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• #577
Last year I found a massive spider by my front door that a couple of people in here identified as S. florentina. It definitely died (my girlfriend is pretty arachnophobic and before it was identified here had convinced herself that it was dangerous and might kill our cat...) but almost exactly a year later, in exactly the same spot, down to the brick, another one of the exact same spider has made a home. Is there any explanation for this other than it being a good spot for whatever reason?
My girlfriend isn't happy but I've convinced her that it's not going to murder the cat and that we should just leave it alone. First photo is the new guy, second photo the one from last year.
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• #578
Anyone identify this (ex) moth?
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• #579
Think this is just a funnel/tube web? They can get to a good size but not as big as the Cardinal spider...
Bee Sting bite tho!
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• #580
Think a Privett Hawk Moth as suggested a few posts up. 😎
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• #581
We have a resident drain pipe beastie.
For some reason they look much bigger from a distance. 😎
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• #582
looks too close to black for A. labyrinthica?
*Ninja edit? Sure I read labyrinth lol
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• #583
No is S. Florentina as suggested no?
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• #584
Top one of ltc's is S.Florentina, you can see the iridescent fangs. The new one they have probably is too judging by the web and very dark colour?
Your one is T. domestica / Barn funnel?
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• #585
Heh. Meant Cardinal, typed Labyrinth.
These are all soooo close tho.
Cannot tell difference between T. Domestica / T. Gigantea / T. Parietina / E. atrica Etc
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• #586
This is Lola and her lair
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• #587
Black tailed Skipper enjoying a damselfly
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• #588
Loving the pics, and the sheer variety of stuff just in people's gardens.
Two damselflies enjoying each other and a spider from near Orford. The damsels are about 30mm long, the spider's body about half that
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• #589
Not a spider, it's an opilione (or is a singular opiliones too?)
Opiliones look like they have their head as part of their body, don't produce silk or venom. Males have a penis too, unlike spiders. -
• #590
Cannot tell difference between T. Domestica / T. Gigantea / T. Parietina / E. atrica Etc
I'm very out of practice, I went through a phase of wanting to learn, spending a bit of time up at NHM and met the arachnida curator a couple of times.
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• #591
Oh yeah! thanks.
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• #592
Thanks for this.
Every day is a learning day. -
• #593
^ what he said. :-).
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• #594
Cool tiny beetle! Found hitching a ride on a walk over the weekend. No idea what it is mind.
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• #595
Not a beetle but a bug. It's a Palomena prasina, or Common Green Shieldbug, second instar, see https://www.britishbugs.org.uk/heteroptera/Pentatomidae/palomena_prasina.html
only three more instars to go before it gets to be grown up! -
• #596
It's just occurred to me that I've not seen a single grasshopper or cricket nymph yet this year. I guess the crap weather has made the eggs hatch late.
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• #597
Absolutely zero effort placed into the photo, but here's a couple... First.i assume will be a moth. Second is a bunch of spiders.
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• #598
And missed getting a picture but had one of these on a leaf the other day.... White-Marked Tussock Moth.
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• #599
We've got lots of grasshoppers on a small patch of wasteland next to my house. The cat has enjoyed many hours jumping after them.
Assume this is a flesh fly