Date Added
July 31, 2024
02:02 PM CEST
Description
Came flying across the road in front of the car with remarkably slow wingbeats (almost like a heron). Lighter coloured patches on the upper side of the wings. I was too stunned to react in time, that's why I only have these photos. The first two have been edited to make the image brighter and adjust the colours a bit. Colour was quite dark, though difficult to see because of the twilight. Very large bird, at least as large as buzzard, maybe bigger. The last photo shows the same branch but without the bird.
Date Added
January 9, 2023
06:22 PM UTC
Description
Magnification: 0.5x / Zoom: 0.8x / CameraAdapter: 0.5x / Objective: 0.63x / MicroscopeName: Axiocam208
Date Added
October 2, 2023
11:54 AM AEST
Date Added
December 26, 2023
04:59 PM AEST
Description
Ten together on one branch at the edge of the creek, couldn't see ovipositors on any of them.
Date Added
August 19, 2022
06:18 PM +03
Description
Specimen collected under a research project on agro ecology. Work done with Cyril Marty.
id : Hyméno 63 (old Hetero 4)
Date Added
September 9, 2023
11:56 PM CEST
Date Added
May 9, 2024
02:19 PM MSK
Date Added
May 12, 2024
06:42 AM CEST
Date Added
January 23, 2024
07:44 AM CET
Date Added
February 8, 2024
11:37 PM CET
Date Added
March 15, 2024
07:59 PM UTC
Date Added
May 12, 2023
08:24 PM UTC
Date Added
March 12, 2023
08:44 AM UTC
Date Added
August 24, 2021
06:23 PM CDT
Date Added
October 23, 2023
05:24 PM UTC
Date Added
October 4, 2023
12:05 PM PDT
Date Added
July 1, 2021
11:22 AM CEST
Date Added
June 9, 2023
04:20 PM UTC
Date Added
June 9, 2023
05:47 PM CEST
Date Added
April 13, 2023
02:41 PM AEST
Date Added
March 17, 2023
01:48 PM CET
Date Added
July 31, 2022
01:13 AM EEST
Description
Laying eggs on Tanacetum vulgare flowerhead. This platygasrtrid is a parasite and Ozirhincus cecidomyid laying eggs on the left likely is the host species.
Date Added
June 25, 2017
09:52 PM PDT
Description
a) The jumping spider resemblance is insane. b) The range of sizes among adults is insane. What is up with this fly.
Date Added
February 19, 2021
08:38 PM AEST
Date Added
June 25, 2022
08:55 AM UTC
Description
gorgeous Chariomyrma - species ID tentative but good fit
Date Added
June 30, 2022
12:18 PM AEST
Date Added
January 20, 2023
08:15 PM +03
Place
Missing Location
Date Added
November 10, 2022
02:00 PM UTC
Date Added
June 19, 2020
06:55 PM -03
Date Added
November 13, 2022
07:05 PM CET
Date Added
July 3, 2020
04:22 PM CEST
Date Added
March 16, 2022
06:24 PM UTC
Date Added
June 10, 2022
06:45 PM IST
Date Added
October 10, 2022
11:08 AM CEST
Date Added
July 8, 2021
02:24 PM AEST
Date Added
September 12, 2021
12:56 AM UTC
Date Added
July 24, 2022
02:04 AM CEST
Date Added
July 11, 2021
05:08 PM CEST
Date Added
June 26, 2022
10:43 PM EDT
Description
This observation is for the larger insect in this photo.
What
Dryad
(Minois dryas)
Date Added
July 12, 2022
11:40 PM UTC
Place
Missing Location
Date Added
July 11, 2022
04:02 PM UTC
Date Added
July 11, 2022
07:35 AM CEST
Date Added
July 3, 2022
10:08 PM CEST
Date Added
June 12, 2022
08:33 AM CAT
Description
This series shows Watshamiella alata watching Sycoscapter cornutus oviposit into a Ficus burkei syconium (fruiting body) for over seven minutes; after the Sycoscapter female departs, the Watshamiella female proceeds to oviposit into the same hole. Compton et al. (2009) described this behaviour for different species of Watshamiella in Uganda and Kenya on Ficus sycomorus and Ficus artocarpoides.
