| | | |
| Parsnip flowers (Pastinaca sativa) attracted as always many pollen gathering insects, like here Mordella sp., the Tumbling Flower Beetle. |
 |
A crab spider (here Misumena vatia) was well hidden below the flower... |
 |
| This little bee only escaped at the last moment... |
 |
The caterpillar of a moth living on parsnip, Depressaria pastinacella (Parsnip webworm), felt still young and beautiful. |
 |
 |
Graminaceae, even dry, attract numerous visitors. How could such unstable constructions be the result of the sole action of wind? |
 |
| As usual, a ladybeetle was hunting (Hippodamia variegata, spotted amber ladybird). |
 |
On the other hand, this ant had been caught by a spider and was left hanging as a food reserve. |
 |
 |
On the left, probably the nest of a bee, Anthidiellum strigatum, with its aeration chimney toward the ground. On the right, two case moths, or bag worms, in their wonderful vegetal clothes. |
 |
 |
 |
 |
I then discovered the eggs of the green lacewing, the golden eyed fly which feeds on aphids, scales and even ant larva... |
 |
After latching, the lacewing larva climb down to hunt. They return to the vertex to rest, to protect themselves from cannibalism. |
 |
 |
| I finally discovered one cousin larva, Dichochrysa sp., with the characteristic camouflage on its back, made of rests of its preys. |
 |
It was just a couple of photos showing some aspects of the intense life in those three feet of fallow land between the lawn and a vineyard. |