Hard to imagine how I (and an entire BBS outing!) managed to overlook the abundant aquatic moss on the burn. But they did and I did for many years. Now it's on the list though - at bryophyte species #100. Hoorah!
Friday, 26 March 2021
New Fife Shore Fly
A shore fly swept this week turned out to be Parydra aquila, apparently new to Fife
As we approach the end of March the invertebrate 1k challenge has thus far produced 77 species new for the reserve, 46 species new to me and 12 species new to the county, which isn't bad at all. It certainly makes the case for it being a worthwhile project.
Away from inverts there are still things other than inverts which are going to pop up. In this case, a sheep poo based trap for dung beetles sprouted fungi this week - the Cowpat Gem, Cheilymenia granulata. A watching eye will be kept on the bait as well as the trap in this case as there aren't many dung based fungi records for the reserve.
Cowpat Gem |
Tuesday, 23 March 2021
Cassida flaveola, Pale Tortoise Beetle, new to Fife from Cullaloe
With the weather cool and threatening rain (and windy...) I went to Cullaloe anyway and decided to sieve even more of the grass pile of wonder. Most of what fell into the tray was of the ho-hum, would-have-been-pleased-to-see-you-in-January variety but one little translucent disc caught my eye, thankfully.
I have recorded the larger, greener Cassida rubiginosa on the reserve, and this is quite noticeably a different thing. It likes Caryophlyll ... Carophylea ... probably Red Campion.
2021 Beetle #87
Thursday, 18 March 2021
Bee aggressive, bee bee aggressive
Another good lunch break at Cullaloe took me over the 250 with some nice big bees and a new/not-new fly. Fly first, since I need to explain. Hydromya dorsalis was in the list of diptera for the reserve but somehow never made it to the total list, so it was recorded, but not counted. Anyway, now it's both and I get to count it as an addition. This was swept on damp pathside, so not a Willow hit.
Bombus hypnorum, Tree Bumblebee |
Bombus lapidarius, Red-tailed |
Saltus scenicus, where it always in when it's sunny |
Kidney-spot Ladybird. Not new, but numerous |
Tachina ursina. One of my favourites |
Salix in Wonderland
I spent a happy lunchtime getting a crick in my neck to look at Salix catkins yesterday, mostly trying to avoid the 100s of honey bees that I think have something to do with the reserve's neighbour.
Wednesday, 17 March 2021
Moffs plus
Finally the moth challenge got some air under its wings and rose off the ground. I set the actinic heath trap up last night and then had a look at the salix catkins, which were happily being feasted on by a usual early spring collection of Common Quaker, Hebrew Character and Satellite moths, An Agonopterix heracliana was netted on the way along the path. This morning the trap held three of my target species - Yellow Horned. The moth total is now up to a monster 8 species. That's nearly double figures!
Kidney-spot |
M.quadrimaculata |
Thursday, 11 March 2021
Latest category counts
On the realisation of 300 dipteran species, it's a good time to post the latest breakdown by category. In addition to a 300 landmark for flies this record also makes the number of additions this year (77) equal to the whole of that for 2020.
Class | Count |
alga | 1 |
Protist other | 0 |
slime mould | 5 |
lichen | 64 |
fungus | 313 |
liverwort | 16 |
moss | 83 |
flowering plant | 307 |
conifer | 2 |
fern | 11 |
cnidarian | 0 |
mollusc | 31 |
bryozoan | 0 |
annelid | 7 |
flatworm | 1 |
harvestman | 11 |
pseudoscorpion | 1 |
spider | 86 |
gall mite | 7 |
tick | 1 |
millipede | 13 |
centipede | 5 |
crustacean | 7 |
collembola | 13 |
bristletail | 0 |
odonata | 7 |
dermaptera | 1 |
orthoptera | 1 |
hemiptera | 81 |
coleoptera | 185 |
diptera | 300 |
lep-moth | 384 |
lep-butterfly | 18 |
hymenoptera | 61 |
insect-other | 36 |
tunicate | 0 |
echinoderm | 0 |
invert-other | 0 |
fish | 5 |
reptile | 1 |
amphibian | 3 |
bird | 141 |
mammal | 16 |
2225 |
Retro fly addition makes 300
While searching for something completely unrelated I found a reference to two recordings of Campichoeta obscuripennis in the 2018 Dipterists Digest. I was sure I had recorded it, too, but it wasn't on my reserve species list. So it was recorded in 2017, 2018 and 2020. When I say "recorded", I see no actual record in the public sphere of the first two. Such is the battle of fly recording.
Here's a pic of the one I had in 2020
Wednesday, 10 March 2021
What stinks and sounds like a bell?
Dung!
An attempt to prod around some sheep poo yesterday turned up numbers of Aphodius sphacelatus, one of which was retrieved from a bucket of water before the rest emerged from gathered poo. Only other thing I had was a small staph, as yet undetermined. And this Tachyporus, which I shamefully forgot because I potted it in the field.
2021 Beetle #82 - Aphodius sphacelatus
2021 Beetle #83 - Tachyporus nitidulus
male, gendetted |
Tuesday, 9 March 2021
Unexpected new mollusc - Cornu aspersum
This morning, while on a brief trip to pick up something that was left for me, I turned a rock and photographed the routine Cornu aspersum, that I expected to find along the walls of the reserve.
