Two parts: first, in the Canoe River area in Foxboro, from Willow St. along the electricity lines. Next, Borderland State Park at the Northwest Trail.
Not a great day for too many insects. At the Canoe River area, the breeze was too much to get many photographs in focus; at Borderland, there were fewer insects than I’ve seen for a while. Maybe the season is dwindling.
As recompense, we’re getting more colors and better light. The early and late autumn — before and after peak colors — are underestimated for their beauty.
These photos (a bee, Sphecodes, I’m told) could have been so much better! I realized after I took them that my camera was still at f/2.8. Trying to capture a fidgety bee at f/2.8 is like drinking your tea with chopsticks.
They’re kleptoparasites: they can feed themselves, but get other bees (including other Halictids) to feed their babies.
My guess is that we caught her in the act of invading another bee’s burrow to lay her eggs! Very cool.
Nice to catch it taking off:
A jagged ambush bug, Phymata cf pennsylvanica
I can never say no to Halictidae photographs:
An ant alate. “Crematogaster cerasi or less likely C. lineolata”.
Can you spot the jumping spider?
I’m using new apparatus for macro photographs. This grasshopper allowed me to make full use of the zoom. Melanoplus punctulatus.
And this is with the lens fully zoomed in, no crop!
Visitor’s Center to the Pond, to Pond Edge Trail, to the Swamp Trail. Then Pond Walk to Ames Mansion.
But first, spiders from right outside my front door. Shame on me for not noticing them earlier! This is Theridion. They can actually be social spiders, and there were multiple of them in this web.
The Halictids were out in force! Augochlora pura:
Halictus sp. : “the hair bands are stronger and seem apical while the head looks much larger than a Lasioglossum”
Maybe Three Streaked Sparganothis, aka Sparganothis tristriata 3699?
Figitidae:
Ancistrocerus cf adiabatus:
Diptera. “Calliphoridae, Calliphora sp. Wing veination in this case mainly gets you to Oestroidea, ruling out Muscoidea.”
A sunset walk at Stony Brook. I was hoping to catch my share of insects before the season ended, and especially Odonates (dragonflies and damselflies) seem to be common at Stony Brook. I hardly saw any, except for the ubiquitous mosquitoes. But a wonderful walk, and plenty of sights to see and snap.
Lebia ornata, I’m told.
View through a chewed up leaf.
Nothing at all eerie about this leaf. I have no idea what you’re talking about.
Lots of light and shadow:
This leaf was breathtaking:
Loved this simple view of fence and branch:
Just a spectral looking leaf. Not sure which crop I like best.
“Coleophora sp. of the type that feeds on Goldenrods and Asters. They need dissection to distinguish, but the common one on most Solidago species is C. duplicis.” In my defence, I actually did figure out that Coleophora was one of the likely candidates!
Took the kayak out to Lake Massapoag. Went to a lily patch, and then just floated, taking photos of whatever came by. Older camera, no flash, moving boat…please forgive the lower picture quality.
Blue heron:
Water skimmer. Gerridae. Maybe Gerris buenoi?
These flies were everywhere. Probably Dolichopodidae, certainly gorgeous: