Dickleburgh Moor
Ant S? + Aphid Sp? on Dock Sp (Rumex Sp)?
Curled leaves suggest Dock Aphid (Aphis rumicis)
Jet Ant (Lasius fuligonosus) + Aphid Sp? on Willow (Salix Sp)
Golden-bloomed Grey Longhorn Beetle (Agapanthia villosoviridescens)
Bagworm case
Bee Sp?
Wheat Stem Borer
Chicken of the Woods (Laetiporus sulphureus)
Large Spearhorn (Chrysotoxum cautum)
Coleophora case on Silver Birch
Tipula luna?
Azure Damselfly (Coenagrion puella)
Eyelash Fungus Sp
Eyelash Fungus Sp
Scutellata olivescens
Fairy Inkcap (Coprinellus disseminatus)
Of all the nettles in the field
Just one
looked like this
5hrs
later
slightly less activity
but
otherwise
unchanged
Fungus Sp
Parasola auricome
Fungus Sp
Panaeolus fimicola
Fungus Sp
Parasola conopilea
Fungus Sp
Copronopsis kubickae
Fungus Sp
Possibly
Mycena speirea
Rust on Groundsel
(Puccinia lagenophorae)
Thick-legged Hoverfly (Syritta pipiens)
Orbilia Sp
Scarlet Pimpernel (Anagallis arvensis)
Crucifer Shieldbug (Eurydem oleracea)
Tetragnatha Sp?
Gypsywort (Lycopus europeaus)
Many Thanks to
Yvonne for the Fungi Ids
Dersingham Bog
Rosalina Sp?
This turned out to be
Birch Woodart (Annulohypoxylon multiforme)
Rhododendron Bud Blast (Pcynostysanus azaleae)
Bagworm Case
Only adult males ever leave the case. The adult females are wingless and leave the case for mating or remains in the case
while the male extends his abdomen into the female's case to breed.
One species of female dies without laying eggs and the larval bagworm offspring emerge from
the parent's body. Some species are parthanogenic.
Taleporia tubulosa
Thanks to TM for id.
Slime mold loking like young deer's horns.
Ceratiomyxa fruticosa
Eyed Ladybird (Anatis ocellata)
Heather Ladybird (Chilocorus bipustulatus)
from
James Common
Orange Underwing (Archiearis parthenias)
Unusually found at eye height, so this was a treat to see.
Pine Ladybird (Exochomus quadripustulatus)
Rosy Crust (Peniophora incarnata)
A rather spectacular lemon yellow poroid fungus.
Unusually flat but it turned out
to
be
Yellow Porecrust (Antrodia xantha)
Minotaur Beetle (Typhaeus typhoeus)
Great ForK Moss (Dicranus majus)
Case Bearer Moth cases
Southern Crestwort (Lophocolea semiteres)
First discovered in the UK in 1955. Introduced via the horticutural trade.
First identified in East Anglia by MO Hill in 1998 from a sample found by RJ Fisk.
It can now be found in many places in Norfolk.