Southern Marsh Orchids

Southern Marsh Orchids

Wednesday, 1 January 2014

Springtail


While out for a couple of hours yesterday afternoon, I was rooting about in the damp woodland bordering a long disused railway line, at the top of my village (Cwmbach), looking for things to photograph. I'd gone there to get a better photo of this specimen of the beautiful blue, resupinate fungus Pulchericium caeruleum (Terana caerulea) but found the stem it was on had been blown down into a stream and the fungus was in a very poor state.



Robbed of that particular opportunity, I went for a general forage and while examining one of the old wooden railway fence posts I noticed these tiny Springtails.

Entomobrya multifasciata
Dicyrtomina saundersi

Using a simple online key to Dutch  Springtails,  http://www.janvanduinen.nl/sleutel/key.php   I have tentatively identified them as Entomobrya multifasciata and the globular springtail Dicyrtomina saundersi, which was on a nearby bramble leaf. They were minute and extremely difficult to photograph, pushing the abilities of my macro set up a little beyond its limits. I find Springails fascinating and there aren't too many of them, so it is possible to identify most of them.

3 comments:

  1. I have the FSC key to Collembola produced by the late Steve Hopkin, but to my shame have rarely used it. They are a fascinating group, and some are easy to identify (e.g. Orchesella cincta). Entomobrya are among the more arboreal springtails, often dropping out of trees onto moth traps and sheets. They seem very fond of wooden picnic benches.

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  2. I find springtails regularly when I occasionally put pitfall traps out in my garden for beetles. Orchesella cincta has turned up before (that's the large hairy one if I remember right?). They are inmportant little critters as they are a major food source for many larger predators like beetles!

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  3. Tomocerus longicornis is the really big one (curls up its antennae if you blow on it). But yes, Orchesella cincta is also large by springtail standards, and has a distinctive band across the abdomen. Plenty of photos online.

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