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Thursday, 15 December 2022

15-12-2022 NGALA LODGE, GAMBIA - RAINBOW AGAMA (Agama agama)






 

15-12-2022 NGALA LODGE, GAMBIA - RED ROCKDWELLER DRAGONFLY (Bradinopyga strachani) (FEMALE)



15-12-2022 NGALA LODGE, GAMBIA - BROWN BABBLER (Turdoides plebejus)





15-12-2022 NGALA LODGE, GAMBIA - PIONEER WHITE BUTTERFLY (belenois aurota)



15-12-2022 NGALA LODGE, THE GAMBIA - PEAHEN MOTH (Isturgia deerraria)




15-12-2022 NGALA LODGE, GAMBIA - HOODED VULTURE (Necrosyrtes monachus)









 

Tuesday, 13 December 2022

13-12-2015 SOUTHERN MYANMAR - GURNEY'S PITTA (FEMALE) (Hydrornis gurneyi)


Gurney's pitta (Hydrornis gurneyi) (Thai: นกแต้วแร้วท้องดำ) is a medium-sized passerine bird. It breeds in the Malay Peninsula, with populations mainly in Myanmar. The common name and Latin binomial commemorate the British banker and amateur ornithologist John Henry Gurney (1819-1890). Its diet consists of slugs, insects, and earthworms.

The male has a blue crown and black-and-yellow underparts; the rest of the head is black, and it has warm brown upperparts. The female has a brown crown and buffy-whitish underparts.

Sunday, 4 December 2022

4-12-2022 MONTE CORONA, VALENCIA - EUROPEAN HARVESTMAN (Phalangium opilio)



Phalangium opilio (also known as the Common harvestman, brown harvestman and daddy longlegs) is a species of harvestman belonging to the family Phalangiidae.

P. opilio is a member of the Eupnoi suborder of Opiliones.

P. opilio has a mostly holarctic distribution and is the most widespread harvestman species worldwide, occurring natively in Europe, North and Central Asia, and Asia Minor. The species has been introduced to North America, North Africa and New Zealand from Europe. In North America, it occurs in non-desert regions of southern Canada and the United States.


This species can be found in a wide range of open habitats, including meadows, bogs, and forests. It is also most abundant in anthropogenic habitats, and is thus considered a synanthropic species of harvestmen. In can be found in habitats modified by humans, such as gardens, agroecosystems, hedgerows, lawns, quarries, urban green spaces, walls and bridges. In agricultural settings, P. opilio is common in temperate cropland, living among crops such as corn, alfalfa, small grains, potatoes, cabbage, strawberries, and apple.

P. opilio apparently prefer vertical surfaces, including tree trunks and vertical man-made structures like fences and walls, with a preference for wood substrate due to its low thermal conductivity and slow release of moisture, being a thermophilous and moderately hygrophilous species. However, their preference varies based on the amount of cover available in a certain area. P. opilio tend to be found in shrubs and brushy vegetation when sparse shrub cover exists, but tend to be found on the ground layer when dense cover is present, such as low vegetation and grass. Early instars, immature P. opilio, only occur on the ground, but later instars have a broader vertical range. P. opilio have also been observed to take cover in low vegetation, like grass, during rain.