Category Archives: invertebrates

The Week on Sunday #28

On with some inter-web finds from the last week…

♦ If you are a macro photographer, one of the best ways to increase opportunities to photograph insects is to have a diversely planted naturalistic garden. You need only step outside your door for subject matter: so easy when you can’t find the time to get out to wilder places. For an example of what you can do, check out this video by John Dunstan, for his proposed “Insect Garden Channel‘:

♦ Here are some timely fact-sheets for spring, from the Xerces Society, which is devoted to invertebrate conservation:

and for those with sub-urban, acreage or farm properties:

Be sure to visit the  Xerces Society for more information on how to make your local environment more friendly to butterflies and bees.

♦ As I have mentioned before, I have yearned to do high-speed in-flight insect photography since I first read Stephan Dalton’s book, S. DaltonCaught in Motion. High Speed Nature Photography 30 years ago. Stephan Dalton’s system was engineered from the ground up, at an estimated value of over $30 000 dollars! How times have changed…

Cognisys, manufacturers of Stopshot and Stackshot now have the magic ingredient for successful daytime high-speed in-flight insect photography: a high-speed shutter. That means the Stopshot system can now be sold as a new package, the Cognisys Insect Rig. Here is what it looks like:

Cognisys Insect Rig

Visit Linden Gledhil’s Insects in Flight gallery to see what can be done. This rig is sold at a cost of a mere $2300!

(No doubt well worth the price, but,… ahem…would anyone care to sponsor me to obtain this delightful system?)

♦ An interview I had earlier this year is now an article at PhotoEd Magazine. PhotoEd is a Canadian magazine aimed at educational institutions and features established and up-and-coming Canadian photographers. It’s a good article with excellent photo reproductions and  am very pleased with the results. Below is a glimpse of the article. The magazine can be purchased at Chapters/Indigo or through subscription at PhotoEd. I will also have free copies available for anyone who attends the next few small-group workshops.

img011img009 img008-001Spring/Summer 2013 PhotoEd Magazine

When Felix Rosso sent his questionnaire he included the following statement, which not only goes to the heart of why I began blogging, but speaks to all photographers, artists and any one else who has taken the path of self-directed learning:

“I like your logo quote “Splendour awaits.” It does not come to us – we need to search it out. Your self-directed learning is inspiring – education is too important an endeavour to put in the hands of others. I have been in education for over 40 years and have always recognized the power of the individual following his/her interests. “

“It does not come to us – we need to search it out.”

Words to live by.

 

♦ And ending on a personal note: how fairs the season for bugs and blooms?

The last week has seen a warming trend, but still far below seasonal averages. The week ahead looks more promising:

from the department formerly known as 'Environment Canada'
from the department formerly known as ‘Environment Canada’

I may be able to get the pond ‘flowing’ again and begin the many garden chores of spring. Most yards that are not facing south will still have lots of snow cover, or be wet, so this is not the time for lawn care (if you still have such an archaic feature in your garden)! Soil compaction can be a danger now, so use a planks to create walkways to do your chores if the soil it still wet. In central Alberta and north , this will be the week to:

  • complete pruning of trees and shrubs
  • renovate old  hedges
  • clean-out eavestroughs
  • set-up rain barrels
  • clean-out and/or place nest boxes for birds
  • set up new bee hotels, renovate old bee hotels
  • clean and fill bird-baths

So far few bugs, one lone centipede that scurried away as I moved an old clay pot. Looking forward to more soon!

 

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Free eBooks by Jean-Henri Fabre.

Fabre at home.

Fabre at home.

I was only about 12 years old when I first heard about Jean-Henri Fabre, while reading about Gerald Durrell‘s childhood in the book Birds, Beasts and Relatives. Gerald’s brother Lawrence, recognising his interest in bugs, gave him a copy of  The Sacred Beetle and Others

by E. J. Detmold: Fabre's Book of Insects.

by E. J. Detmold: Fabre’s Book of Insects.

Forgetting my food, I tore the parcel open, and there inside was a squat, green book entitled The Sacred Beetle and Others by Jean Henri Fabre. Opening it, I was transported by delight, for the frontispiece was a picture of two dung-beetles, and they looked so familiar they might well have been close cousins of my own dung-beetles. They were rolling a beautiful ball of dung between them. Enraptured, savouring every moment, I turned the pages slowly. The text was charming. No erudite or confusing tome, this. It was written in such a simple and straightforward way that even I could understand it. ‘Leave the book till later, dear. Eat your lunch before it gets cold,’ said Mother. Reluctantly I put the book on my lap and then attacked my food with such speed and ferocity that I had acute indigestion for the rest of the afternoon. This in no way detracted from the charm of delving into Fabre for the first time. While the family had their siesta, I lay in the garden in the shade of the tangerine trees and devoured the book, page by page, until by tea-time – to my disappointment – I had reached the end. But nothing could describe my elation. I was now armed with knowledge. I knew, I felt, everything there was to know about dung-beetles. Now they were not merely mysterious insects crawling ponderously throughout the olive groves – they were my intimate friends.

