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NORWICH: Hurrah the fly up the window is a windowfly

Early July 2021

A couple of other interesting sightings from around Norwich. An emergence of flies in an old building is perhaps not unusual from time to time, but having seen a post online featuring something similar I realised that these particular flies were relatives of the soldierflies, and in an age with increasingly silly vernacular names being invented for books*, I was happy to find out they were called House Windowflies. The second species pictured here is a bug, Atractotomus mali, associated with Hawthorn or Apple.


* The logic of creating vernacular names is that learning the scientific ones puts people off learning groups of species that don't have vernacular names, and can thererfore make branches of natural history 'elitist' (although for this argument to be true, elite presumably means anyone who has taken time learning the names) and that people are more likely to care about things that they can name, which probably is probably true. There are however, some problems with this approach:

1) Personally I think the main thing discouraging people from learning about flies, beetles etc, is that there are thousands, many look very similar, no definitive field guide and many require dissection or microscopic analysis, rather than they have unfamiliar names

2) Quite a lot of these names are invented by one person (e.g. a field guide writer) and there is nothing to stop a different author also coming up with a completely different set of names, creating more confusion. Fungi is a notable exception, where a panel sat down together to come up with names for about 1000 species. Not all of the names are great, but at least they were agreed by consensus.

3) The best way of learning a new group is to go to events with experts and be shown things, yet most experts will have already learned the thousands of scientific names and are unlikely to be aware, or want to learn, thousands more made-up ones, that may or may not catch on. This actually risks creating a greater divide between the experienced and beginners.

Anyway, hobbyhorse stabled for now.

NORWICH: A selection of invertebrates (and a fungus) from Train Wood

Early July 2021

A very productive walk home via Train Wood led to sightings on an interesting chrysomelid beetle on St John's Wort and I finally managed to find a smut fungus that several other people had been noticing on False Oat Grass recently. A big group of Peacock caterpillars on nettles was nice to see too.

Dichrorampha petiverella
The leafhopper Eupteryx urticae and above it the psyllid Trioza urticae
Chrysolina hyperici
Ustilago avenae smut fungus
Peacock butterfly caterpillars

NORWICH: New to Norfolk - Haw Candlesnuff fungus

28th June 2021

Ending a good month for local wildlife sightings, I noticed some small white spikes growing by the path at Lakenham Way. They seemed to be localised beneath a single Hawthorn bush, and further investigation showed that they were growing on old buried Hawthorn berries. Fortunately Suffolk county fungus recorder Neil Mahler recalled an old journal article about them, Haw Candlesnuff (Xylaria oxycanthae). New to Norfolk, and an unusual species in that they seem to fruit in mid-summer and I've not noted them here despite walking this way into the city regularly for many years.




NORWICH: Goniglossum wiedermanni

24th June 2021

Another work commute highlight. A solitary bee associated with White Bryony has recently colonised Norfolk, and I was checking bryony flowers for it. I still haven't found it yet, but did find a fly associated with Bryony that is arguably better looking than the bee - Goniglossum wiedermanni.



NORWICH: Parasitised Mullein moth caterpillar

17th June 2021

On the way home from work I checked some Mullein plants and noticed the caterpillars of the Mullein moth. I've seen loads of these (although still not an adult moth), but also noticed that a couple of them were small and orange. I recognised the general appearance as having been 'mummified' by a type of parasitic wasp. I reared the wasp through, and it as identified online as an Aleiodes species. I then got in touch with national expert Mark Shaw, who asked for the wasp and the mummified caterpillar to be sent to him with a view to adding it to the collection at Edinburgh museum. When conditions allow it might be DNA barcoded, but his assumption is that it is likely to be Aleiodes leptofemur.



WHITLINGHAM: June WeBS cout and Tobacco-coloured Longhorn Beetle

June WeBS count 

Mute Swan - 78. Two families noted, one with one cygnet and another with two cygnets 

Canada Goose - 59. No young noted. It appears there was one brood hatched, but these were assumed predated at some point. 

Greylag Goose - 164. Only three of this years young noted. Carrion Crow predation of young goslings was seen this year - could it account for the loss of more broods? 

 Egyptian Goose - 50. Includes broods of two and three of this years young. 

Elsewhere Garden Warbler still in song and four Common Terns still present. A nice scattering of invertebrates, the highlight of which was a Tobacco-coloured Longhorn Beetle, previously recorded at Whitlingham but a new species for me.

NORWICH: Mousehold heath - a June invertebrate selection

There is a rare case-bearing moth, Coleophora saturatella, that feeds on Broom, so now and again I like to check the plants at Mousehold in the hope of finding it there. As expected by now I didn't find it, but there were plenty of other interesting things, some associated with Broom, but others more generalist.

Andrion regensteinense
Ditropis pteridis
Green Tiger Beetle
Common Damselbug (Nabis rugosus)
Norfolk Hawker - a common species in the broads but it seemed strange seeing one up on the heath
Prosternon tesselatum, a species of click beetle.

NORWICH AREA: A range of insects on Common Mallow

I've fallen completely behind with blog updates, so will now try to lump some similar things together in order to get uptodate by the summer.

A few years back I was sent a link to a publication called Beetle News, which had an article about the types of weevils you can get on Common Mallow. There are four, two rather similar ones and two that are easy to identify. At various points during June and July I kept having a look at mallow plants around the city, and eventually found all four species. There is also a rare one found on Marsh Mallow that I have been  shown in the past at Minsmere, whilst a sixth species occurs on Hollyhocks but hasn't yet been found in Norfolk.

