6 Apr 2026

As Happy as a Pig in Prime Earwig Habitat

Wednesday 1st April 2026, Sweeney Fen and  Porth-y-waen

The first fixture of Joy of Wildlife’s 2026 Spring and Summer programme was a double-header in the north-west of the county. Neither of the sites we intended to visit are very blessed with car parking space, so we met in the large layby at Llynclys and decanted into as few cars as possible (three) before heading to our first destination: a farm at Porth-y-waen which has recently created a small woodland and meadow for wildlife. So far, so good. A longish and fairly bumpy track leads up to the farm. We drove carefully, in procession, up to the end of the track… where we were met head-on by a tractor towing a trailer. After some shunting back and forth from all parties we decided to stage a strategic retreat, backing carefully, in procession, back out of the track again. We went to the Shropshire Wildlife Trust reserve at Sweeney Fen instead, a one minute drive up the road. Here is a general view of the fen. 
photo: Keith Fowler
Sweeney Fen is definitely a Wellington boots sort of place. This was unfortunate for one of our number, who discovered he had left all footwear at home save for the sandals he was standing up in. Fortunately, a spare pair was generously offered and accepted, though they were a little on the snug side. But beggars can’t be choosers!
 
On arrival the first thing we noticed was a rather excellently laid hedge.
photo: Keith Fowler
We were all impressed but our lichenologists took a particular, and it turns out, productive, interest in it. Here is their account: “We spent quite some time looking at the section of new laid hedge and took some samples.  Well, we've been having fun as the first two samples we looked at where we thought we knew what the species was have turned out to not be, a reason to always check if you think the lichen looks a bit different.  We have one species which does not want to key out, we think we have the genus as the spores are distinctive, but it keys out to a species which does not seem right, so it a sample for next year's winter workshop. One other species taken from the lengths of branches used to weave in the top of the hedge has yielded a lichen for which there are no records in Shropshire - Arthopryenia cerasi. There was lots of the lichen on these branches. We are currently awaiting a reply as to the source of the branches that the hedge layer used.”
 
Spring flowers were much in evidence. Carpets of Wood Anemones and Primroses intermingled with each other.
The Primroses had been intermingling in other ways too, as witnessed by the hybrid False Oxlips.

photo: John Martin
At the far end of the fen was a good stand of Marsh Marigold.

And elsewhere Early Dog Violets were showing well.

photo: John Martin
An old, vacated gall was spotted on Bramble. This is caused by
Diastrophus rubi, a gall wasp.
photo: Liz Roberts
Beating the grass, sedges and rushes produced a number of Drinker moth larvae, a species common in this sort of habitat.

Another typical fen species is the cranefly,
Ptychoptera albimana. Here is a pair in the business of propagating their species.      
Still on the marshy theme, this is a Red Marsh Ladybird,
Coccidula rufa.
And this is Paederus riparius, a rove beetle found in wetland habitats.

photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
Red-rumped Ladybird,
Scymnus haemorrhoidalis, also turned up. A grassland species with a tendency to be commoner in damper habitats.

The vacuumers got to work  and produced a good selection of finds:
Dyschirius globosus

Rybaxis  longicornis

Apion frumentarium. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett

Kateretes cf pedicularis. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
Lunchtime was approaching and, as usual, people who were spread far and wide across the site began miraculously gravitating towards the chosen lunch venue. Of course finds continued to be made during this reverse migration, including this spider carrying an unwanted passenger: the larva of a parasitic wasp, likely an Ichneumon of the genus Polysphincta.  Needless to say, it will not end well for the spider.
photo: John Martin
A sawfly was captured and identified in record time (but still measured in days, not minutes) as
Dolerus haematodes.
photo: John Martin

Lunch over, it was time to move on. We decided to walk the 5 minute distance back to Porth-y-waen rather than risk more vehicular trauma, but not before one final find of note from Sweeney Fen was made: a Great Crested Newt.
photo: Liz Roberts
At our second site, the walk to the woodland took us through the farmyard and past the largest dung heaps we have seen in quite some time! Some of us (well, me, in fact) are immediately on red alert when a good dung heap is sighted. All sorts of interesting critters inhabit them, but particularly, from my point of view, the Lesser Earwig,
Labia minor. Widely distributed in Britain but rarely recorded and probably declining due to the decline of their dung heap homes, which have been legislated into shadows of their former selves. Most heaps are also full of systemic pesticides courtesy of the livestock which produce them. Nevertheless, we continued on to the woodland, newly planted on gently sloping ground. Here, in a small clearing, a Tawny Mining Bee was spotted almost immediately.

More amphibious 
excitement was provided by a Common Frog.
photo: Liz Roberts
The vacuumers got down to work and produced several common ladybird species, including 22-spot
 
And 24-spot.

At this point I could wait no longer, dug out my disposable, latex-free, 'latex' gloves and headed back to the heaps. Lesser Earwigs can be infuriatingly hard to find, partly because they are tiny (around 6mm, much smaller than the Common Earwig) and lightning fast. But mostly because they are rather picky about their surroundings and are frequently absent despite concerted searching. However! The first one turned up inside a minute and it quickly became clear that the whole expanse was absolutely heaving with them (and with invertebrate life in general). Here is an adult female, with the front end of an upturned nymph visible at the bottom of the picture. I was as happy as a pig, or an earwig,  in its favourite habitat!


