Thursday 26 September 2013

Join in and get outside for fun on the Bing!

On Tuesday the 1st of October we are having another habitat creation day at Fallin Bing. We will be there from 10am- 3pm and anyone and everyone is welcome to come along for as little or as long as they want! We will be clearing encroaching birch scrub from along the paths and maybe creating some bee banks along the sides of the Bing. The bee banks will add some variety in height along the Bing which has fairly flat sloping sides. This will benefit ground loving invertebrates that love to bask in areas of bare ground.


TCV learning about the history of Fallin Bing
I shall be bringing cake and biscuits along for the day and also some refreshments. Volunteers from The Conservation Volunteers and TCV Green Gym will be there to help out. I will be out and about with the video camera getting footage of volunteers hard at work and also having fun.

If interested in coming along or for more information about the project please contact Suzanne Bairner at Suzanne.bairner@buglife.org.uk and 01786 447504.

Thursday 19 September 2013

Buglife staff have fun on the bing!

Buglife have just had their annual staff conference and this year we were in Scotland! We decided to take the team to Fallin Bing to show them the work we have been doing and also how amazing the site is. Although cold at the top of the bing with the wind, the sun was shining allowing us to see the views from the top.
 

Buglife staff enjoy the view from the top of Fallin Bing
Buglife staff were given nets to have a look for some bugs and managed to collect some different things to what Niall Currie (TCV Natural Talent Apprentice who has been surveying Fallin for invertebrates-see blog post from 27th August and 12th September) had collected before. We had a caterpillar of the Birch sawfly (Cimbex femoratus) and the Peppered moth (Biston betularia) as well as the hoverfly Sphaeroprhoria scripta.
Looking at the sweep net to see whats inside...
As the sun was out there were lots of bugs around.
While they were busy collecting and having fun I was out with the video camera getting some footage of the team at work. It was great to get footage of the Buglife staff collecting bugs as well as lots of photos as we can use this for the digital record for the All Our Stories project which we will give back to the local community to use.
We have our next habitat creation day on Tuesday the 1st of October from 10am to 3pm. We will be clearing birch scrub from the footpath and also creating some banks for ground nesting invertebrates. Everyone is welcome to attend and cake will be provided! You can come along for as little or as long as you want. We will be meeting in the car park at Fallin Mining museum at 10am. For more information about the day please contact Suzanne Bairner at suzanne.bairner@buglife.org.uk and 01786 447504.

Thursday 12 September 2013

The amazing bugs of Fallin Bing!

As mentioned in the previous post I have been surveying Fallin Bing for its invertebrates and have so far recorded many interesting finds.

At this time of year there are many hoverflies going about.  They are often yellow and black, looking a bit like bees and wasps, but like all true flies they only have one set of wings and don’t have long antennae.  One of the most common and distinctive is the Marmalade hoverfly (Episyrphus balteatus), many of which actually arrive on British shores after an incredible migration through Europe.  Hoverflies mostly feed on nectar from flowers and are important as pollinators of plants.
Another colourful nectar feeder is the Small copper (Lycaena phleas) butterfly.  I’ve been seeing them since the start of August as the second generation of these attractive little butterflies have taken to the air.  However by the end of their flight period the males can look very battered as the will vigorously defend their patch.
A Small copper butterfly resting within the meadow at Fallin Bing
Among the most familiar of the flying insects are the bumblebees and Fallin bing is rich with them because of all the flowers they can gather pollen from.  On one visit to the Bing I watched a huge Buff-tailed bumblebee queen feeding on the bright yellow Common bird’s-foot trefoil (Lotus corniculatus) flowers.  This species has a short tongue and they struggle to reach the nectar within deeper flowers.  So instead of sticking her head into the flower tube I watched her being a bumblebee burglar and biting her way through the side of the petal to steal the nectar without helping to pollinate the flower!
Down on the ground layer there are many other bugs to be found.  I have focussed my surveys on the predatory Ground beetles and Spiders, which are very numerous all across the Bing.  The wolf spiders are so called because people used to think they hunted in packs.  In fact they are solitary hunters, but in warm sunny patches dozens can sometimes be seen scampering about.  At this time of year it is also worth looking out for females with egg sacs attached to the end of their bodies.
Another interesting group are the Jumping spiders (Family Salticidae), this time the name is more apt, since they do actually leap on their prey.  They have a row of large eyes, which gives them the best vision among the spiders, allowing them to identify prey and judge distance before jumping.  Yesterday, I was trying to identify a tiny jumping spider I had found on the Bing and to my astonishment I found it was half male and half female.  With one of the boxing glove-like appendages of a male and the other more slender like the female.  It also had one front leg with special marking that the males use to wave to females and the other was patterned as is usual for females.  This hermaphroditic form is very unusual in spiders with an estimated 1 in 17 000 showing this trait!
A jumping spider (c) Roger Key
Harvestmen are the odd looking relatives of spiders, with very long comical looking legs.  Unlike spiders they do not have a narrow waist between their two body parts and do not produce venom.  They do however also eat small insects or decaying items.  A favourite of mine is the Horn-palped harvestman (Phalangium opilio) whose male is very distinctive with horn like front limbs.  These creatures actually peak in numbers in autumn and were regularly seen during harvest time, which is where the name comes from.
Over the last few months I have been amazed by the diversity of life on Fallin Bing and I have found there is always something new and interesting to be discovered.  Why not go to Fallin Bing for a mini safari and take a look for yourself?
Niall Currie
TCV Natural Talent Apprentice