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Insects and snow

By Richard Jones on 11/02/2009 08:53:46

The snow was great fun, but it made wildlife watching in my garden a bit pointless. I am rather biased on this, because as far as I'm concerned, wildlife really means insects. OK, there are a few birds and the odd squirrel out there


Scale insects

By Gardeners' World on 18/10/2011 15:56:46

Tiny sap-sucking scale insects. They are 1-6mm long, and their whitish, grey-brown shells are covered by protective, waxy scales. The insects don't cause too much damage unless they are present in huge numbers, but some excrete an unsightly, sticky


National Insect Week

By Richard Jones on 23/06/2010 15:30:25

It's National Insect Week, so I'm obliged to mention insects at every opportunity. Organised by the Royal Entomological Society, its aim is to promote the study of insects, to encourage the wider world to understand why it is important to study them


The insects have gone berserk

By Richard Jones on 27/04/2011 11:03:05

For anyone who thought the cold winter might have been a bit harsh for wildlife, I hope the recent heatwave has been an eye-opener. I’ve certainly never seen so much insect life in April before. The garden has been awash with orange-tips, holly


Horse chestnut scale insect

By Gardeners' World on 19/10/2011 13:38:40

The horse chestnut scale insect was first found in the UK in the late 1960s, having come over from southern Europe. It is now widespread and common in the south of the UK and Ireland, and is spreading northwards. Mature, adult horse chestnut scale


Scale insect

By Gardeners' World on 14/09/2007 16:57:24

Small, sap-sucking insects.


Hibernating insects

By Pippa Greenwood on 29/01/2009 17:12:27

A couple of years ago we replaced our PVC window frames with beautiful wooden ones. And last week I discovered that they have attracted a number of hibernating insects.As the sun shone for the first time in weeks, I opened all the windows to let


Insects on roses

By Richard Jones on 03/12/2008 10:01:09

completely forgotten about them when they arrived last week. Roses do very well in London, and so too do the insects that feed on them.Apart from the leafcutter bees, which cut out those beautiful semicircles, the insects I most associate with roses


Insects on compost heaps

By Richard Jones on 28/05/2008 13:14:00

of flies emerges.Fruit flies (at least two Drosophila species) feature strongly, which is no surprise given the amount of apple cores, banana skins, melon shells and potato peelings we chuck in each week. Although the adult flies are only 2.5mm long


Insects in late-autumn

By Richard Jones on 05/11/2008 16:48:18

and cherry laurel, but against one hoarding is a mass of ivy and it’s still in flower.Ivy is a very important late nectar source for all sorts. The bush is ablaze and abuzz with insects. Twenty or more red admirals and small tortoiseshells vie with countless


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