Wildlife pictures

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Butterfly and Adder Monitoring today at Queen Elizabeth Country Park. Saw quite a few species. My Butterfly I'D isn't great, but I saw Marbled White, Meadow Brown, Large/Small Skippers, Ringlet and quite a few others. Perfect weather too. Well, maybe a bit too hot for my Scottish skin. :lmao:

RS2lRPL.jpg

Marbled White.
 
Here are some recent shots from my forays in the grasslands of West Cumbria.


A robber fly I suspect

Robber by alf.branch, on Flickr


Is this a sawfly full of eggs


Unkown by alf.branch, on Flickr


A snipe fly taken with my Zuiko 35mm f3.5 in autofocus on Oly E-M1



Snipe fly by alf.branch, on Flickr


This was in my garden and I am informed is Eristalis pertinax



Eristalis pertinax by alf.branch, on Flickr


A couple weevils making more weevils



mating-weevils by alf.branch, on Flickr


Another garden hoverfly


Hover-fly-2 by alf.branch, on Flickr


Any ID's are welcome
 
Great shots Alf, as always. The first one I think is an Empid or a Dolichopodid rather than a robber fly, as it lacks the tuft of hairs between the eyes. I don't know what it is though. Fascinating looking fly.
 
A mixed bag from couple weeks ago.

Some from the garden first


A bee on a climbing hydrangea doesn't seem to be in my book.


Bee-on-hydrangea by alf.branch, on Flickr


The bees seem to like my laurel hedge


Bees-like-Laurel by alf.branch, on Flickr


A bluebottle


Bluebottle by alf.branch, on Flickr


From my dog walks



As far as I can tell this is a female cuckoo bee P.vestallis it was not keen on flying from flower to flower



Female-P-vestallis-possibly by alf.branch, on Flickr


A yellow dung fly as far I can ID


Yellow-dung-fly by alf.branch, on Flickr


Any corrections on ID welcome.
 
Grasshoppers are very difficult to identify, especially as nymphs, which these are. Top one is probably a common field grasshopper, and the lower a common green grasshopper. Colours are not reliable in either species. Confident that it isn't a mottled grasshopper though. The markings to look at are the white stripes on the thorax. To be honest though, Meadow grasshopper is also possible for all of them. I would want an adult before I could be confident.

Incidentally, nice Wandering Snail in the first pic too.
 
Grasshoppers are very difficult to identify, especially as nymphs, which these are. Top one is probably a common field grasshopper, and the lower a common green grasshopper. Colours are not reliable in either species. Confident that it isn't a mottled grasshopper though. The markings to look at are the white stripes on the thorax. To be honest though, Meadow grasshopper is also possible for all of them. I would want an adult before I could be confident.

Incidentally, nice Wandering Snail in the first pic too.

Thanks for the info Mike.
 

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