This is the stowaway on the Volendam. We think it boarded the ship before it left Europe, and sailed with the ship across the Atlantic and now down to the Amazon river.
ovo de Siproeta stelenes na sua planta hospedeira Ruellia angustiflora
Resting on an understorey plant. At a quick glance, I initially thought it was a bird dropping. The white hairs give it the appearance of being infected with an entomopathogenic fungi, maybe as a deterrent to predators...? Definitely the most amazing cerambycid I've ever seen!
Update: this species finally has a name! The paper naming and describing it can be freely downloaded from here: https://doi.org/10.54102/ajt.iv1x5
Saw dozens (but it was a windy day, there was not much visibility). A colleague had seen hundreds in previous days, including groups forming rows on the sea floor.
Flew into building and stunned himself on the inside of a window. I caught him, took him outside and sat him on a twig. After 5-10 minutes, he recovered and flew away
This photo lost some quality in scanning from an old slide. It shows a wild-born bird. The species is now extinct in the wild.
First iNaturalist record.
With Graham Armstrong, Pete Ellis, Steve Guy, Guy Langan, Paul Harvey, Phil Heath, Ian Lewis.
Seen for more than an hour after dawn, in a small loose group of Eur. Curlews, feeding in a short-grass field on the south side of the main lake. This was "limpy" - the bird that had been shot about 3 weeks earlier, but seemed to make a recovery.
This location is the last known wintering site for this species. The last record from here was in February 1995.
Here is a link to the last video taken at this site, in January 1995:
http://www.hbw.com/ibc/video/slender-billed-curlew-numenius-tenuirostris/bird-foraging-short-grass
A truly amazing encounter with one of the world's most enigmatic ungulates. When I first saw this Pygmy Hippo, it was resting on the ground a few meters off the trail, covered with sweat droplets. After about an hour of waiting, it got up and slowly walked through the forest. It did not appear to mind my presence.
I was lucky to observe this owl for about 20 minutes. When I first found it, it was actively looking around from a relatively open perch. It flushed to a more concealed perch after I attempted to approach it more closely. I heard it (or another individual) calling the following night in the same general area. (I'm about a year behind on my photos, but I had to expedite this one...)
I really don't know what it is. I think It could be a microfungus. It has around 5 mm height and was placed on a bell pepper surface.
This is the second member of the Ambohitantely species that bred out today 1 March 2023. The images are of what (I suspect) is a live female Madagascar silk angel moth? The final two images are of the casing the pupal skin and the dried dead adult. Len
Hirundine seen on RRS James Clark Ross, en route from Falklands to South Georgia. First seen at 13:30 ship's time by Nicholas L. Warren at 51 degrees, 52 minutes S, 55 degrees, 52 minutes W. Observed later that afternoon by NLW, Ben Phalan and Mike Dunn. Not seen on subsequent days.
This bird was observed and photographed while I was en route to Bird Island, South Georgia. I then had no internet access or access to relevant field guides until 2004. I sent the photograph (which was a transparency) to a colleague in February 2003, and he identified the bird as a Grey-breasted Martin. He added that there had been at least one in Stanley in early November 2001 as part of an "invasion" of hirundines (Barn Swallow, Chilean Swallow) from end October to mid November, per December 2002 Falklands Conservation newsletter.
However, on getting the slide scanned in 2018, I revisited this record and believe the bird is in fact a Purple Martin.
DESCRIPTION (from field notes)
Overall: A bit bigger and chunkier than a Barn Swallow, perhaps about the size of a Common Starling. A dark, sooty plumage overall, blackish with some shiny blue sheen.
Bare parts: Bill dark grey, quite strong, slightly hooked at tip. Pale pink mouth (wide). Legs and feet dark blackish brown. Eye dark (blackish).
Upperparts: Blackish, with dark blue gloss on some new inner primaries, innermost greater coverts, some lesser coverts, middle tertial, and patchily on mantle. Pale ashy grey forehead and nape, black lores, glossy blue patch across top of crown. Perhaps had a whitish border to mantle, but this may have just been feather bases showing. Wings dark blackish, long (obscuring tail).
Underparts: Greyish, becoming whitish on chin (v. slight hint of darker malar streaks) with some faint streaks on lower breast from shaft streaks or darker feather shafts. Whitish vent.
Behaviour: Quite weak, but not enough to allow it to be caught. Flew a short distance out from ship several times before returning to perch on deck. Pecked at a paint chip and looked like it was trying to drink spray.
Squeaks made when disturbed (poked with finger) once it was already playing dead
Five sepals, ten petals, five anthers, three pistils. Three purple bracts below the corolla that fell off when touched.
Note that the location of this observation was recorded (based on iphone photo metadata) as -9.2224472222, -35.8868138889 with accuracy of 10 m. That's completely wrong, and was a location I had visited hours earlier. However, I guess it's an iphone problem, not an iNat problem. Corrected to the right location.
I believe this was the male from an hour previously, leaving the bromeliad to go live and love some more. He had climbed up to the end of a leaf from the neighbouring bromeliad. He does look a lot yellower than the photos from 19:24, so I am not sure if it is the same individual or not. In the subsequent two days, no adult frog was seen in this bromeliad.
Possibly the same tagged pigeon first seen on top deck in Portsmouth, UK in August.
Quarter inch white balls, some puckered and loose, some slightly attached to soil
Nesting on a ferry going daily for 33 km up and down the Drin Valley (2:30 hours one-way).
The swallows are breeding in the vehicle area on the lower deck, which is open on both sides.
Apparently, the parents are shuttling back and forth with the ferry, and feeding their chicks during the trip.
See also
www.inaturalist.org/observations/14568369
www.inaturalist.org/observations/14568372
Inmovilizado por semillas pegajosas de Pisonia aculeata (atrapapájaros)
Gesneria brachysepala was for the first time collected by Erik L. Ekman at the 4th of October 1928 and had not been seen ever since. The species was known from a single locality in South Western Haiti. G. brachysepala has been searched for, by two Gesneriad experts: The Laurence E. Skog expedition in 1970 and the expedition of John L. Clark in 2015. They did however not find it, and Laurence E. Skog considered it extinct. The species was rediscovered in July 3, 2019 in a ravine about 1 km east of the type locality.
Reith, M (2020). Rediscovery of Gesneria brachysepala Urb. & Ekman. Gesneriads, the Journal for Gesneriad Growers. Vol.70 Nr.1