Sunday, 27 September 2020

Ballachurry Reserve, 23rd September 2020

Blackberries, a fallen leaf and raindrops on a spiderweb = Autumn!

  I was keen to visit the Reserve on Wednesday as the Reserve Officer and her team of Merry Muckers had been there the previous afternoon to cut the damp meadow area with the Decimator. They had raked it off for us and transported all the cut vegetation to the compost heap. It will be worth keeping an eye on the compost area in future as all the spiders and insects that will have been raked off with the grass often draw in the birds, notably Goldcrests.

I should really have waited for the afternoon, I think, when the sun finally appeared and everywhere warmed up. As it was, the morning air was surprisingly cold and I could have done with a pair of gloves and some woolly socks! The wildlife seemed to be keeping warm down in the vegetation out of sight too but here is what I recorded:

Birds:

SC208694 Goldcrest; Chaffinch heard but not seen.

SC208695 female Blackbird; Woodpigeon flying over.

SC209694 ( hide) 2 x Heron flying in together

Ladybirds:

SC209694 4 x 7-spot  all in very small area together.

Butterflies and Moths:

None seen - too cold and windy 

Other:

SC208695  4 x Green Shieldbug nymphs and 1  adult

                  "Footballer " Hoverfly & Yellow Dung Fly

                   Eristalis Hoverfly; Unidentified Muscid  Fly; Noon fly;  Greenbottle fly ( Dasyphora or Eudasy phora)

                    Giant Willow Aphids ( recently arrived, no honeydew attracting insects as yet) 

SC209695 Ersitalis pertinax Hoverflies x 2; Platycheirus albimanus flies x 2

SC208694 Crab Apple tree growing well

Just inside reserve - mown and raked off

Damp meadow area mown and raked off to bring down fertility


 
 compost piled high

 possibly the highest I've ever seen it!

Crab Apple doing well

 Eristalis species Hoverfly

 Muscid species Fly

 Noon Fly top left.   Bottom Right Dasyphora or Eudasyphora muscid fly

Probably Muscid species flies

Yellow dung fly

Platycheirus albimanus fly

 Male Eristalis species Hoverfly - maybe pertinax

 Platycheirus albimanus

Eristalis pertinax

  With thanks to Steve Crellin for fly identifications


Our largest Aphids

Giant Willow Aphids


Adult Green Shieldbug


Green Shieldbug Nymph

and another

 I counted 4 altogether


 two of four 7-spot Ladybirds

I'm afraid I had to censor a rather puerile alteration to noticeboard!
Note Loch Ness Monster too!


a rather chilly looking reserve

We are very grateful to Tricia and her team for cutting the two meadow areas and raking them off. Removing the cut vegetation reduces the fertility year on year giving the wildflowers an advantage over the coarse grasses. There has been a steady improvement over the years but as the area was originally arable farmland,  regularly  fertilised no doubt, we still have a way to go yet! 

 With thanks to Steve Crellin for fly identifiactions

Please click on photos to enlarge them

Friday, 25 September 2020

Ballachurry Reserve - 17th September, 2020.

 

 An autumnal feel to Ballachurry Reserve

Very late posting this account of my visit to the Reserve on Thursday, 17th September morning. This was a dual purpose visit. Education Officer, Dawn Colley, at the Manx Wildlife Trust had suggested that the reserve might be enhanced by a log pile for invertebrates such as beetles to call home. Although we have a pile of rotting planks near the compost heap a pile of natural logs looks so much nicer. I found a few candidates for the job in my own garden and we can add to these as others become available. So first job of the morning was to find a suitable location for this. I eventually decided to place the pile quite near the path junction and half buried some of the logs in the soil and left others on the surface. One of the smaller logs already has some Tremella fungus growing on it which I hope will increase as time goes on. 

Once this job was done I set off round the reserve with binoculars and camera at the ready to see what was to be seen. Here is the report:

Birds:

SC208695 Robin 

SC209694 ( hide)  Mallard duck; Wren heard but not seen.

SC209694 Water Rail heard from reed bed

SC208695 Woodpigeon

Butterflies:

SC209694  ( path junction) Speckled Wood x 2 together

SC209694 Speckled Wood x 4

SC208695 Speckled Wood x 3; Red Admiral;  Unidentified White flying

SC209695 Speckled Wood

SC209693 Speckled Wood

Ladybirds:

SC209694  5 x 7-spot

SC209695 3 x 7-spot

Other:

SC208695  Sargus Species Fly ( Soldier Fly)

SC209693 Helophilus pendulus  Hoverfly; Eristalis Pertinax Hoverfly; Eristalis tenax Hoverfly.

SC209695 Sargus species fly ( Soldier fly); Eristalis speciesl Hoverfly;  Episyrphus balteatus Hoverfly (Marmalade fly)

SC208695 Shieldbug nymph

SC208694 Shieldbug nymph

SC209695 unidentified tiny snail

SC210694  small Crab spider on nettles

SC209695 various unidentified spiders in brambles and gorse

SC209694 acorns on oaks ( NB grid ref. is incorrect on photo)

SC209693 ripening Hazelnuts

SC209694 Tremella fungus on log pile and unknown fungus on hurdle

  

Autumn Robin rather than Christmas Robin

Our resident Mallard

on her way to snack on the blackberries!

 
Speckled Wood

and another

 one of eight x 7-spot Ladybirds seen today

Photo not doing justice to bright red of this Soldier fly's body  (Sargus species)


 "footballer" in striped jersey - Heloophilus pendulus

male Eristalis pertinax

Eristalis tenax male


 Red bodied Soldier fly ( Sargus species)

Eristalis species Hoverfly

 Marmalade Hoverfly (Episyrphus balteatus)


Shieldbug nymph - Hawthorn perhaps?
 
 another Shieldbug nymph - Common Green this time?


 really tiny snail on Sycamore leaf

tiny crab spider on nettles

 you can tell it's Autumn when the spiders appear

this one had caught a juicy meal


 annoying how they hang with their undersides to the camera!

 Some large acorns to feed the Fieldmice when they drop
 and ripening Hazelnuts for them to store

 new logpile

we can add to it in future

 orange blobs are Tremella fungus ( sometimes called Yellow Brain)

 different sort of fungus on willow hurdle nearby

 With thanks to Steve Crellin for fly ID's

I have been back to the Reserve again since this visit and hope to post another account shortly.

Please click on photos to enlarge them