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Wildlife (16)
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Richard Jones (18)

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Strasbourg

By Richard Jones on 03/08/2011 12:06:18

-cum-quay, the size of a single bed has been so enthusiastically decorated with plant containers that the table and chair are lost in herbage.Several hoverflies and bumblebees are visiting the flowers. Chaffinches and sparrows flit noisily through the climbers


Those wasps are still going strong

By Richard Jones on 17/10/2007 11:18:49

queen buff-tailed bumblebee, was examining the compost heap; I guess she was searching out a suitable hibernation site. Every now and then something else would buzz past: rosemary leaf beetles, green shieldbugs and ladybirds were all very active


Garden butterflies

By Richard Jones on 30/04/2008 12:51:00

the missile. If it's a female it will ignore the stone and continue sunning itself. So confrontational are the males that they will also flap up to investigate other butterflies, bumblebees, birds and even passing aeroplanes.


Bug boxes

By Richard Jones on 28/01/2009 17:11:47

together with wire or shoved into an open-ended canister of some sort and place this in a sunny position against a fence, wall or tree trunk.Solitary bees and wasps do not live in large colonies like bumblebees, honeybees and yellow-jackets (social wasps


Signs of spring

By Richard Jones on 17/03/2010 16:55:36

Spring has sprung. All at once. The guinea pig and his hutch are back outside. Shieldbugs, in their purple-brown winter colours, are sunbathing on the fence. The first bumblebee of the year, a queen buff-tailed, floated past and a male feather


The greater bulb fly

By Richard Jones on 26/05/2010 11:52:22

In the bright heat of this week's baking sunlight, a buzz of black and orange fur announces the arrival of what I think is one our cuddliest hoverflies. Merodon equestis is a large (12 - 15mm long), stout, bumblebee mimic, and although not quite


Wasps and spiders

By Richard Jones on 28/09/2011 16:54:08

and dangerous prey, even the occasional heavy bumblebee.Not everything goes according to plan, though. As I watch a wasp becomes stuck against some sticky silk strands. It struggles, quite literally, for its life. The spider trots up to see what is disturbing


Birds and beetles

By Richard Jones on 21/11/2012 17:17:00

warning of ‘conservation concern’. These types of decline have already been seen in more obvious (and more newsworthy) insects, such as bumblebees, butterflies and moths.One thing is clear to me though - as the industrialisation of agriculture continues


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