The surprise element of this is that when I came to copy the species line from the "complete list" tab of my spreadsheet to the "2021 list" tab it turned out it didn't exist! So Cornu aspersum is a new mollusc, the second new snail of the year.
Monday, 8 March 2021
Beetle #81
Another win for the grass pile. New to me and the reserve. With the reserve total on 185 we're slowly creeping towards a not-horrible 200. The aim, though is to be about 100 north of that by end of play. 48 of the existing tally is already Staphylinidae.
2021 Beetle #81 - Hygrohypnus angustatus
Saturday, 6 March 2021
80 beetles and Lithocharis nigriceps new to me/reserve/county
2021 Beetle #79 - Pterostichus madidus
not photographed because I thought I surely must have already recorded it!
2021 Beetle #80 - Lithocharis nigriceps
As per the species account in the book - - in a (the) pile of grass cuttings
Thursday, 4 March 2021
Another day, another beetle (oh, and a wasp)
First the wasp. Again, from the magical tussocks came this lovely female brachypterous wasp, which was kindly identified on the Icheumonidae facebook page as Aptesis nigrocincta. Very pretty little thing it is, too. It may or may not be new to Scotland. The status of such things is "data deficient". But it's certainly new to me, and to Cullaloe, and almost certainly Fife. It's actually quite big for a wingless wasp. It parasitises a sawfly which hasn't been recorded either, so that's an interesting one to look out for. Neither has Scottish dots on NBN.
The beetle is somewhat more routine, but still new for Cullaloe. Believe it or not, it did NOT come from a tussock, but rather from under a stone in the woodland. One thing Cullaloe lacks, really, is turnable stones, so if I find one I always turn it. When I say "find", it's not as if I don't know where they all are! Most of the time I can name what's going to be underneath them (spoiler - it's one of several Pterostichus). The Leistus is beetle species #184. Pretty pleased with that, since we started the year with only 150.
2021 Beetle #78 - Leistus fulvibarbis
Beetle additions - 76 & 77
Still from the 2nd, a Catops from fish-baited pitfall trap and another staph from the Land O' Tussocks. The Philonthus is known from here according to my field guide marginal notes, but wasn't actually on the list. There were no Catops on the list, despite discovering a new species of fungus for Scotland on an unidentified one a couple of years back!
2021 Beetle #76 - Catops tristis
2021 Beetle #77 - Philonthus laminatus
Big and shiny |
Tuesday, 2 March 2021
The Overwhelming
As spring has sprung the Time of Overwhelming draws ever nearer, and there's no doubt I'm flirting dangerously with it. This morning I spent a happy lunchbreak at Land O' Tussocks, which was once known as "The Orchid Meadow" and is now a sea of Deschampsia and Juncus tussocks, intermittently mown by the occasional presence of a couple of sheep. It has a cracking damp/wet spot in the middle which is bordered by Water Avens and it holds Marsh Thistle, Marsh Willowherb, Big Yellow Trefoil (yeah, I'm sure that's what it's called...) and other such wet-bit plants. Also, in its season, shedloads of Tormentil and nice late season Scabious - if the sheep haven't eaten it. For a very fairly tedious-looking rectangle of grassland there's a lot going on.
The latter was species #201 for the year, with species #200 taken by a long-awaited addition - the 35th fly - Pteremis fenestralis. I think I had this before but I never actually caught one so I never added it to the list.
Mooned by a lesser dung fly |
I will not, unless I'm prevented from getting to the reserve tomorrow, get through the remaining species before I collect even more. Which means tomorrow I will start the day with material in hand. AND I saw the first peeping flowers of Willow breaking out today. I have one baited bottle trap and two baited pitfalls.
Monday, 1 March 2021
Spring
Made the best use of an appointment at the recycle centre to make a small detour to Cullaloe. A good sunny morning is a fine time to observe flies on all the south-facing wood the entrance has to offer.
Long wooden fence - a big draw when in full sun |
Sinkhole protector (?). Also good |
Even a small signboard. |
Bottle trapping
So the first bottle trap experiment failed due to hard weather, but finally last week I was able to get a robust trap with fish bait going. Last night I emptied said trap and it had a predictable set of inmates. I should have a photo of the trap but when I set it I'd forgotten my phone/camera. Doh! I swapped out the "capture chamber" so I can photo it again anyway.
Most obvious in the trap was Calliphora vicina, finally. This may have appeared earlier had I set the trap nearer to the cottages end of the reserve, but it's an inevitable species both in bait traps and on sunny surfaces. Then there was one (only one?!) Dryomyza. Usualy they show up early in numbers, but the trap wasn't out that long and not in its usual place. A couple of Heleomyzidae were Tephrochlaena oraria and Heteromyza commixta. The rest of group was made up of a small collection of Drosophila subobscura. All common species on the reserve, but nice to get the dipteran ball rolling a bit. Surprisingly absent was Sylvicola cintus, which I had in 10s if not 100s last year, but maybe that's specific to location. The trap was previously over a wet seepage in a different part of the reserve. Maybe a second trap's required.
This week will hopefully see me swishing a kite net at Willows and the game will be seriously on. As usual, I expect my capabilities will be over-run over the space of about 48 hours. Current dipteran tally - 32 species.
Calliphora vicina |
Heteromyza commixta |
Dryomyza flaveola |
Drosophila subobscura |