Kakapo
Well-Known Member
Today I had a very pleasant field trip along the river of my city in companion of two fellow entomologist friends. I said a predated penduline tit lying on the path, with the head already reduced to bone, and full of ants. There were some rare and interesting insects and even some lifers (surprisingly for my "neighbour" photographic hunt area that I visited so often during my childhood).
BIRDS:
57. Eurasian golden oriole (Oriolus oriolus) - only heard, at two different spots, tough one of my friends was lucky to see it when I pointed at the sound adress!
HERPTILES:
5. Iberian wall lizard (Podarcis hispanica)
INVERTEBRATES:
292. Menemerus bivittatus
293. Lycosoides coarctata
294. Calopteryx xanthostoma! Two females. Not seen since 2014!
295. Orthetrum cancellatum - a magnific male that fortunately returned to the same rush every time it flied, so we can photograph it
296. Paracinema tricolor - the nymphs mentioned in an earlier post have grown enough for ensure the identification, but still none adult.
297. Graphosoma lineatum - only one, in Torilis arvensis. This year I noticed the complete lack of Graphosoma of either species in areas where previously they was extremely common. I'm very surprised it lasted into June for find this species and just one individual. Worrying.
298. Dyroderes umbraculatus, a nymph
299. Coreus marginatus
300. Brachycarenus tigrinus
301. Spilostethus pandurus (one along the river, other inside my house just a while ago!)
302. Peirates stridulus
303. Hermetia illucens (two, one landed in my hand)
304. Xanthogramma marginale
305. Hoplia chlorophana!!!! LIFER
306. Anthaxia millefolii (I never saw it before in my city area)
307. Anthaxia scutellaris (fourth sight in my life)
308. Acmaeodera pulchra (two: one busy in Chondrilla juncea flower, other landed in a dry elm branchlet)
309. Thea vigintiduopunctata
310. Propylaea quatuordecimpunctata
311. Scaurus rugulosus
312. Oedemera flavipes
313. Anthidium florentinum
314. Camponotus truncatus (two queens already wingless in different places! second sight in my life!)
315. Delta unguiculatum!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Super LIFER!!!! Sadly the wasp was more quick than my camera.
Yesterday at night, after I wrote this, another moth appeared resting in the glass of a shop in a city.
INVERTEBRATES:
316. Gymnoscelis rufifasciata
INVERTE