Tag Archives: Oedemera nobilis

Summer Colours at Gunnersbury Triangle

Thick-kneed flower beetle (metallic iridescent green and gold) on Poppy (red, pink, orange, there are plenty of colours in there!, with violet stigmas)
Crab Spider scarily camouflaged on Hogweed: whitish-green and bright red, curiously
Caterpillar of Angle Shades moth, magnificent in bright green and turquoise. Its food plants include Bramble, Hazel, Hops, Birch, and Oak, all of which are found here.

Fine Crop of Insects Pollinating Hogweed at Gunnersbury Triangle

Macrophya (Symphyta) mating on Hogweed
Macrophya (Symphyta) mating on Hogweed: one of two mating pairs, and many individuals around in the warm sunshine this afternoon. Mating lasts for less than a minute, so the photographer has to be lucky and quick

Small bee pollinating Hogweed
Small bee pollinating Hogweed (flying between flowers)

Tiny speckled beetle pollinating Hogweed
Tiny speckled beetle pollinating Hogweed

Rose Chafer on Hogweed
Rose Chafer on Hogweed

Oedemera nobilis on Hogweed
Oedemera nobilis on Hogweed

Strangalia maculata longhorn beetle on Hogweed
Strangalia maculata longhorn beetle on Hogweed

Marvellously slender long-tailed Ichneumon
Marvellously slender long-tailed Ichneumon, on Hogweed of course (just look at that ovipositor!)

OK, and to end, one insect NOT on Hogweed, the Small China-Mark Moth, on a Reed. It and many others of its species were fluttering about the pond, where they mate and lay eggs in waterside vegetation. I was really pleased to get the camera so close to this attractive little insect.

Small China-Mark Moth
Small China-Mark Moth

More a Bug than a Butterfly Transect

I had a go at the ‘regular’ butterfly transect down at the reserve. It was warm and humid but overcast and it didn’t look promising. A large willow covered in Gypsy Moth caterpillars had been loosened by all the rain, and had fallen across the path. I lopped off the crown branches and carted them down to a dead hedge to fill in a gap someone had been climbing through.

The sun peeped out and the cloud cover reduced to maybe 60%, making it warm and pleasant. A single Small White appeared over the ramp and made it onto the transect. I wandered around the reserve, but there was nothing until I found a solitary Speckled Wood in the large meadow.

However, there was plenty to notice all around. The building site looks a lot better now the ‘Costa Concordia’ white horizontal balcony cladding on ‘Chiswick Point’ (well, it’s in Acton Green and on Bollo Lane, but I guess Bollo Block didn’t quite have the same cachet) has been completed: it will be nice when the noise of cranes and drilling stops.

Handsome iridescent green male Oedemera nobilis on Catsear
Handsome iridescent green male Oedemera nobilis on Catsear

Many ichneumon flies were out on the Hogweed, some mating; almost every Catsear flowerhead had one or two handsomely iridescent green Oedemera nobilis, the “thick-kneed flower beetle” – only the males have the swollen hind femurs, but both sexes have a gap between the slender wing-cases. The males were of noticeably varying sizes, presumably the large ones having the best chances of mating.

Tent of Comma? caterpillars on Stinging Nettle
Tent of Peacock butterfly caterpillars on Stinging Nettle

A fine bustling mass of hairy black early-instar caterpillars of the Peacock butterfly, wriggled on their silk tent atop a Stinging Nettle.

Laburnum leaf beetle larva doing an impressive amount of leaf damage
Laburnum leaf beetle larva doing an impressive amount of leaf damage

The Laburnum by the main path is being eaten full of holes, probably a good thing for a non-native shrub in the reserve, by spotted and striped larvae of the Laburnum Leaf Beetle. Never seen it before.

Mating Rose Sawflies
Mating Rose Sawflies

The wild rose in the car park hedge was host to a mating pair of Rose Sawfly, a serious pest for gardeners but an attractive insect with a bright yellow abdomen.

Large Red Damselflies in cop over a lot of healthy Starwort in the pond
Large Red Damselflies in cop over a lot of healthy Starwort in the pond

As if all these treats weren’t enough, there were Large Red Damselflies mating and egg-laying on the pond, Common Blue Damselflies, lots of Hoverflies, Click Beetles (seemingly Athous haemorrhoidalis), large brown frog tadpoles and small black toadpoles, singing Blackcaps, a Song Thrush, a Jay, and plenty more. Maybe it’s not just Bugs Day on Saturday, but Bugs Week.