mthew
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Raptor Wednesday
The local Northern Mockingbirds have been relentless in going after the local American Kestrels. With a hissing sound, they dive and dive. This was yesterday morning. A little later, an alarm-sounding kestrel pulled me to the window and I saw: crow chasing a Red-tailed Hawk over the park, with a Northern Mockingbird going after the…
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Discovery Week II
Look at those rear legs! It’s like they banded this one. Which would be a feat, since these are rather small insects. This is the Common Hoover Fly Parasitoid Wasp (Diplazon laetatorius). A member of the wide and wonderful world of Ichneumonidae, the ichneumon wasps, this one, as its name tells you, parasitizes hover fly…
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Discovery Week I
This week I’ll be showcasing some new-to-me species. Eye-level leaves are the naturalist’s friend. Your big honking tree has a lot of leaves up there, and 99% of them are inaccessible to the eye. But find yourself some low branches, or a sapling, and examine the sun-bathed leaves. They can be hopping… That’s how I…
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Baby Grasshoppers
Look closely. There are at least four little grasshoppers on this plant. The coreopsis flowers are making room for them, too. And here’s katydid in the mix. *** Breaking! There are coyote pups in the Bronx. I haven’t seen them, but these pictures on iNaturalist are just what you need today.
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The Return of Monarchy
Saw my first Monarch Butterfly yesterday. A male. Nectaring on milkweed in Green-Wood.
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Nectar “Robbing”
Bee species can be divided up by tongue-size. The Eastern Carpenter Bee, pictured here, is one of our largest bees. But it doesn’t have a big tongue to go with that body size. They’re considered a medium-tongued species. They can’t reach into long flowers. So they cut holes at the base of these flowers. And…
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Ubiquitous
Harmonia axyridis is found everywhere now. Mugwort is a good place to find them. This is a vary variable beetle, variably spotted, even variably colored (although the red ones predominate). They are rounder and larger, in general, than native species. Introduced to North America about a century ago, they are invasive, bad news for native…
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Small World
Linden Bark Borer Moth on a linden leaf. An introduced species… to go with our numerous introduced linden species. Linden’s are very popular street trees here. The flowers are just opening now. European Paper Wasp, the one with the orange antennae. One of the tiger crane flies. Certain grassy and unkept parts of Green-Wood are…
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Keep Looking
An unkempt clump of spirea and other plants. Just watch for a bit. Things are happening. You just need to tune your senses to it.