This is a good time of year to find mines of Ectoedemia sp. micromoths in 'green islands' in fallen Oak leaves: the leaves you want are quite easy to identify due to the green part contrasting with the brown of the fallen leaves. These micromoth larvae extend their feeding season by blocking off the chlorophyll return valves in the leaf. This ensures that a supply of food continues to be available even after the leaves have fallen from the tree. The specimen shown below had a bit of bad luck, however:
Ectoedemia micromoth mine in 'green island' in Oak leaf |
- they don't fall out of the leaf
- they end up at a part of the leaf that contains enough food for their growth and development
- the mines don't cross themselves, which would force them to encounter (and eat) their own dung
Some of the rules involve following veins, others force a change of direction after a certain amount of time; other decisions are made by the female when she lays the egg. The rules don't always work, but I find that the vast majority of mines are successfully completed. I'm guessing that in this case the rule to turn away from the sub-vein is timed and the location was just plain unlucky.
You can see a normal mine here: http://donegal-wildlife.blogspot.com/2009/10/smart-miners.html
I found a few fungi including this Clitocybe vibecena:
Clitocybe vibecena |
Scleroderma citrinum earthball |
Even dead and now-useless parts of plants can have innate beauty: this empty seedhead of Hogweed was worth photographing:
Hogweed seedhead |
Sycamore leaves are covered in their tar-spot fungus Rhytisma acerinum:
Sycamore tar-spot fungus, Rhytisma acerinum |
We have had solid rain for the last two weeks and I haven't seen a single moth in that time. The last night, in pouring rain, a single specimen of Red Sword-grass came to light. The Red Sword-grass hibernates as an adult, so something must have stirred this one from its hiding place.
Red Sword-grass |
Red Sword-grass has a mostly western and northern distribution and is found mostly near bogs or heaths.
4 comments:
You are a veritable mine of information Stuart, thank you.
That leaf-miner info is absolutely fascinating.
I guess the poor moth was avoiding drowning....
I was watching a programme on TV last night, and they said that slime moulds were a single-celled organism - which tallies with the amoeba relationship but is hard to believe when you see and watch them.
There also seem to be different types, from the creeping "dog-sick" ones on grass to those that look - and feel - just like pink marshmallows on logs (Lycogala sp.). Extraordinary.
@Toffeeapple:"You are a veritable mine of information". Good pun......;)
@Gill: I was initially sceptical that slime moulds could move. I tended to interpret the apparent movement as consecutive generations of new specimens leaving a trail of corpses behind them. But I came across a 'specimen' (actually a community) that had formed and then made a bee-line for a mushroom some 15 cm distant. Unfortunately, the photographs didn't work (too dark). I read somewhere that colonies of slime moulds are being tested for use as light detectors in robots .
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