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Category Archives: odonata

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More Aeshna affnis with a small skipper butterfly and a slender leaved hare’s ear

butterflies, Essex, grasshopper, insect, odonata, wat tyler cpBy Neil-UKWildlifeAugust 14, 2012Leave a comment

At lunchtime I bumped into a couple of folks looking for the southern migrant hawker (one of who was Simon NL on Flickr, click his name to see his excellent pics). I got a couple of photos of the perched male today: Sadly with my Sigma 150-500mm rather than my 300mm prime, which I can’t…

Southern migrant hawker Aeshna affinis

Essex, insect, odonata, wat tyler cpBy Neil-UKWildlifeAugust 10, 20123 Comments

There were a few people in Wat Tyler CP today looking for the Southern migrant hawker dragonfly. If you are unfamiliar with this species see my last post. Today I was unable to use my long lens so didn’t get any more of it in flight, but at the end of the day I got…

Southern migrant hawker dragonfly at Wat Tyler Country Park

Essex, insect, odonata, wat tyler cpBy Neil-UKWildlifeAugust 9, 20121 Comment

In 2010 a number of Southern migrant hawker dragonflies (Aeshna affinis) turned up at Hadleigh Country Park, a few miles East of Wat Tyler CP. They also turned up at Vange Wick (not Vange Marsh) just to the south of Wat Tyler CP, so I’ve been hoping they would turn up here. Last year, I…

Crockford Bridge: Southern damselfly and golden ringed dragonfly

insect, New forest, odonataBy Neil-UKWildlifeAugust 8, 2012Leave a comment

On Sunday I visited Crockford Bridge, a stream well known for its dragon and damselflies. My target species was the southern damselfly, one of the rarest species in the UK and one I had never seen. It didn’t take me long to find one! Here is a pic of my first ever southern damselfly! They…

Ruddy darter, wolf spider with eggs and a common lizard

Essex, insect, odonata, Reptile, wat tyler cpBy Neil-UKWildlifeAugust 2, 20121 Comment

A few photo from Wat Tyler CP during the recent sunny spell. First up a ruddy darter. This wolf spider was warming her egg cocoon in the sun. And this lizard posed for a photo… …before playing peak-a-boo.

Emperor dragonfly egg laying

Essex, insect, odonata, wat tyler cpBy Neil-UKWildlifeJuly 30, 20122 Comments

More recent photos from Wat Tyler Country Park. This time a female emperor dragonfly which was laying its eggs on some fallen reeds. This angle, although a bit top down, shows the tip of the abdomen in action below the surface. And I tried an in the environment shot too.

Scarce emerald damselfly Lestes dryas

Essex, insect, odonata, wat tyler cpBy Neil-UKWildlifeJuly 29, 2012Leave a comment

The rubbish weather so far this summer has stopped me getting much in the way of macro shots at all, let alone of the local speciality, the scarce emerald damselfly. However the improved weather last week did let me get the following.

British dragonfly and damselfly emergence and flight times

Freshwater invertebrates, insect, odonataBy Neil-UKWildlifeJuly 14, 20123 Comments

A few years ago on my old blog I posted a diagram to show the emergence and flight times of all the British odonata (dragonflies and damselflies) and a seemed to be quite popular. Since then a number of new species have become established in Britain, or are at least well on their way to…

First (scarce?) emerald damselfly of the year

Essex, insect, odonata, wat tyler cpBy Neil-UKWildlifeJune 18, 20122 Comments

Today just before my lunch break ended (typical!) I spotted an emerald damselfly (Lestes sp.). I managed a few photos, trying to focus on the key ID features to separate the from the Scarce (Lestes dryas), ‘common’ (L. sponsa) and the Southern/ migrant (L. barbarus) emeralds, all recorded from Wat Tyler Country Park. It refused…

Scarce emerald damselfly nymph Lestes dryas

Essex, Freshwater invertebrates, insect, odonata, wat tyler cpBy Neil-UKWildlifeJune 4, 20121 Comment

Last week a realised that the emerald damselflies would soon be emerging and there would not be nymphs around for much longer. This because despite hatching in March/April, they only take a matter of weeks to grow and emerge as adults, so the time available to photograph them is not very long. I managed to…

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