Back in the trees, vacuumers vacuumed and others managed to temporarily disappear without trace into the scenery despite its relatively compact dimensions. Finds continued to be found,  including the small rove beetle
Tachyporus obtusus
The fly Lonchoptera lutea

photo: John Martin
And an as yet unidentified Chrysomelid beetle which might just turn out to be something notable. Stay tuned for updates!
 
photo: John Martin
This parasitic wasp was found, equally tiny and astonishing.

photo: Nigel Jones
I will let our Dipterist/Hymenopterist describe it in his own words: “
Attached is an image of that Diapriidae wasp – Psilus species. It’s not possible to take it to species as the key is old and very rudimentary – basically there are almost certainly several new UK species not in the key. Psilus have the mandibles at the back of the head. No one knows why, but it is surmised that they are used to break out of the host (a fly pupa). The mandibles cannot be closed on one another, so they can only push outwards from the base of the head – weird!”
 
Our Arachnologist was as  busy as ever. Here are some of his finds:
Zora spinimana. Photo: John Martin

Larinoides cornutus, female & male. Photos: Nigel Cane-Honeysett

Episinus angulatus. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett

Diaea dorsata. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett

Araniella sp. (Cucumber Green Spider). Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett

I will end with a couple of botanical finds. Firstly Gooseberry

photo: John Martin
And finally another extensive patch of False Oxlips, with some parent Primroses mixed in among them.

photo: Keith Fowler

Many thanks to our hosts for allowing access to both of these interesting sites.  
  
 

Photographs © the author except as noted

29 Mar 2026

Four Seasons in One Day

 Wednesday 25th March 2026, Rudge Farm

 It has been a couple of years since our last visit to Rudge Farm, which sits close to the Staffordshire border near Chesterton. A large arable farm, it contains an area of regenerating heathland on sandy soil, which is being managed for wildlife.
 
We gathered in what could be described as typical March weather. Sunny periods alternated with sharp showers of both rain and hail. One constant feature was the wind, which was both fierce and freezing. Here is what a sunnier moment looked like:
photo: Keith  Fowler
And here is a collection of invertebrates collected during a hail storm - complete with hailstones!
photo: John Martin
The woodlouse above is Philoscia muscorum and there are also a capsized 16-spot ladybird and a Pogonognathellus longicornis springtail in there among other things.
 
We parked at the corner of an arable field that had previously been used to grow asparagus. Inspections of the edges of this field (shown above in the first photo) produced two nice liverwort species. This is Common Crystalwort, Riccia sorocarpa.
And this, much rarer liverwort is a Sphaerocarpus species (Balloonwort). It is one of two, which can only be separated by the structure of their spores. Either one would be a Shropshire first. A sample is now maturing on the recorder’s kitchen windowsill in the hope that it will ripen, produce spores and reveal its true identity.
photo: John Martin
Vacuum sampling in the grassy margins around this area produced plentiful finds. One nice species was this small rove beetle, Anthobium unicolor.
Others included several ladybirds. In ascending order of spots: 16-, 22- and 24-spot.
photos:  Nigel Cane-Honeysett
A Pill Millipede
photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
Small Nettle Weevil,  Nedyus quadrimaculatus

photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
And another weevil, Andrion regensteinense. 
photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
Progressing along the edge of this field brought us in due course to a wide, grassy track. 
This track descends, then ultimately leads back upwards to the right, to the aforementioned area of heathland. Black Oil-beetles, Meloe proscarabaeus have been recorded on this heathland for several years but now seem to be spreading, having been seen all along this grassy track in recent times. We kept our eyes peeled, but in the meantime some gorse was inspected, producing a Gorse Shieldbug
And a Gorse Weevil.
photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
About halfway along the track the first oil-beetle was spotted - a male, with a second male appearing a little further on. The sunny spells were giving enough warmth for them to be ploddingly active.
photo: John Martin
When the sun disappeared, though, the wind got up even further and it was a different story, for both beetles and humans alike. All were frozen to something like a catatonic state! Closer to the heath and in a cold spell, this beetle was discovered and gave every appearance of being dead. It was prodded, whereupon it defensively reflex-bled haemolymph (the ‘oil’ which gives the species their common name) from its knees, demonstrating that it was alive but very cold. Fortunately the next sunny interval was not far away.
As far as I am aware, all of the half a dozen or so oil-beetles that we saw were males except for this one female (note the much less funky antennae), seen when we finally reached the heath.
Up on the heath (or, more correctly, on the sandy track at its edge) finds other than oil-beetles included the hoverfly Eristalis pertinax
photo: John Martin
Another  fly,  Geomyza tripunctata 
photo: John Martin
And a stilt bug, Berytinus crassipes

Lunch was declared, the group retreating to the shelter of the woods to escape the wind. By the time that rations had been consumed, another sunny spell had arrived, transforming the scene once again.

photo: Keith Fowler
Around this time several non-invertebrate finds were made: Yellow Brain Fungus
photo:  Nigel Cane-Honeysett
False Puffball, a large and conspicuous slime-mould 
photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
And Dog-lichen, Peltigera canina
photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
Plus the fly Bibio lanigerus, a smaller relative of the familiar St Mark’s Fly so often seen in Spring.
photo: John Martin

Turning to begin the return loop of our walk, we took a path along the other side of the heath.
This descended to a valley bottom and stream, back into woodland (and shelter!). Here the vegetation produced a Forest Bug, Pentatoma rufipes nymph 
Plus spiders including Episinus angulatus
photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
And a pirate spider, Ero species, with Neottiura bimaculata following in its wake.
photo:  Nigel Cane-Honeysett

The valley bottom was reached
photo: Keith Fowler
and a darkling beetle, Nalassus laevioctostriatus found.
A final, pleasing find was Moschatel (or Town Hall Clock, named for its multi-faceted flowerheads) which carpeted the floor near to the stream. 

photo: John Martin

A very productive day despite the often challenging conditions. Thank  you to our hosts for allowing us to return to this splendid site.  
  
 
Photographs © the author except as noted