Still ticking along
Boxing day. Full of comfort food and alcohol. Triumphant from success at family Yahtzee. Listening to one of my Christmas present CD's (B52s 'Wild Planet' - a bit of retro vinyl replacement) I took the 'Insects of the New Forest' from the book shelves and started to browse... and there it was.
I took the photograph above at Dungeness in July this year and hadn't got around to identifying it. It resides in a folder of 'mystery species' that I maintain and that I periodically try to solve. That New Forest book has solved it. If I'm not mistaken it's a Heath Assasin-bug (Coranus subapterus). Another one for the pan-species list...
That's the palm of my hand that the insect is residing upon. If you are a palmist and can tell me my fortune from the photograph above then please let me know whether or not:
I'll ever get to 4,000 species
Be able to confidently identify mosses and lichens
Take other birders seriously.
I hope you enjoyed your Christmas...
Comments
2 - Yes, to a degree. Mosses are well covered in excellent literature. Lichens are harder for me but I aim to study Cladonias next year so maybe a case of a step at a time.
3 - No.
4 - Yes. I gather you did so too.
There's a thread here:
http://www.insecte.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=35&t=41571&sid=5b62567b6a4e8aa9b052e06d8837f7dd
with French entomologists trying to separate the two and they're comparing features not visible in this photo.