Ashley Wicks has sent us a beautiful picture of a speckled bush cricket and a honey bee sharing an ox-eye daisy. While the bee is collecting nectar and pollen for its colony, the cricket is either just passing through or is there to eat the flower petals.

Thanks Ashley!

Tufted vetch

After all those insects, a little botany: tufted vetch (Vicia cracca) growing at the end of Lambrok Meadow.

Fig gall

Let’s end National Insect Week with a real doozy: this is a fig gall on an elm leaf in the hedge between Sleepers and Cornfield. It is caused by Tetraneura ulmi, an elm-grass root aphid with a very complicated and quite astonishing life cycle.

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A real mouthful of a name:

Xanthogramma pedissequum, the superb ant-hill hoverfly, a rarity spotted by Ian early on a spring morning in 2021 and added to our species list.

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Great Pied Hoverfly

This is one of the UK’s largest flies: a great pied hoverfly, so named for its black and white colouring. Ian photographed it at the bottom of The Race, near the Wildlife Wheel, feeding on the flowers of cow parsley. It is also called the pellucid hoverfly because, in certain lights, the pale patches on its sides are translucent: a see-through hoverfly!

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Dactylorhiza fuchsii

Our common spotted orchids are in flower! Ian has sent photographs and we have added pictures from previous years to make a gallery.

Header image by Ian Bushell

Summer solstice

This evening, at 9.50pm, the sun will reach its most northerly point, the Tropic of Cancer. That means that today will be the longest day of the year and tonight will be its shortest night. Officially, summer has begun.

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Incomplete metamorphosis

We are too inclined to think of butterflies if anybody says anything about metamorphosis: eggs under a green leaf, caterpillars, chrysalises, and the beautiful adult wings unfolding in the sunlight. But all insects metamorphose and in many different ways.

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Grasses

Grasses are flowering plants: they have all the same essential bits and pieces as a buttercup or a dandelion. The difference is that they are wind pollinated so they have not adapted their structure to meet the needs of insect pollinators: they have no scent, no nectaries, no colours or ultra-violet sign posts and no petals to make landing platforms.

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Message from Ian:

I think this is a very recently emerged female Ruddy Darter – Sympetrum sanguineum – taken on Friday June 7th near the reserve’s big pond. 

All pictures taken in the reserve by Ian Bushell

This is Stachys sylvatica, commonly known as hedge nettle, hedge stachys or hedge woundwort. It is growing at the far end of Lambrok Meadow.

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