Birds, Leps, Observations & Generalities - the images and ramblings of Mark Skevington. Sometimes.
Showing posts with label Calliphora vicina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Calliphora vicina. Show all posts

Tuesday, 21 April 2020

New Life

Another sunny but windy day spend tucked away in the now familiar office. I did pop my head out a couple of times during the day, and spotted a brief fly through Speckled Wood new for the year. I usually get odd ones through the year so hopefully will get a chance with the camera at some point.

Later in the afternoon, I spent a good hour loitering around my current favourite place - the lilac bush which seems to be the epicentre of dipteran sunbathing with the odd brief hymenopteran. Although it's getting a bit samey with several Eristalis pertinax and Epistrophe eligans still holding court and buzzing most other stuff. I managed to point the camera at a few bits but with the wind and sun the ratio of useable shots was low. Added to that, the ratio of fully identifiable stuff was low .....

Calliphora sp. (I think)

Edit: Seth has indicated this is Calliphora vicina based on the pale basicosta, although the front spiracle is not obviously bright. I think that refers to the bits labelled here ....


Thought to be an old male Andrena scotica (per Steven Falk)

Meanwhile, the garden Scarlet Lily Beetles were absolutely taking the piss. Blatantly indulging in threesomes and laying eggs all over me fritillaries ....


Much more pleasing and welcome was this female Orange-tip that had a quick sun-bathe before flitting about and landing on a cuckooflower. Trouble is that was in full sun also so I had to fanny about with the camera exposure to get anything half useable. Haven't looked properly but will check the garden plants for eggs in a couple of days and then ensure Nichola leaves them in situ. Some new life is more welcome than others ....


Otherwise I was desperate enough for images to even look at some moss and lichen .....

Wall-screw Moss

Think this bleached out fragment is Xanthoria parietina

Sunday, 9 March 2014

Croft Hill

Today was gloriously sunny, but with family chores and kids football I wasn't able to capitalise fully. The garden trap provided the first decent catch on Saturday night, and I noted a few bits in the garden late morning (first Brimstone, Small Torts and Peacock). Later this afternoon though I was free and I headed over to Croft Hill to have a mooch about. Not a cloud in the sky, and by that time it was a superb late teens temperature.

Croft Hill is a big hill overlooking a big hole

Looking north towards Huncote Embankment

I spent some time searching tree trunks and fence posts, and I managed to find a fair few inverts tempted out by the warmth, including two new beetles and a new bug for me (though I haven't managed to photograph them all yet).

Cicones undatus - a new one for me

This is a gall wasp - one to try and key through on a rainy day

Forest Bug nymph

Common Footman - found two larvae grazing on algae

Loads of 7-Spot Ladybirds about

Couldn't get a clear shot of this Tree Bumblebee - it flew off after I tried to manipulate it

Lots of flies sunning themselves on trees and fences, like this Calliphora vicina

Can't beat a bit of flowering Gorse to brighten any huge man-made hole

Here's a couple from the moth trap last night:

Grey Shoulder-knot

Clouded Drab

Monday, 7 May 2012

Super Flies

Loads of flies sunning themsleves on fence posts etc at Croft Hill yesterday, plus a good number of hoverflies on flowers and shubbery - here's a selection .....

Anthomyia procellaris, characteristically feeding on bird shit

Calliphora vicina

Tachnia fera Probably Face Fly (Musca autumnalis)

Volucella pellucens Leucozona lucorum (knew this didn't look right somehow, and completely missed that it was this smaller similar species which I haven't seen before)


Saturday, 20 August 2011

Life In The Garden 17/08/2011

WARNING - lots of photos follow of things that are not birds or moths. Or plants.

Having access to a digital camera and a wealth of on-line reference images and info, means that in this day and age it is easier than ever to become completely distracted for long periods of time, snap away at anything that moves, and identify it retrospectively. Or string it, depending on how good or bad the references are and your photographic skills ....... please let me know if anything below is more stringy than Rab C Nesbitt's vest.

Anyway, I innocently wandered into the garden on Wednesday morning to see if there were any hoverflies about, or maybe another Tree Bumblebee as last year. Before I knew it a couple of hours had passed, the camera battery was dead and I'd added 322 photos to the SD card. Most of the following are new for the garden and me (at least in the sense of trying to name them).
I'll start with hoverflies, headed up by a new one for me and the garden - newly identified thanks to the book I bought yesterday.

Myathropa florea

Volucella pellucens

Volucella inanis

Next up, true Flies. I only started taking shots of these when I noticed a garden first Mesembrina meridiana (which ironically evaded the camera) and lots of Sarcophaga sp. (which I did photograph but I've left them out this time). I grabbed a few shots of other flies, then realised one or two were different again, and before I knew it I was on a fly mission.

Calliphora vicina

Eriothrix rufomaculata

Tephritis formosa

Thaumatomyia notata?

Pollenia sp.

Neomyia viridescens

Lucilia sp.

Phaonia sp.

Face Fly (Musca autumnalis)


Before I end this overly long and illustrated post, some other bits ..

Viburnum Beetle (Pyrrhalta viburni) - destroying my Viburnum tinus

Common Flower Bug (Anthocoris nemorum)

I think this is Xanthoria parietina - a lichen living on a bit of dead Winged Spindle