Wildlife picspam
Jun. 26th, 2007 07:16 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)

This fly is about 2mm long. I was fortunate that it liked to hang out on this sign long enough for me to get an in focus picture.
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Remember all that discussion about what kind of vetch is pictured in my 365 post? Well this is the other kind. A whole mess of it filling a vacant lot in Waltham.

This little fellow got him or herself caught in the concrete ramp entrance to the Drumlin Underground exhibit (which I sometimes call "the amphibian trap" since we find dozens back there every year). It's a spring peeper Pseudacris crucifer, recognizable by the X on its back. This individual is covered with dust and dirt--my volunteer swept it up while cleaning the ramp--so the X is a little obscured. It's always amazing to me how such a small animal can be so loud. Their ringing call in early spring lights up the wet forests where they live.


This is a garden centipede. Usually they are bright red-orange, but this one has recently molted its exoskeleton, and the new color hasn't "set" yet.

This is the larva of a predatory fungus gnat (family Keroplatidae). It's lurking on this mat of dry rot fungus waiting for a fungus-eating creature to stumble into the sticky threads it has lain.

A harvestman perched high on a goldenrod. I don't know why it does this behavior--it seems like it would be vulnerable to bird predation.

This is the fledgling oriole I had to euthanise the other day. You can see that it bled from its mouth quite a bit.

And this is an adult male oriole we found in the Riverway. Its wings were stiffly held up and back, making the carcass into a kind of tripod.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-26 12:30 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-26 01:25 pm (UTC)http://hbs.bishopmuseum.org/aocat/kero.html
The clincher was a nearly identical photo, down to the type of fungus(!), on bugguide:
http://bugguide.net/node/view/14942
no subject
Date: 2007-06-27 11:12 am (UTC)http://www.glowworm.co.nz/glowworms.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arachnocampa
no subject
Date: 2007-06-26 02:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-26 03:26 pm (UTC)or maybe they taste really bad and the birds know this?
who knows :>
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