Richard Jones

@bugmanjones@techhub.social
647 Followers
106 Following
395 Posts
I’m very good at finding insects, in fact I’m a professional. Books on wasps, ants, beetles, dung, limericks, shieldbugs. Not so much a bird watcher, more of a word botcher. Shout: “Weird bug” to get my attention. 
https://bugmanjones.com/
The view from my office today claims I have arrived.
Always photograph a common blue. Just to make sure it isn’t a brown Argus. Or in this case to confirm that it is a brown Argus. These two underside spots vertical. As usual I had to look that up.
Me being bitten by a ladybird. Last time it happened was during the Brighton ‘ladybird plague’ of 1976. When they land from flight a ladybird can taste whether a plant is being attacked somewhere by aphids by detecting the response chemicals, kairomones, in the plant sap.
This damsel bug nymph is an excellent ant mimic and well worthy of the name Himacerus mirmicoides. Does stand out a bit though, as there are no Formica wood ants at the Tower of London today.
Hoplia philanthus. I can’t bring myself to call it a Welsh chafer until someone can explain how it came by the name.
How many legs does a butterfly have? Four. Plus two invisible feathery antennal brushes. If you’re a painted lady.
Halyzia sedecimguttata, the orange ladybird, used to be considered quite a local British species, feeding on mildew on beech leaves in old woods. Now regarded as common and widespread. I wonder what changed?
Zoropsis spinimana haunting the wheelie bins of East Dulwich. Photo sent by a neighbour. Such a handsome thing. Can it nip? I’ve not tested that hypothesis yet.
Fave leaf beetle of the day — Sermylassa halensis. North Downs near Maidstone today.
Cryptocephalus hypochaeridis doing what it does best — sitting in a bright yellow composite flower. North Downs near Maidstone today.