Monday, April 26, 2021

Peter Piper Picked a Peck of Pickled Pipefish

Braefoot Point with Inchcolm Island behind

 With the tide low yesterday morning I headed for the rocks and rummaged around for an hour or so. I didn't see as much as I was expecting, to be honest, but I did find some very nice Worm Pipefish. At first I found only one, and I wsa excited enough about that. Then under another rock I found 5 all wrapped around each other. Maybe it's mating season.

Worm Pipefish: short upturned nose, no caudal fin

That would have been a result enough , despite the lack of other interesting things, but it also turned out that a very nice paddle-worm was new, too. Earthworms are probably the group I find most boring to deal with (it's mostly counting), but marine worms are spectacular things with their scales, tendrils, etc. Amazingly at 40cm this wasn't the biggest worm of the day! These paddle-worms definitely have a Chinese New Year feel about them, and the body colour on this one was spectacular. Not sure what's the benefit of growing so long. 

Dragon worm


At the end of the day I went to drop this worm back into the water (yes, too long but it was OK), only to discover that there was a mass of exposed seaweed. As the light faded I practically ran around like a maniac. If I was going to find a sea spider in Dalgety Bay surely this was the day?


It wasn't. But I did find another three nice additions - bootlace worm, which is an absurdly long nemertean. I have no idea how long because it was basically in a pile. And the yellow-ringed tunicate Ciona inestinalis. So intent was I on looking for things that  it seems I only took one photo. This is it, and you can see the result of fading light. You can just about see the yellow tips that would be rings when it was fully open.


The third addition was an actual living sea urchin, although since I managed to crush it with the rock before I found it "living" was a temporary situation, sadly. Of course there were many other common things, including 1000s of brittlestars, starfish, crabs (green shore, edible, long-clawed porcelain, great spider) and butterfish, though strangely no other fish was knowingly encountered. I also checked a good few Cuvie holdfasts to see if I could locate a blue-rayed limpet. That also was not to be. I'll definitely be keeping my eye better on the tide tables in future, though.

Bootlace worm



Thursday, April 22, 2021

Aellurilus v-insignitus at Pettycur

I was alerted to the presence of a particularly rare spider in Scotland which is more -or-less on my doorstop, and only there. I made the pilgrimage a few miles east, fully thinking that I would spend an hour staring at rocks with no luck. However, it wasn't to be and I was able to quite easily locate a few specimens (1m 2ff) of said spider. A later search by someone more conscientious turned up a good many more.

I was lucky enough to get one in the binoculars just as it began to display to a female, waving its palps in the air like a Mexican wave before shaking up and down at the "knees". I guess that process was successful as they ran off up the hill together. Or maybe that's what failure looks like. I tried to make a video, but because the sun was on the screen all I managed was a video of a nearby stone.





Monday, April 5, 2021

Happy Mondays

With a day off and a chance to visit two sites that I like, but don't spend much time on, I went both to the bog and the coast. Where it snowed! At least it snowed in between bouts of decent sunshine, allowing me to pick up my 4,000th species - this rather fetching Nomada fabriciana

The supporting cast were Viola hirta, Agonopterix assimilella (micromoth larva in spun broom, bog edge) and Pine Cone Bug, from a Scots Pine also on the bog.

And that was that. Only 999 species to go until 5k, since I also picked up the dung beetle Aegialia arenaria, which was crawling around in numbers around the dunes. If I make it even close to half way there this year that will have been a very good year.

Sunny Beach, about 6 degrees!

Nomada fabriciana


Friday, April 2, 2021

Reptile in the bag - Common Lizard

Came across this little chap on my wanderings today. After allowing me to take some nice snapshots it then graciously popped into the delicately-placed sweep net for a closer look. When I set it back down it didn't ever wander off. Seemed happy enough, though.