My Olivedale Garden

Sunday, 21.11.2021
I thought I’d give a garden journal a try. My retirement coincided with a hard covid lockdown in South Africa at the end of March 2020. My garden has become very important in my life and I am trying to photograph everything I see and post them on iNat.

The highlight today was to watch two African Hoopoes, an adult and a juvenile. Both were foraging in the back garden. Despite the juvenile being quite successful the adult returned time and again to feed it. Other observations today:
A Southern Masked Weaver nest building.
Two Striped Ladybird Beetles; one with a single stripe, the other with three.
Ladybird Beetle larva are everywhere as well as their pupa.
A Leafhopper.
Two mantid nymphs.
Lacewing eggs.
A Masked Bee.
And all the usual garden birds.

Last month I got to spend some time closely watching a Flower Crab Spider. She was on a daisy flower. It was interesting to watch as she moved from flower to flower, sometimes patrolling the underside of a flower or moving up and down the stem. Over 23 days she had 13 meals, those being mainly flies and bees. Interesting to me was the presence of Jackal Flies when she caught a Bee. I only saw her miss a prey item once. I was able to observe and photograph a male, small and reddish in colour, mate with her; well that’s what I presumed was going on. Then one day she was just not present any longer.

An interesting article related to crab spider predation is:
https://academic.oup.com/beheco/article/17/6/933/317264

Posted on November 21, 2021 03:36 PM by doug263 doug263

Observations

Photos / Sounds

What

Freeloader Flies (Family Milichiidae)

Observer

doug263

Date

October 17, 2021 12:56 PM SAST

Description

This obs for the fly (ringed). The same crab spider as https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/97153747

Photos / Sounds

What

Flower Crab Spiders (Genus Thomisus)

Observer

doug263

Date

October 18, 2021 04:23 PM SAST

Description

This observation is for the male. The female is the same individual as https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/97153747

Photos / Sounds

What

African Hoopoe (Upupa epops ssp. africana)

Observer

doug263

Date

November 21, 2021

Description

Adult feeding the juvenile (on the left; duller in colour with a greyish neck). Even though the juvenile was foraging successfully, the adult continued to return to feed it.

Comments

When crab spiders manage to capture sting-possessing bees of a body size similar to their own, how do they avoid being stung?

Posted by milewski almost 2 years ago

I am not sure. I think they are able to hold the bee still with those strong front legs and their venom is very fast acting. To actually watch the process it is very quick.

Posted by doug263 almost 2 years ago

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