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Archive 2008 · Springtail mix

  
 
LordV
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p.1 #1 · Springtail mix


As you will have gathered, Winter is springtail season but you do need a high mag system to capture them. All shots taken at 4 or 5:1 withan MPE-65 - some focus stacked.

Brian V.

Bit of a "bum" shot - but good for ID purposes



Camouflaged at last



A fairy godmother springtail ?



Springtail grazing - about 1.3mm body length



Different globular springtail. 0.92 mm body length






Nov 18, 2008 at 02:57 AM
e6filmuser
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p.1 #2 · Springtail mix


LordV wrote:
As you will have gathered, Winter is springtail season


Just to clarify, I think you are suggesting that springtails are among the few insects available in winter. They occur all the year round, although some of the plant-dwelling (epiphytic) globular ones are found only in the warmer months.

The purple grazer is an isotomid, possibly Vertagopus arboreus.

The purple globular one is probably one of the black Sminthurinus spp (Sminthuridae), requiring microscopic examination to identify to species and the genus needs revision anyway.



Nov 18, 2008 at 07:13 AM
LordV
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p.1 #3 · Springtail mix


perhaps I should have said globular springtail season but even that is not strictly true. They just seem to become more visibly numerous in cooler periods.

Frans I'd those as Vertagopus arboreus and Sminthurinus domesticus respectively - so some agreement

Brian V.



Nov 18, 2008 at 07:26 AM
e6filmuser
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p.1 #4 · Springtail mix


S. domesticus is generally a species of greenhouses and suchlike but I found a couple of males in moss in South Wales. S. niger is the same size and colour as domesticus and is common and widespread. The latter, according to Hopkin, usually has a yellow dorsal stripe.


Nov 18, 2008 at 09:09 AM
e6filmuser
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p.1 #5 · Springtail mix


If you want to photograph Collembola with highly modified antennae, the following being the least spectacular:

http://www.stevehopkin.co.uk/collembolamaps/Symphypleona/407SPpum/

look for yellow globular species on the surface of ponds (at the base of marginal aquatic plants is good) but I am unsure of the seasonal occurence. Males of Sminthurides aquaticus have highly modified second and third antennal segments and their setae, for grasping the antenne of the female during mating.



Nov 18, 2008 at 09:24 AM
michael kilner
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p.1 #6 · Springtail mix


v.nice love the 2 new finds


Nov 18, 2008 at 10:40 AM
MichAg92
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p.1 #7 · Springtail mix


excellent series - like the fairy godmother the best


Nov 18, 2008 at 09:30 PM
LordV
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p.1 #8 · Springtail mix


THanks for the comments and info everyone
Brian V.

e6filmuser - oddly the one place I don't seem to find springtails is around my ponds - I thought they be swarming there. Find them everywhere else- even on my car at the moment
Brian V.



Nov 19, 2008 at 01:41 AM
e6filmuser
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p.1 #9 · Springtail mix


LordV wrote:
oddly the one place I don't seem to find springtails is around my ponds - I thought they be swarming there. Brian V.


I think it has to be a very long-established body of water. After all, an insect which doesn't fly, and would jump off any transient vertebrate doesn't travel too well.

Having said that, somewhere I have some preserved specimens of an exotic species which I found thriving on the surface of my tropical aquarium decades ago.

There are terrestrial species of Sminthurides, one of which was found in UK cereal fields.


Edited on Nov 19, 2008 at 02:56 AM · View previous versions



Nov 19, 2008 at 02:52 AM
LordV
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p.1 #10 · Springtail mix


e6filmuser wrote:
I think it has to be a very long-established body of water. After all, an insect which doesn't fly, and would jump off any transient vertebrate doesn't travel too well.

Having said that, somewhere I have some preserved specimens of an exotic species which I found thriving on the surface of my tropical aquarium decades ago.

There are terrestrial species of Sminthurides, one of which was found in UK cereal fields.

My ponds are over 20 years old mind you I do have a nice colony of water measurers (hydrometra) - maybe they eat them



Nov 19, 2008 at 02:56 AM
LordV
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p.1 #11 · Springtail mix


e6filmuser wrote:
S. domesticus is generally a species of greenhouses and suchlike but I found a couple of males in moss in South Wales. S. niger is the same size and colour as domesticus and is common and widespread. The latter, according to Hopkin, usually has a yellow dorsal stripe.

You may be interested in this comment by Frans on Flickr
"Note also that the species is easily confused with S. niger and S.concolor.
But based on the series of shots taken by Brian, only S.domesticus consistently shows the white and red spot at the inner side of the eye cluster. I consider this characteristic now as diagnostic for the species. "

Brian V.




Nov 19, 2008 at 06:34 AM
Igor Shuryak
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p.1 #12 · Springtail mix


Wonderful shots. Is that a small mite in #3? Or just a plant bit that looks like one?


Nov 19, 2008 at 01:19 PM
LordV
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p.1 #13 · Springtail mix


Igor Shuryak wrote:
Wonderful shots. Is that a small mite in #3? Or just a plant bit that looks like one?


Thanks Igor
Think it's a bit of plant on the tail hairs of the springtail.
Brian V.



Nov 19, 2008 at 01:22 PM
Goldenorfe
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p.1 #14 · Springtail mix


wonderfull fairy tail creatures!
phil



Nov 19, 2008 at 02:03 PM
LordV
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p.1 #15 · Springtail mix


Goldenorfe wrote:
wonderfull fairy tail creatures!
phil


Thanks Phil

Still waiting for the full herd of the globulars to build up like below.

Brian V.





Nov 20, 2008 at 01:52 AM





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