Monday 26 February 2024

My 2023 Yearbook

My 2023 Yearbook of wildlife photography has just been published.  You won't be surprised that there are plenty of pine marten and ladybird photos.  You can view the free online version here.


Tuesday 20 February 2024

Southern wood ants


I have never photographed an ant before - I fear this may be the start of a new interest.  I met these in Harlestone Firs, a place I haven't been to for 50 years.  When I was very young it was somewhere I visited frequently for walks and bike rides and I remember from then the giant anthills under the fir trees.

This is the Southern Wood Ant, Formica rufa, also known as the Red Wood Ant.  Last week the anthill was covered with dead leaves and was mostly dormant but I found three worker ants wandering about the surface.  Probably because it wasn't very warm, they didn't move very quickly and paused frequently, which was a help in taking the photos.




Ants are the most highly evolved of the Hymenoptera (sawflies, wasps, bees and ants).  Formica ants are polygynous (with up to 100 queens in one colony) and with 100,000 - 400,000 workers in one hill.  They eat mostly honeydew from aphids but will also prey on caterpillars and spiders. Unlike honey bees, whose colonies remain active all winter with honey stores, I read that ants hibernate in winter and the colonies are dormant.  I presume they become active again once there is food available.  I plan to revisit these in the spring to see what they are up to and to take more photos.

Also on the anthill were a Devil's Coach-horse (Ocypus olens), which declined a photo, and a common pill millipede (Glomeris marginata) which I don't think I have ever seen before.  Despite being a millipede it has only 36 legs, although this one wasn't prepared to show any of them.

Thursday 15 February 2024

OtterCam in February


I hadn't planned to post otters again so soon but the photo above has been attracting a lot of attention in various Facebook groups so I thought it only fair to share it here.  The picture of the dog otter is a frame grab from a trail camera video, good enough quality to look OK on phones and laptops.  I think it is helped by the fact that the otter stood very still for a fraction of a second and the light was good.  And as usual the camera had an extra +0.5 dioptre lens.  A freeze-frame gives a much clearer view of his whiskers and webbed feet than the video, especially the uploaded version on YouTube and Facebook.  Click on the photo for a closer look.  Here are three more photos from the same video.



And here is the video.  He is a very powerful-looking animal.

Sunday 11 February 2024

News from WeaselCam


I have been running two camera boxes in the garden for the past few months to keep an eye on weasels and whatever else makes an appearance.  There were 12 weasel sightings in December, only one in January and so far there have been three in February.  On one morning last week one camera recorded an American grey squirrel, a weasel and a stoat all within two hours. The sighting of the stoat was frustratingly brief as it was too quick for the camera.  It only captured this frame of the tail.

The fascinating thing is that it shows partial ermine colouration with a white tail.  In northern regions some stoats turn white in winter, retaining just a black tail tip, although this far north (55°N) the change is more often partial.  We can't see the rest of this one but it is obviously mostly still brown.  Below is how it (or another one) looked in early December.

Here is the weasel from the same box.

And here's the squirrel!

Weasels usually explore the box rather than just running through and very often return more than once during the same recording.  I wish stoats did the same - perhaps I need a bigger box and a bigger pipe.  This weasel activity was all recorded within two minutes although I have edited out the gaps.


The day after the stoat appeared in the box I saw it
 from the kitchen window, just outside the box. I was willing it to go in again but instead it ran right across the lawn towards me with something in its mouth, presumably prey.  With luck it will stick around and I'll be able to post more pictures.

Monday 5 February 2024

Winter ladybirds


A year ago I learnt that winter is the best time to look for ladybirds and that graveyards are one of the best places to look.  This winter I have been regularly popping into cemeteries and churchyards, armed with a torch and a camera.  Here are a few of the ladybirds I have seen.

This is a red bimaculata form of 10-spot Ladybird in a small crevice in a gravestone in Jesmond.

This is a black bimaculata form of 10-spot Ladybird on an adjacent gravestone.

When I went back a week later to get a better photo of the red one the black one had joined it.

And a month later the red one had disappeared and been replaced by a Cream-spot Ladybird.

I have seen several other interesting variations of 10-spot Ladybird but they are often tucked away making it difficult to get a good photo. 





Two Pine Ladybirds with different markings.


Pine Ladybirds are not the only black ladybirds with four red spots.  Here is a Pine Ladybird at the top with two quadrimaculata forms of 2-spot Ladybird.

And an unusual 2-spot Ladybird, f. bar annulata.

Most ladybirds at this time of year are immobile but I found a Larch Ladybird wandering round on a gravestone in the sunshine at Slaley, a first for me.  I have yet to find one in a larch tree.

An Eyed Ladybird, the largest UK species.

Here are a few more, not on gravestones.  A Harlequin 
Ladybird.

An Orange Ladybird.

A 7-spot Ladybird.

A 10-spot Ladybird, f. decempustulata.

And my favourite recent ladybird photo, two Water Ladybirds.

Having been to several churchyards and cemeteries that have no ladybirds I am gradually learning where they are more likely to be.  Even then it is a bit unpredictable.  Dinnington churchyard had none a year ago but four species when I returned this winter.  I'll keep looking.