Tuesday 14 January 2020

Spiders, Beetles and Bugs




Not many of them, it's not my main area of interest but I always end up taking a few pictures during the year and then don't find the time to research and identify them. They usually wait until we get a wet and windy winters day when I have nothing better to do.


Three spiders, all easy to identify. An interesting area to explore but it's difficult to get decent photographs and the identification, once you get away from the more obvious ones, can be really time consuming. Perhaps I just need to have a "Big Spider Year".



Common Garden Spider - Araneus diadematus



Zebra Spider - Salticus scenicus



Green Orb-weaver - Araniella cucurbitina



Beetles and Shieldbugs next. These are really just a by-product of taking pictures of butterflies. It's just fascinating how much life exists in the vegetation but you just don't see it unless you stop and look.



Black and Yellow Longhorned beetle - Rutpela maculata



Cantharis rustica - one of the soldier beetles



Common Red Soldier Beetle - Rhagonycha fulva



Sulphur Beetle - Cteniopus sulphureus



Thick-legged Flower Beetle - Oedemera nobilis



Oedemeridae group of beetles probably Oedemera lurida


Shieldbugs I particularly like. They are relatively easy to identify and there are only around forty four species recorded in the UK. Just the right sort of number for a life list, challenging but achievable. Not sure that I want to go in for netting or hoovering though, so it would be difficult to find them all.



Hairy Shieldbug - Dloycoris Baccarum



Red-legged Shieldbug - Pentatoma rufipes



Red-legged Shieldbug - Pentatoma rufipes



Common Green Shieldbug - Palomena prasina


Came into the house on the Christmas tree and trying to get out through the double glazing



Common Green Shieldbug - Palomena prasina



Only one problem, you need to be careful not to confuse them with Squash Bugs, family Coreidae, that can look very similar. This one below the Dock Bug.



Dock Bug - Coreus marginatus


The last picture, a Harlequin Ladybird, an invasive and problematic species. It out competes our native ladybirds for food and also eats their larvae and eggs. I rarely see any other ladybirds these days.



Harlequin Ladybird -  Harmonia axyridis



More to follow with Flies and Hoverflies.




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