Pseudapion rufirostre - a blackish weevil with orange legs. The third commonest of the four locally, but still found fairly frequently when searched for.
Malvapion malvae. Grey at the front, yellowy-brown at the back, so distinctive when found on Mallow (apparently there are a few similar species on other host plants, but not that are likely to occur nearby). The second commonest of the four species around Norwich from the plants I checked.
Aspidapion radiolus. A black weevil with grooved elytra (wingcases) and a textured pronotum. When looked at carefully there is no groove between the eyes. By far the commonest of the four encountered, but until you get your eye in it does need examination under a hand lens or a really good photo to check the groove is absent and eliminate A. aeneum.
Aspidapion aeneum. Similar to the above species, but the elytra are less grooved, it is slightly wider and metallic blue rather than black. When looked at closely it has a groove between the eyes. Whilst possibly overlooked as A. radiolus (weevils typically drop off the plant into the udnergrowth when you go for a closer look!) it appears to be the scarcest of the four weevils around Norwich based on my observations.

The same article also mentions two flea beetles that occur on Common Mallow, Podagrica sylvestris (which as orange legs) and P. fuscipes (which has black). I've not found either yet, but Stewart Wright found P. sylvestris in his garden on the day of a fungus foray and showed me.


Whilst checking Hollyhocks in a garden centre, I also found a mallow-feeding leafhopper Eupteryx atropunctata for good measure.


THORPE MARSHES: A range of beetles and a rare case-bearer

Early June 2021

A couple of hours at Thorpe Marsh turned out to be very profitable for invertebrates. Dolerus aericeps, a sawfly associated with horsetails, was found on the permissive path, and was followed by a succession of 'new' beetles. Firstly the weevil Notaris scirpi, then whilst looking for Spotted Marsh ladybirds I noticed a peculiar-looking Monoceros Beetle, which was trumped shortly after by an Ant Beetle.




Whilst not as spectacular, in recording terms these were all trumped by a Coleophora larva, which Rob Edmunds identified as Sandy Case-bearer (Coleophora lithargyrinella), the first Norfolk record since 1874. Interestingly both this species and Monoceros Beetle are often found in drier, sandy habitats, but were present here at the edge of the grazing marsh.


NORTH NORFOLK: Natural Surroundings Rhagium mordax

Early June 2021

After over a year of avoiding busy places we now have a backlog of places to visit, and near the top of the list was Natural Surroundings at Bayfield. We took Margaret and had lunch before a good look around the grounds. A plant I didn't recognise was growing in the woodland near the car park, which was identified by Andy Musgrove as Fringecups. The undoubted wildlife highlight of the visit though was a longhorn beetle, Rhagium mordax, found by Cathy. For some reason this species has a slightly alien look about it and has long been on my target species list.



WHITLINGHAM: Early June insects

Early June 2021

A couple of early month visits to Whitlingham were pleasant but mainly social visits with others. Insect highlights included Anasimyia lineata, a 'beaked' hoverfly, Denticollis linearis (a click beetle) and Trypeta zoe, a leaf-mining fly.




CENTRAL NORFOLK: Buxton Heath spider wasps

30th May 2021

Buxton Heath is one of our favourite places to go for an afternoon walk, and even a family stroll down the main path along the heathland usually turns up something new. That was certainly the case on this occasion, where we must have seen about 20 Black-banded Spider Wasps, including one returning to a prey spider left motionless on the path. The spider Trachyzelotes pedestris was another new one for me, as was the beetle Onthophagus similis and leaf mines of the Pale Feathered Bright moth (Incurvaria pectinea). Throw in good views of Linnet, Stonechat and Yellowhammer, plus a flyby Cuckoo, and it was an eventful visit.





WHITLINGHAM: May WeBS - crow predation of Greylag gosling.

23rd May 2021

The May WeBS count got off to a dramatic start, as whilst counting the geese on the beach area a Carrion Crow picked up a Greylag gosling and flew off with it, flying across the path in front of me and dropping it onto the barn meadow, where it proceeded to kill and eat it! Whilst the Carrion Crows are an ever present in this area I had never actually seen them take a gosling before (and it wasn't a newly hatched one either). Since posting this observation on Twitter another observer told me that she had seen the same thing, and that actually the crows seem to have developed a technique for coralling the young against the shore. This could partly accout for the seemingly low number of fledged goslings this year.

Other than the gosling predation there wasn't too much of note, a brood of 6 cygnets had hatched and six Common Terns were present, whilst four Tufted Ducks were the only non-Mallard ducks. There was a good range of insects seen, including Aglaostigma fulvipes, a fairly common sawfly but a new one for the site, and a Stonefly (unfortunately not able to identify it to species level).




NORWICH: Mid May periwinkle fungi

Mid May 2021

The highlight of this weeks wanderings was to finally catch up with Subterranean Clover growing in Earlham Cemetery. Having initially walked past a large patch of it, Ian Senior was able to point out that I had almost been standing on a patch. Closer to the city I noticed some Greater Periwinkle with fungi on the leaves, which turned out to be a whole community of a mildew, Golvinomyces vincae, a rust Puccinia vincae and a parasitic fungus growing on the rust, Tuberculina sbrozzii

 






A couple of aphids were also of interest, Acyrthosiphon pisum on Broom and Callipterinella calliptera on Birch.




WHITLINGHAM: Missed Tern, new sawfly.

16th May 2021

Following the amazing find of a Caspian Tern at UEA Broad, Justin Lansdell managed to see the same bird briefly at Whitlingham. Unfortunately it didn't seem to take a liking to the latter site, heading along the broad and back to UEA. I given this flying about I spent an hour or so at Whitlingham in the hope that it would return, but sadly it didn't. Whilst there I noted a brood of six Canada goslings and three Greylag goslings, whilst the sawfly Monsoma pulverentum was new for me, and St George's Mushroom (Calocybe gambosa) was new for the site.