Backyard and Beyond

Starting out from Brooklyn, an amateur naturalist explores our world.

As John Burroughs said, “The place to observe nature is where you are.”

mthew

  • Spider

    A jumping spider amongst the leaflets of a hickory. I thought this big, bold specimen would just sing out its species identification, but no. You got me. Turns out there’s a good bit of variation within some spider species.

  • R for Robin

  • Flying Now

    Swift Feather-legged Fly. Common Whitetail female. Red-spotted Admiral. Nessus Moth. Or rather, flying things, since it’s hard to get a good picture of insects in flight. We can try, though. Dusky-winged Hover Fly. Spot-winged Glider — the spot on the hindwing is sometimes even subtler. Cuckoo leafcutter bee. Meanwhile, an Asian Tiger Mosquito attempts to…

  • National Moth Week: Polyphemus

    A one centimeter-long instar of the Polyphemus Moth on a white oak leaf in Green-Wood. It’ll get bigger…the final instar can be 6cm long (about 2.5″). If this survives all the vicissitudes, it will pupate and return next year as a large moth. Found last winter: I think these are all Polyphemus cocoons. From this…

  • Roof Crow

    A Fish Crow, identified by its vocalizations, patrolling neighboring roofs. For bugs. Crunchy snacks. I believe the prey here is a Common Green June Beetle. Seemed to already dead up there. Crow was scavenging and found several tidbits. Flashbacks: Two years ago, Laughing Gulls were swarming over a bunch of these same beetles at Bush…

  • Tiger Swallowtail

    A couple of caterpillars of the Eastern Tiger Swallowtail butterfly. When they are in their early stages or instars, they look a bit like bird turds. But when you look closer, your larger-than-average predator brain will note some curiosities. The “eyes” are fake, by the way.(Some caterpillars pretend to be twigs…) As they get older,…

  • Midge Monday

    It turns out, because you have to turn the leaflets over, that hickory trees are potentially loaded with gall mites. There are several dozen hickory gall midge species in the Caryomyia genus, each forcing the tree to make a little shelter for the mite. Acting on a call from a curator on iNaturalist, I examined…

  • Mite-y Cargo

    A blue-form female Familiar Bluet, I think. About three blocks from the nearest water body. The edge of this parking lot was weedy– more recently every bit of greenery was removed. But it’s already sprouting back… Anyway, the damselfly turned out to be laden with cargo. These red things are water mites, hitching a ride.…

  • Bent Snapper

    Medium-sized snapping turtle. By medium-sized, I mean the shell here is bigger than your average dinner plate. About a month ago, I ran into this same turtle in the water. This carapace (top shell) is unique, and rather unusual. I’ve never seen the spines on the far edge pointing upwards on other specimens.

  • Birds

    Another breeding bird? A pair of Brown Thrashers were hunkered under a few bushes in Green-Wood recently. A big, bold bird that hides its light under a bushel if there ever was one. Seeing this one out in the open was a nice change of pace. Forster’s Tern hunting over the Crescent Water. A bit…