One or two more mysteries emerged when I decided to take an early trip to Dipton Woods, Corbridge to see if green hairstreaks were appearing in view of the bright weather.
Not like me to get overly interested in flowers but I lingered a bit over the wood sorrels near the start of the track and, even less likely, wanted to know what the fungus was I saw on a tree in the same area.
|
|
So apparently it was a hoof fungus, appropriately named.
Green hairstreaks were about though not in the large numbers I have sometimes seen there. In total I saw eight. I thought it might be because it was early in the year but a chap I bumped into a bloke reckoned the couple he saw had been on the wing a long time. The ones I saw turned out to be a mixture.
|
|
It was also encouraging to see a further eight speckled wood, showing they are in my view doing better than last year.
Speckled Wood |
Also spotted but very hard to photograph were what I took to be a number of bilberry mining bees. I was fairly convinced of this but they were always hanging of the bottom of bilberry flowers and the state of my knees doesn't encourage crawling around in the dust to get the right camera angle.
However there was also the appearance (twice) of another mystery tricolour nomad bee that I did manage to capture, the underside being particularly interesting for the contrasting brownish colour.
Experts may tell us that these tricolour nomads are impossible to distinguish visually, but given the likely presence of bilberry mining bee, there must be a shouting chance that this is Panzer's nomad bee, which is thought to be its main predator.
No comments:
Post a Comment