21 Apr 2026

Meadows and Margins

Wednesday 15th April 2026, Minsterley Meadows

In 2024, following a successful fund raising appeal, this pair of meadows on the outskirts of Minsterley was purchased for the community by the Middle Marches Community Land Trust. Further funding, including a National Lottery Heritage Fund grant, will allow the MMCLT to manage this site for three years from purchase. The headline species for which this site is particularly notable is Green-winged Orchid. Our visit was a little too early in the season to see them in their full glory, but fortunately a few early individuals were in flower.
photo: John Martin
The weather was a major and ultimately terminal presence during our visit.
photo: Keith Fowler
Alternating between warming sunshine, howling wind and rain, the forecast suggested that we had better make the most of the morning, as the afternoon would be very unpleasant. For the time being at least, blue skies appeared periodically as we began our searches.
 
photo: Keith Fowler
photo: Sarah Wallace-Johnson
The first meadow produced, fittingly, good numbers of Meadow Ladybirds, this one dwarfed by a springtail, Orchesella villosa, and in turn dwarfing another, tiny Neanurid springtail.
A second micro-ladybird species appeared: Red-rumped Ladybird, Scymnus haemorrhoidalis.
The larva of a Ringlet butterfly was persuaded from a grass tussock.

The sun continued to favour us...
photo: Sarah Wallace-Johnson
…bringing out several species of bee, including
Andrena chrysosceles
And Andrena nitida.
The field margins were also hosting reasonable numbers of hoverflies. This is Epistrophe elegans
And this is Eristalis pertinax.
photo: John Martin
In fact the margins were, not unexpectedly, an excellent source of invertebrate life in our trays. These ‘edge habitats’ are usually rich in life and should be preserved at all costs. Field margins provide vital refuges for animal of all sorts when meadows are cut and where they grade into the hedgerows, the taller and woodier plants within them offer an alternative habitat, increasing the overall biodiversity of the site.
 
Finds were not confined to plants and animals. A very small and attractive parasol fungus was found on a log. Unfortunately I do not know if has been identified.
Nettles in the field margins produced this rust, identified as Puccinia urticaria.
photo: Liz Roberts
We tracked the western field boundary into the second meadow, where it continued to produce interesting finds. A pair of Celery Leaf Beetles, common on hogweed, had that Spring feeling.
Dock Bugs were frequently spotted on docks and nearby vegetation.
A 22-spot Ladybird emerged from a grass tussock.
More ladybirds emerged from Ivy in the hedge: 14-spot (left) and 10-spot (right).
The Ivy also produced a chunky weevil - Liophloes tessulatus.
We were now most of the way along the boundary of the second field, and lunch was calling. The weather was also closing in. As lunchboxes and flasks were unpacked the heavens opened and we were forced to huddle under umbrellas held at jaunty angles against the driving rain. In the middle of all this, a smart beetle, Badister bullatus, was vacuumed from the margins.
And then perhaps the best find of the day, a rather small and odd-looking harvestman, Anelasmocephalus cambridgei. This slow-moving species tends to cover itself in particles of dirt as camouflage, in which state it usually escapes attention. This one was unadorned but still very hard to spot - an excellent find in the sample tray.
With the rain abating there was time to spot a common rove beetle, Stenus bimaculatus
photo: John Martin
before the group set off into the middle of the second meadow, where another botanical highlight had been spotted: Moonwort.
photo: Keith Fowler

photo: John Martin
A very small fern found in grassland, like the orchids it was just in the process of warming up for its Spring performance. A few tiny fronds were barely visible in one small area of the meadow. I doubt I would have spotted any of them if they had not been pointed out to me.
 
Some of us continued to the top of the field.
photo: Keith Fowler
Forecasts had predicted that the rain would have set in by now. Barely had it been remarked that we were being very lucky when the sky filled in and the heavens opened again. Prayers were offered to the Rain Gods, but they were not answered…
photo: Sarah Wallace-Johnson
…so we retreated and went home! An early finish to a very interesting and productive day. Thank you to our hosts for allowing us to do what we do.
 
Addendum
Some extra photos from last week’s visit to Severn Valley Country Park have been sent to me, reminding us of the glorious (and dry!) weather which accompanied our visit.    
Bee Orchid rosette. Photo: John Martin

Bank Vole. Photo: John Martin

Myathropa florea. Photo: John Martin

Snakeshead Fritillary. Photo: John Martin

Wood Sorrel. Photo: John Martin




Photographs © the author except as noted

14 Apr 2026

Ant-associated Excitement

Wednesday 8th April 2026, Severn Valley Country Park

Glorious weather marked our day at Severn Valley Country Park. This, plus it being the Easter holiday period, made the park very popular with families looking for a day out. So much so that the car park reached capacity (fortunately not until we had assembled) and people resorted to parking along the entrance road.

As usual, the actual car park and its environs detained us for some time. A number of Sallows were in flower, attracting various flies and bees. Ladybirds were also present in numbers, including a heartening quantity of 2-spot Ladybirds. This pair were in the business of creating the next generation. Note that one of them is the red-on-black ‘quadrimaculata’ form.
We eventually moved on to the immediately adjacent pond area.

photo: Keith Fowler
A number of
Epistrophe elegans hoverflies kept their eyes on us from a safe distance above our heads…
…while at ground level a couple of surprisingly tame Bank Voles completely ignored us as they went about their business.

