out at Bookham Common ( today 26th June ) - Three Purple Emperors put on a wonderful display of acrobatics ; Silver- Washed Fritillaries and White Admirals almost everywhere we looked; and some very accommodating Purple Hairstreaks posing for photographs.
Many thanks to Gibster who showed us around- much appreciated.
I saw several new Holly Blues yesterday (26th) around my local patch just west of Heathrow, and more today. Here's one sucking up minerals from a damp patch of ground.dilettante wrote:I saw a Holly Blue in my garden yesterday (South Cambs, 26 June). it looked in very good condition, so I assume it's 2nd brood, but it's a bit early for that, isn't it?
Matsukaze - when I was younger, about 20 years ago there used to be an impressive chalkhill blue colony on Stoke Camp. Is it still there?matsukaze wrote:Still plenty of Small Blues out at Stoke Camp; they have been out a while as they are no longer very blue...but still very small.
Thanks Mike. I had my doubts about it being a dragonfly, though I'm sure you can understand my difficulty when seeing the Club tailed Dragonfly. The markings are quite similar. With your information, I think it points to a member of the Tiger Crane Fly family.MikeOxon wrote:I can start by confidently stating: definitely not a dragonfly.
This insect has only two wings, which places it firmly in the Diptera. I think I can see one of the halteres, which are the little balance weights that hind-wings evolved into in the diptera (true flies).
The abdomen shape indicates a female and the long legs and short antennae point to Crane Flies (Tipulidae). The commonest, and most likely is T. oleracea but I am not sufficiently expert to state that with confidence. The larvae of these are the notorious "leather jackets", which cause much crop destruction.
Mike
Strange that High Browns are probably past their peak here in S. Wales but I have yet to see a Grayling (they're all over the hillsides round where I live).selbypaul wrote:Spent the day in the Lake District.
Also a profusion of Grayling, must have counted 40+, never seen so many.