Neliocarus nebulosus
I also ended up with another Anthobium type, though this one looks good for A. unicolor.
And a small Carabid proved to be Bradycellus verbasci - nice to see one out in the wild rather than piled up in the moth trap. I decided to have another go at carding, seeing as I had the specimens albeit they were all significantly smaller than the first lot I tried. I'd had a read on Mark Telfer's website and decided in for a pound ....
Slightly better attempts I reckon, aside from the badly snipped card (which I can re-snip a bit) and the keen-eyed will note a blob of glue on the Bradycellus that I hope I can remove - it doesn't look so obvious without flash. I've ordered some proper mounting boards and think with a few more goes I can get somewhere near presentable!
Also amongst the specimens was this ladybird.
Rhyzobius litura
The bugs proved to be Nabis ferus, more Drymus sylvaticus and Peritrechus
One that I can't ID at all so far is this moth caterpillar - proleg arrangements suggests Geometridae but no idea which, and it's not eating the grass I found it in so it's a catch-22 - need to rear to ID, can't rear without ID ....
4 comments:
Skev, for your larva try reg Fry's caterpillars.
It seems you have the bug Mark, great Blog keep it going!
Nice carding! Not seen that weevil yet, as you say amazing eyes
Thanks Edward, yes aware of that site and I use it especially when I have a suspect ID to check, but not quite so easy to trawl through speculatively. As it happens my pre-ordered copy of the new guide arrived today and I sorted it quickly - Green Carpet.
Thanks Martin & Martin - I'm well up for getting out and about now, feeling better than I have for a long while, just need a decent warm dry spell.
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