Compton, S.G., Van Noort, S., McLeish, M., Deeble, M. and Stone, V., 2009. Sneaky African fig wasps that oviposit through holes drilled by other species. African Natural History, 5, pp.9-15. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/230580629
Date Added
July 2, 2022
10:00 AM UTC
Date Added
June 30, 2022
03:21 PM CEST
Date Added
June 28, 2022
08:41 PM UTC
Date Added
June 19, 2022
12:10 PM CEST
Date Added
February 24, 2017
08:36 PM CST
Description
First iNaturalist record.
With Graham Armstrong, Pete Ellis, Steve Guy, Guy Langan, Paul Harvey, Phil Heath, Ian Lewis.
Seen for more than an hour after dawn, in a small loose group of Eur. Curlews, feeding in a short-grass field on the south side of the main lake. This was "limpy" - the bird that had been shot about 3 weeks earlier, but seemed to make a recovery.
This location is the last known wintering site for this species. The last record from here was in February 1995.
Here is a link to the last video taken at this site, in January 1995:
http://www.hbw.com/ibc/video/slender-billed-curlew-numenius-tenuirostris/bird-foraging-short-grass
Date Added
November 29, 2021
11:41 AM CET
Date Added
May 11, 2022
10:07 PM CEST
Date Added
May 11, 2022
10:07 PM CEST
Date Added
May 2, 2022
10:21 PM CEST
Date Added
May 31, 2021
10:10 PM CEST
Date Added
April 4, 2022
05:03 PM CEST
Date Added
April 10, 2022
10:14 AM CEST
Date Added
February 17, 2022
09:50 PM +0330
Date Added
January 23, 2022
08:01 PM CET
Date Added
January 21, 2022
03:20 PM EST
Date Added
January 18, 2022
09:27 PM CET
Date Added
January 16, 2022
10:06 AM PST
Date Added
March 7, 2021
09:25 PM UTC
Date Added
January 15, 2022
10:51 PM CET
What
Human
(Homo sapiens)
Date Added
January 12, 2022
09:02 AM CET
Date Added
December 28, 2021
06:51 PM UTC
Date Added
December 28, 2021
08:13 PM CET
Description
The most flirtatious lizard I've ever encountered so far.
Date Added
December 28, 2021
09:16 PM CET
Date Added
December 28, 2021
09:16 PM CET
Date Added
December 20, 2021
07:25 PM CET
Date Added
December 27, 2021
10:49 AM CET
Date Added
December 20, 2021
02:18 PM CET
Date Added
December 19, 2021
12:55 AM CET
Date Added
December 19, 2021
01:07 AM CET
Date Added
July 1, 2021
04:29 PM CEST
Date Added
December 17, 2021
11:56 AM CET
Date Added
December 16, 2021
10:02 PM CET
Date Added
February 2, 2021
03:09 PM -03
Date Added
December 15, 2021
09:51 PM CET
Date Added
November 1, 2021
04:02 PM CET
Date Added
November 1, 2021
04:21 PM CET
Date Added
December 11, 2021
10:53 PM CET
Date Added
October 21, 2020
03:51 PM UTC
Date Added
December 9, 2021
08:32 AM UTC
Date Added
November 27, 2021
12:41 PM UTC
Date Added
November 27, 2021
03:23 PM CET
Date Added
November 25, 2021
11:38 PM CET
Date Added
November 24, 2021
12:20 PM CET
Date Added
November 24, 2021
11:55 AM CET
Date Added
November 25, 2021
08:25 AM CET
Date Added
November 19, 2021
03:22 PM CET
Date Added
November 18, 2021
07:19 PM CET
Date Added
November 16, 2021
09:38 PM CET
Date Added
November 16, 2021
09:38 PM CET
Date Added
November 14, 2021
08:38 PM CET
Date Added
November 12, 2021
09:57 PM CET
Date Added
November 12, 2021
09:05 PM CET
Date Added
November 12, 2021
11:53 PM CET
Date Added
April 7, 2021
09:55 PM +07
Description
It was climbing on branches in higher parts of birch crowns and jumping between them, moving from tree to tree rather chaotically. Below people were goggling at it, above three magpies and one crow were worrying and trying cautiously to arrack, but it seemed to enjoy playing. This did not look what i would consider a wild animal behaviour, so I could not exclude it escaped from captivity. On the other hand, our town is immersed in the forest... It did so at the same place for about an hour, graduallt becoming less motile, and I just left it... For 42 years here I only once have seen a martes before in the surroundings, in 1980s.
Date Added
February 11, 2021
08:46 AM CET
Date Added
April 28, 2021
07:17 PM CEST