The "What is this bug?" thread

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I took it a while ago on my iPhone. I now have a nice Canon so will see if I can get a better pic. Cheers for that, I'll look it up.
 
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Found this a little while back, have tried google but to no avail. Love to know what they are and what laid them.


Sent from somewhere?

Are you sure it's insect related and not an aglae/mould of some kind?

Sent via smoke-signal from a woodland in Scotland.
 
Goatboy I have no idea what it was I have since been back and found badger sign and the log all ripped open.


Sent from somewhere?
 
The first ones are solitary bees, which are beyond my skill. the last one on the forget-me-not is a Nomada bee-wasp, which is a nest parasite of solitary bees, laying eggs in their nests for its larve to feed on the bees and their food stores. Yours might be Nomada goodeniana, though I cannot be confident. They are not easy to separate, though you can try for yourself on the BWARS website if you are so inclined.
 
The first ones are solitary bees, which are beyond my skill. the last one on the forget-me-not is a Nomada bee-wasp, which is a nest parasite of solitary bees, laying eggs in their nests for its larve to feed on the bees and their food stores. Yours might be Nomada goodeniana, though I cannot be confident. They are not easy to separate, though you can try for yourself on the BWARS website if you are so inclined.

Tnaks Mike I have new photos of the bees shot here the solitary bee is a mining bee possibly Andrena carantonica (actually could be 4 individuals) and the Nomada is a Cleptoparasite on the on the Andrena. Yesterday I observed some Nomada entering the holes in the shots.
The Nomada could be Marsham's Nomad bee based on the females I have shot apparantly this one was a male.
 
I have absolutely no idea but my first impression ( and it's totally a guess) was something newly hatched, wings still unfurled and probably not yet fully coloured up?

D.B.
 
Flies do not have nymph stages. Egg, several instars of larva, pupa and adult. Judging by the poor degree of melanization, I'll suggest a newly emergent adult.
Flies are Diptera = one pair of flight wings and the other pair reduced to haltere balancing organs. I see two obvious pairs of wings so Hymenoptera is a possibility.
 

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