I found a new fly last month. It was sitting on a wild carrot flower and
there was something striking about it that made me get the camera and take some
photographs.
Ectophasia crassipennis |
The fly Ectophasia crassipennis, is a tachinid
fly. This is a large group of flies
(about 270 species in the UK) that parasitize other species. They are parasitoids, rather than parasites –
the difference being that parasitoids kill or fatally weaken their hosts
whereas parasites take resources from their hosts but don’t kill them (like the
stylops I described in a previous Nature Notes). Some tachinids parasitize butterfly or moth
caterpillars, but this species parasitizes hemiptera, for example, shield
bugs. They lay their eggs on the back of
the insect where they can’t be reached and when the larvae hatch they burrow
into the insect and eat it from the inside.
Tachina grossa |
Incidentally, on a recent trip to Braunton Burrows in Devon
to survey bumblebees we found another tachinid fly – Tachina grossa – it
is the biggest and ugliest fly I have ever seen, as big as a bumblebee and
being black and hairy, also resembles one.
That particular fly lays eggs on hairy caterpillars like the oak eggar
moth with eventually fatal consequences for the moth.
I seem to have seen more hornets in the garden
recently. Normally we get the occasional
one preying on the wasps eating windfall apples, but recently I have regularly
seen one hunting round our meadow area.
A week or two back we put out the moth trap to see what late summer
species were about. Imagine my surprise
when I looked in the trap the following morning and found more than a dozen
hornets in there. This made emptying the
trap a much more hazardous task than usual.
They were all a bit dopey and most flew off as I pulled the egg boxes
out. A couple of them ran out of energy
and subsequently died, but judging by the moth wings in the bottom of the trap,
none of them had gone hungry during the night.
Seeing so many hornets, as well as the hornet rove beetle I described in
last month’s column, suggests that there was a colony nearby, possibly in the
wooded area at the bottom of Elm Lane as that is the direction I have seen them
fly off in.
European Hornet - Vespa crabro |
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