The vacuumers got to work, extracting several beetles from the surroundings.

Celery Leaf Beetle. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett

14-spot Ladybird. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett

24-spot Ladybird. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett

Tachyporus obtusus. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett

Oulema obscura. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett

Microplontus campestris. Photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
Meanwhile, a Water Ladybird was found at the edge of the pond, not with a suction sampler but with a sweep net.

The cricket season has begun: two tiny first instar Dark Bush-cricket nymphs appeared. One was spotted and captured in the bushes but the second decided to do a  spot of sun-bathing on the tube of one of the vacuums! These are the earliest Dark Bush-crickets ever recorded in Shropshire, beating the previous best of 20th
 April in 2015 and 2025. Is this significant? Almost certainly not!
We decided to move into the meadows on the opposite side of the access road. But not before a couple of late finds were made: a Hazel Leaf-roller, who hadn’t read the instructions and was perched in a Hawthorn.
And a Nursery Web Spider who had snaffled a juvenile wolf spider for lunch.

photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett

Into the meadows we went.
photo: Liz Roberts
One notable feature of the day was the number of male Orange-tip Butterflies on the wing. Sadly they were unphotographable, never resting for a moment from their relentless patrolling. The same could be said of the Brimstones which were also zooming around. But a Comma was more accommodating.

The meadows soon delivered one of  the finds of the day: a Turtle Shieldbug. A species with only a handful of Shropshire records, all from the south-east quarter of the county. To prove it  wasn’t a fluke, a second one turned up a few minutes later.

It was a good day for shieldbugs and allies. Others which were photographed included a Forest Bug nymph
A Box Bug (another species which only moved into Shropshire in the recent past)

And the Rhopalid bug
Rhopalus subrufus.
The Turtle Bug was good. But the find of the day must surely have been a small, unusual-looking rove beetle.

This is Nigel’s report of the find: “
Yesterday’s rove beetle is the ant associate Lomechusa emarginata. There are only two post 2000 Shropshire records on NBN and a few from the mid 20th century, so it’s a good find. It’s not at all common anywhere with just 83 UK records on NBN. These are amazing beetles. The beetle and its larva both solicit food from the host ants by tricking them into regurgitating liquid intended for the ant’s own larvae. Basically, Lomechusa appear to have broken the communication code between ant and ant larva. There’s more! Lomechusa have different summer and winter hosts. Spending the summer with Formica ants and the winter with Myrmica ants. Extraordinary. This is what makes our Wednesdays so much fun.”
 
A few other finds from this area included a  couple of arachnids. Firstly a spider, Episinus angulatus
photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
And then quite possibly a Wednesday first: a positively  identified mite, Leptus trimaculatus.
photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
Two Cream-spot Ladybirds were persuaded from a Field Maple.

As was, rather more surprisingly, a Common Groundhopper. Quite what this flightless, ground-dwelling insect was doing up a tree only it knows!

We moved on, heading deeper into the trees. Continuing the theme of wildlife not reading the field guides, a flatbug appeared randomly during the sweep of an aerial net.

Probably not uncommon but rarely recorded due to their hiding-under-bark lifestyle, this one was presumably having a rare trip out into the sunshine and got unlucky. It is
Aradus depressus.
We arrived at our next intended target: a woodland stream.
photo: Keith Fowler
In truth this did not yield the quantity of finds for which we were hoping, but a nearby damp area did produce a second groundhopper species in some quantity: Slender Groundhopper.

Another weevils species also appeared around this time - Leiosoma deflexum.
photo: Nigel Cane-Honeysett
The open canopy of the woodland was also putting on a fine show of Spring flowers.
Lesser Celandine & Bluebells

Wood Anemone

With finds in slightly short supply, someone had a bright idea: give up and retreat to the visitor centre for ice creams! There was a conspicuous lack of resistance to this idea, so we examined what remained in the trays and then began retracing our steps uphill. Keen readers will recall the opening paragraph of this report, the consequences of which began to have ominous portents as we neared the visitor centre. Words such as “sold-out” floated through the air towards us as we passed families emerging from the building. And lo, it came to pass that there was no ice cream, except for dog ice cream (which is ice cream for dogs(!?), not dog flavoured ice cream, in case you were worried). The hoards of day trippers had eaten it all and the relief delivery had not yet arrived. Calamity! We were forced to make do with tea, coffee, crisps and cake (which was, admittedly, delicious).
photo: Keith Fowler
In due course,  refreshed, we prepared to leave. But what is this we see? People with choc ices! Yes, the emergency ice cream lorry had arrived, 15 minutes too late for us. Though, truth be told, I did spy a couple of our number with a crafty Cornetto as we walked back to our vehicles…
 
Many thanks to our hosts for allowing us to do what we do, and for providing delicious and refreshing refreshments!  
  
 
 
Photographs © the author except as noted