At that time, in South Africa in the early 1970′s, I had no access to Fabre’s books.  They had no copies in the library (my second home for most of my youth), and the internet and ebooks were not even a twinkle in someone’s eye.

Thoughts of reading Fabre faded…

Continue reading »

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Why I Photograph and Blog Strange and Obscure Little Animals

It’s still winter,, thus, still time for introspection, and time to  revisit some of the 96 draft posts that have accumulated in the last year…

Not long ago, Chris Buddle at Arthropod Ecology did an heart-felt post on “Why I study obscure and strange little animals“. While I don’t think he expected it to be a meme, his reasons struck home and made me pause and think. I am not a scientist, but why do I blog and photograph “obscure and strange little animals“? My rambling reasons follow:

  • because bugs are fascinating in their physical details, and one of the best ways to see the details is in a photograph.
  • because they are beautiful, with so much diversity in forms and structures, carved by evolution.
  • because they are everywhere, yet so little regarded or respected.
  • because I may, by sharing the fascination, turn a bug-stomper into a bug-respecter – maybe even a bug-lover.
  • because it allows me to occasionally cross paths with entomologists and other scientists: they are good people (and almost as interesting as the bugs!) and worth listening to.
  • because we know so little about bugs– and photography has the potential to open up new paths of  understanding.
  • because bugs have amazingly fascinating behaviors and life-cycles, and photography and blogging helps me to share the wonder.

    "Salticid, Habronattus cuspidatus"

    You talkin’ about me?

  • because photography is a skill that needs to be constantly honed and developed.
  • because they can provide a channel for creativity.
  • because they keep me physically and mentally active.
  • because they are great tools for learning, and understanding the natural world.
  • because it helps re-enforce memory, and I need that.
  • because it serves as a searchable record of what I do.
  • because it satisfies the child in me.
  • because it satisfies my need to connect with nature.

In the world of bug photography and blogging, I’m relatively a minor player.  However, I do gain some  personal satisfaction in what I do, and partaking in the community of bloggers, ‘arthropodologists’ and  bug photographers continues to be an enriching experience.

 

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The Week on Sunday 17

13 January, 2013 and another edition of The Week on Sunday.

♦ Opening today with this video from John Acorn, who makes us yearn for warmer days…

♦ If you like parasites, this has been a good week for news:

◊ Carl Zimmer writes about the jewel wasp, Ampulex compressa, that parasitizes cockroaches…

◊ But just how does a jewel wasp larva survive in the bacteria-infested cockroach anyhow? See If You’re Going To Live Inside A Zombie, Keep It Clean for more.

◊ What is this obsession with disinfection? Ed Yong reveals the latest ant research with news on Ants disinfect their young by drooling backside poison. (I’m so embarrassed…he said backside! :oops: )

◊ And – last and most disturbing - Jerry Coyne shares a video by someone who think bugs only exist to be bombed into oblivion. But that’s not the point…see how a Gordian worm emerges from parasitized spider…after the spider has been blitzed.

♦ The latest edition of the free magazine Anima Mundi is out, and the lead article has photographs of the amazing Pterochroza ocellata, the peacock katydid.

♦ Do you want to learn about tropical Lepidoptera? What looks to be a great course is happening at the Jenaro Herrera research center in the Department of Loreto, Peru. “The station is located in a biodiversity hot spot, surrounded by Amazonian rainforest that includes a variety of ecosystems.” Delicious!
Check out the Neotrropical Lepidoptera Course at CEBIO for more information. (Hat-tip to Terry Thormin)

♦ The Christmas season messed me up somewhat. I missed Terry Thormin’s post on Butterflies, Dung and Carrion… and who in their right mind would want to miss out on that?

Photography

♦ Not long after the release of Wide-angle Macro, the Essential Guide by Clay Bolt and Paul Harcourt Davies, Piotr Naskrecki came through with his approach to the subject. Be sure to visit Getting Low and Wide Part 1 and Part 2 for great tips.

♦ Ted MacRae  - that most amazing bug blogger over at Beetles in the Bush - has a problem. He is trying to refine his flash diffusion method, by means of popular opinion! Whatever one may think of popular opinion, be sure to check out Ted’s post and vote!

And from the Last but not Least dept., go over to Splendour Awaits’  (little) brother blog and have a look at Dan Johnson’s amazing piece of work…it is art riddled with bug paths.

