Archive for the 'UK' Category

Earthworm (Lumbricus terrestris)

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If I were an early bird, this plump little fellow would look like a tasty morcel to me! What one might call a good start to the day. I’m sure there’s a moral to be learnt here somewhere.

Ahh, yes, of course :

The early bird gets the worm.

We all know that the world belongs to those who get up nice and early. Get up early and life can but smile for you.

However, there is a darker side to this story… one of personal disaster… the early (perhaps even earlier) worm gets eaten! Of course we automatically associate ourselves with the bird. The moralists of old conveniently failed to complete their comforting proverb. It should read :

The early bird gets the worm.
But the early worm gets eaten!

In other words know yourself! If you are a bird, get up early. If you are a worm, stay in bed a little longer and let other worms get eaten!

And, for the mice amongst us, here is some food for thought :

The early bird gets the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

Wikipedia entry on the earthworm

Watch “Darwin’s Worm” a short video made by Jean Painlevé on the virtues of the earthworm.

Sea anemone at low tide

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Gosse’s prawn

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Philip Henry Gosse was a talented 19th century English naturalist who carried-out detailed marine biology studies and wonderfully described his observations of the natural world. He was also a talented artist and many of his books contain his own drawings. The photograph above was taken in a rock pool in Cornwall 120 years after Philip Gosse had painted from life the very same subject!

The prawns are almost transparent and dart in and out of the recesses of the rock pools and are almost impossible to photograph. I plunged my hand into a rock pool and as by magic not one prawn, but many prawns, swam towards my hand. Were they attracted by the paleness of my skin or the warmth on my hand?

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Notice how the limbs of the common prawn (Palaemon serratus) are elegantly ringed in blue and orange! Just below the common prawn in Gosse’s drawing is the sand shrimp (Crangon crangon).

Kynance Cove with the Lizard in the background

Gunwalloe fishing cove

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Rockpool at Porth Leven

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Sea anemone in a rock pool at low tide

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Crab spider (Misumena vatia)

These brightly coloured little spiders are found amongst flowers and the larger females (typically white) have the ability of slowly changing colour from white to pale green or yellow and back again depending on the flowers on which they find themselves! The red markings on the abdomen can also change in size or even disappear. The males are darker and smaller.

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Crab Spider (Misumena vatia) – Wikipedia

Diptera

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Semi-detached in Purley, Surrey

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