Along sedgy sphagnous marsh margin; probably A cinctipes
Very suggestive of Slaty-backed: Herring Gull sized with slaty colored back, huge white tertial crescent, large white apical spots on folded black wings, dark mascara stripe through eye. Clearly not as big, bulky, big headed or big-billed as Great Black-back that was seen swimming right beside it. Chestier, not as long-winged as Lesser Black-backed. Smaller, darker mantled, dirtier headed, broader tertial crescent than the Great Lakes Gulls I've seen.
HBNC wild native grasses 72F slight breeze
A Lepomis Sunfish caught on Coldwater Creek - Nottawa Township, MI. Catch and Release.
Lepomis Sunfish caught on Coldwater Creek - Nottawa Township, MI. Catch and Release.
A first for my property if this is indeed a Marine blue. Wings coppery brown above with indigo bases. Nectaring on clover. Woohooo!!! #78 for my sanctuary! And it may be Ohio’s first well-documented record.
There were dozens of elfin skimmers out this day. Shaw lake is a hidden gem for these sorts of surprises.
I'm reaching quite a bit on this ID. Improvement welcomed.
I just hated to leave him at Pardosa with his flashy coloring. Definitely not what I usually see!
The first Checkered White I have seen since 2012! I have @lundbergj to thank for this. I was experimenting with my new camera I bought from him. Not much was flying today due to cold/ breezy weather, so I figured I would practice flight shots on Cabbage Whites. I looked at this one through the viewfinder and I just about dropped my nice new camera! A Checkered White! I never would have noticed it if I wasn't practicing flight shots. It didn't look any different from the Cabbage Whites at a distance.
Along the Slippery Elm Trail between Kramer and Powell Rd. Photo by Wood County Park District Volunteer Gaynelle Predmore.
I found this coyote pup with a plastic jar stuck on it’s head. I took it to Bruckner Nature Center where they informed me that state law prohibited them from even attempting to save its life.
Visto no interior de floresta atlântica de baixada com o guia Wylde Vieira
This silphid larva seems to be observed regularly in the Alps in iNaturalist, but is never identified at species level - with some exceptions - which might either be due to lack of an ID key, or to similarities. .
I was thinking of the mountain species, Silpha tyrolensis - but it appears to be too slender, and not properly black.
For an illustration of the larva of Silpha tyrolensis, see:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/43261234?seq=1#metadata_info_tab_contents
(on page 271) - but this looks quite different.
It also looks like Ablattaria laevigata - see:
https://ukrbin.com/show_image.php?imageid=200718
Tricky.
Pueblo Park campgrd., Apache NF, 6200 ft, wingspan = 31 mm. Larval food plant = Guara spp. (now Oenothera spp.) (Onagraceae).
Female. The first Swift Setwing I have seen at Spring Lakes since 2017! I saw a single male each year in 2016 and 2017. Then, I didn’t see any at this location from 2018-2020, although I searched very hard. So I assumed the population had died out (or the two I saw were migrants.) I was very glad to see this female today. She was ovipositing (repeatedly dipping abdomen in water), and then perched in the grass for a few moments. I only had time for a few photos before she flew off. I couldn’t find her again or find another one. But since it was a female laying eggs, there is hope for the future!
This observation is for the predator. For the prey, see https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/84815561
Observed on Walnut Juglans sp.
Perhaps someone can confirm identification? Could simply be Brown-belted Bumble Bee.
Governor Bebb historical village; prevailing loud chorus of cassinii, with loud chorus of septendecim in hickory grove.
An interesting color variant! No reason to believe this was anything other than cassinii; size was consistent and no decula calls were heard in the area.
Seen with @shaunpogacnik95 at Irwin Prairie SNP. ID is from Shaun’s observation here https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/82116541. Apparently a substantial find for Ohio’s odonata?
On Artemesia sp. foliage. Sage steppe habitat. Voucher specimen placed in Orma J. Smith Museum of Natural History (as part of the Deer Flat NWR Insect Biodiversity Survey) at The College of Idaho, Caldwell, ID.
Паук Stegodyphus lineatus
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/54371257
Female, potential future split, the male in particular is morphologically very distinct, no photos of males unfortunately
First iNaturalist record.
Third bird is so-called gray-morph male. Flock of 15 birds.
ID'ed by Dr. Stephen D. Gaimari, Environmental Program Manager I (Entomology & Nematology),
Plant Pest Diagnostics Center
California Department of Food and Agriculture
This fresh-looking dragonfly was cruising along a trail at Horton Grove Reserve, Durham North Carolina (USA) on 6 June 2020.
Dromogomphus spinosus - Black-shouldered Spinyleg (female)
bugguide.net/node/view/6388
Happy Wing Wednesday!
This photo was taken by Ed LeGrand. I am submitting it here with his permission.
There's a pinkish cast to the photo (from light reflecting from the pokeweed stalk, I think), but the color of the photo has not been manipulated.
Not sure if this is an American Bumblebee (Bombus pensylvanicus) observed while monitoring Bluebird nest boxes.
You know it's going to be a good year when you find a lifer species on the first day of dragonfly season.
A couple of these caterpillars were running around the bottom on a large puddle that was just a few inches deep. They looked at home under the water, so I guess it's an aquatic species.
Caught while swordfishing in 2000' of water. Released after collecting data. Seam away strong. Local biologist and ichthyologist were unsure of species. No other records of any similar shark observed in Cayman waters.