 

 

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The Week on Sunday 15

It’s been a distracting week here at Splendour Awaits, so for this ‘Week on Sunday’ I go retro, and look at a movie from the past that came into my view again this holiday season:

Perhaps the best all-round, full length insect documentary ever made: Microcosmos, the 1996 film by Claude Nuridsany and Marie Pérennou, is the last ‘Week on Sunday’ post for 2012.  Microcosmos not only displays excellent story telling through buggy vignettes and amazing filming technique, it is worthwhile listening to just for Bruno Coulais’s  soundtrack alone. Be sure to watch the snail love scene that begins at about 15:30!

That’s all folks, I’ll be back in the new year. All the best to you all in 2013!

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Best Images of 2012

For a variety of reasons, 2012 was not a very productive year for me in regards to bug photography, but here are a handful of my favorite images that, overall, attracted the most attention in the last twelve months. First the images taken in 2012:

A rose is a rose is a rose is a death trap…

Bombus centralis approaching Digitalis grandiflora

The Black Oil Beetle, Meloe niger

Male Habronattus americanus from the Opal Natural Area

Stick Insect on a Pin

Baby earwig at one day old

Female earwig protecting her  eggs

Female earwig protecting her eggs

 

  • The most visited blog post with a single bug image in 2012 was the Centipede on White from 2009:

Lithobius sp. on Whiite

Echthrus sp., (Family Ichneumonidae) in ‘drilling’ position.

Many thanks to all those who have visited and supported this blog over the last year!

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Olympus BioScapes 2012 Results

If you are here for a first time visit, you may not know why a bug blog is venturing into microscopy. This is driven partially by climate: I live in Alberta Canada, and for about six months of the year we live in  freezing conditions that most bugs decline to face. Microscopy (and focus stacking, which I also hope to explore ) is one way for me to explore small worlds in the home, removed from the icy blast. Besides which, as a blog devoted to the little things that often escape our notice, microscopy ranks high as a method for revealing minute splendour.

The winner of the Olympus BioScapes competition was Mr. Ralph Grimm from Jimboomba, Queensland, Australia, with his video of colonial rotifers showing eyespots and corona. These were photographed at magnifications from 200x – 500x, with differential interference contrast technique.

 

 

For more evidence of small wonders, go take a look at the results of the Olympus BioScapes competition, an annual event that features images produced by some of the world’s top photomicrographers. These are amazing photographs, most of which require patience and a skill set that most macro photographers would be amazed by – and as any photomacrographer would tell you, good macro photography is hard work! As usual, a good share of the featured images are of invertebrates, and a few are of insects and other arthropods. Below are some examples that stood out for me:

by Mr. James Nicholson

 

Mr. James Nicholson

NOAA/NOS/NCCOS Center for Coastal Environmental Health & Biomolecular Research

Fort Johnson Marine Lab, Charleston, SC, USA
Specimen: Live mushroom coral Fungia sp. Close-up of mouth during expansion.
Technique: Autofluorescence

 

 

 

 

by Dr. Christian Sardet and Mr. Sharif Mirshak

 

Dr. Christian Sardet and Mr. Sharif Mirshak

The Plankton Chronicles Project
Villefranche-sur-Mer, France, and Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Specimen: Claw of crustacean amphipode Phronima sp. Muscles and rows of pigment cells (melanocytes) are visible.
Technique: Darkfield

 

 

 

 

by Mr. Charles Krebs

 

Mr. Charles Krebs

Issaquah, Washington, USA
Specimen: Butterfly “Prola Beauty” (Panacea prola) wing scales, 200X.
Technique: Diffused reflected illumination

 

 

 

 

 

by Dr. Victor Chepurnov

 

Dr. Victor Chepurnov

Algae R&D Office

Ghent, Belgium
Specimen: Living freshwater diatom cells in a drop of water. Two species, are visible: Cyclotella meneghiniana (tablet shaped) andNitzschia palea (long).
Technique: Differential interference contrast

 

 

 

 

by Mr. Michael Crutchley

 

Mr. Michael Crutchley

Pembrokeshire, Wales, UK
Specimen: Daphnia (water flea), captured using image stacking.
Technique: Darkfield

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

by Dr. Igor Siwanowicz

 

Dr. Igor Siwanowicz

HHMI Janelia Farm Research Campus
Ashburn, Virginia, USA
Specimen: Oak lace bug (Corythucha arcuata), a common oak pest. Dorsal view of bug ca. 3mm long.
Technique: Confocal microscopy

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Visit the Olympus BioScapes web page for more, and larger, images.

I can only dream of being able to make images of the quality that is presented in BioScapes, where subject preparation, objective (lens) quality and lighting technique require a high degree of precision and sometimes expensive technology. However, I hope to at least capture a little of the wonder of the micro world this winter.

 

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Also posted in Alberta, Canada, Competition, Edmonton, Hemiptera, Inspiration, Lepidoptera, macro, Microscopy, Olympus Bioscapes, photography, Science, Season, Video, Web LInk, Winter | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment