Showing posts with label wasp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wasp. Show all posts

14 Jun 2021

AAWT - Day14-15 - Bill Jones Hut to Ghost Gully Camp

Trip taken April 2021- clear days, cold nights.
 

Views over Long Plain

   
Hainsworth Hut


Quartz crystals on the track





Very few flowers left


Whoever this guy is, he has a red mite behind his head.


Active European Wasp nest, reported to NPWS.
Vespula germanica


More views from Mosquito Creek Trail


Morning view of frost and fog on Cooleman Plain


 View of Bimberi from frosty tent


Bill Jones Hut


The toilet, very funny



Sparshall's Moth, a female


Trichiocercus sparshalli



Brumby trap. Plenty of brumbies in this area.


View from Old Currango


Old Currango Homestead


Homestead interior, very comfortable


Views from Port Philip Trail, towards new walking country


7 Apr 2020

Critters in Isolation

April 2020- finding little things in our world outside, but not too far from home, while we are following the new social isolation rules.


Meadow Argus Junonia villida.  A common butterfly and a good poser.




Pasture Day Moth  Apina callisto.  This one is freshly hatched.  The caterpillars that are busy digging little holes in the ground in spring are now these guys.



This is a video of the Apina callisto caterpillar taken late August 2019 digging its hole.  This video taken very close by to where this moth was today.




Caper White Butterfly Belenois java.  This is a female.



This is a male. They were hanging on for dear life in the wind today.




Nine Spotted Leaf Beetle Phyllocharis cyanicornis.  He is just 7mm long.






Another chapter in the story of Apina callisto.  An introduced European Wasp Vespula germanica is tearing into this moth.  We watched as the moths wing fell off.



The wasp continued to attack the moth. We realised that the wasp was removing the wings on purpose, most likely to carry the body back to feed larvae.



The tiny Lucerne Leaf Roller Merophyas divulsana. The caterpillars like Honeysuckle and Abelia, of which there is plenty around here in the suburbs.




White-patch Bark Moth Scioglyptis lyciaria




The same type of camouflage colourings, but this moth is much tinier, and rests with abdomen sticking up, and has bent antennae Nacoleia rhoealis




Mayfly -order Ephemeroptera- the adult lives only about 2 days. The long, white-tipped cerci (tails) indicate this is a male.




Nest of Paper Wasps Polistes humilis from the eves of the house, with grubs visible. The nests never get to a great size, as sooner or later a magpie will come along to pull one down and stab at it for the wasp grubs inside.







6 Apr 2018

Gungahlin Hill

A female Painted Apple Moth Orgyia anartoides with her eggs on Scribbly Gum


Another egg case on Acacia. The abandoned pupal case can be seen inside.


And again on Brittle Gum


Velvet Ant, which is actually an ant-mimicing flightless wasp  Ephutomorpha sp


Plenty of Soldier Beetles mating Chauliognathus lugubris. My child calls these Banana Bugs, which is much cuter.


Body feather of Eastern Rosella Platycercus eximius