SHRUBS AND GRASS ALONG THE ROAD TO POMER

@borjan · 2025-07-20 07:08 · Discovery-it

In the last two weeks of June this year, I took a few visits to the shrubby area between Medulin, my hometown, and the nearby village of Pomer, situated only a couple of kilometers further west along the bay.

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The weather was sunny, the vegetation was still green and lush for the most part, and many plants were fully in bloom.

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Many insects were also there, so expect a lengthy post with quite a few interesting species.

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This is the relatively large composite flower of the Orlaya grandiflora plant.

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Here you can see a group of those plants surrounded by grass, swaying in the mild summer wind. Orlaya grandiflora is commonly known as the white laceflower and is native to Mediterranean parts of Europe.

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Some of the flowers were hosting groups of small, dark beetles that were feeding on pollen and nectar.

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In this set of nine photographs, you can see one of those beetles exploring the bigger petals that surround the intricate structure of florets in the center of the composite flower.

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The scientific name of the species is Anaspis rufilabris. The family is Scraptiidae.

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The Orlaya grandiflora plants were blooming near a shrub ...

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... that also had some lovely flowers for this flourishing post.

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These are wild roses. The following photograph ...

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... shows a much bigger portion of the shrub and a bit of the scenery behind it.

The scientific name of the plant is Rosa micrantha. Some of its leaves ...

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... were partially eaten ...

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... by the sawfly larvae.

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The scientific name of this species from the Argidae family is Arge pagana. I didn't see any adults around, so I'm unable to show you how they look.

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Arge pagana larvae feed on leaves of roses, both wild and cultivated ones.

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They eat almost the entire leaf, leaving only the big central vein.

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All the Arge pagana larvae I photographed in those days, by the side of the road that connects my hometown to Pomer, were foraging on the leaves at the top of the shrub.

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On one of the lower branches, I found a sawfly larva of a different kind.

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This species, Endelomyia aethiops, belongs to the Tenthredinidae family.

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Not only is the appearance of this larva different, but it also consumes the leaf quite differently. While the Arge pagana larvae chew everything except the midrib, the Endelomyia aethiops eats only the soft tissue on the upper surface of the leaf, leaving partially skeletonized patches behind its meals. In some of these shots, taken while the larva was voraciously feeding, you can take a very good, up-close look at those partially eaten areas.

When undisturbed, the Arge pagana larvae eat in a pose common to most leaf-chewing larvae and caterpillars. You can see them stretched along the surface of the leaf. But when a potential danger comes too close ...

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... they lift the rear part of the body in a pose that is supposed to be threatening.

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I've never seen an Endelomyia aethiops larva doing that.

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To me, the Arge pagana larvae look even easier to pick when in their defensive pose, but some predators find a scene like the one shown in this photograph somehow disturbing.

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The Arge pagana larvae of different sizes were feeding together, often on the same leaf.

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You can see a group of the smallest ones I found that day in this shot. These larvae are very sociable. They live and feed in colonies.

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Endelomyia aethiops larvae often dine alone, although they can occasionally be seen in groups as well.

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Both species of sawfly larvae are fun to photograph.

Most of the roses on the Rosa micrantha shrub were completely white. I mean, their petals were all white.

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Here you can see one with slightly pinkish petals.

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One of these two is slightly pinkish as well, although the difference is almost unnoticeable.

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The pink is far more pronounced on these semi-disclosed petals.

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Here you can see two white flowers with a detached petal lying on one of the leaves between them.

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I zoomed in a bit in this shot.

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This macro shot shows the center of another white rose on the same shrub.

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This little red sphere on the Rosa micrantha leaf is the work of a tiny wasp from the Cynipidae family.

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Diplolepis nervosa or Diplolepis eglanteriae is responsible for this protuberance, commonly called a smooth rose pea gall. The wasp lays an egg on the leaf, and then, when the larva hatches and starts feeding, the plant reacts to some chemicals released by the larva by creating a gall around it.

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Here you can see a much bigger larva that feeds on the same shrub. It's a moth caterpillar that resembles a stick. In the following photograph ...

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... the same caterpillar is chewing one of the juicy young leaves.

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The scientific name of the species is Agriopis aurantiaria. It belongs to the Geometridae family.

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In this shot, besides the Rosa micrantha shrub in the foreground, you can see a chunk of the large pine tree behind it. The pines in the area were covered with pollen cones. In the following photograph, you can see one of those small cones ...

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... that has fallen from the tree and ended up entangled in the silky threads on the top of the ear of grass. The grass in question is Hordeum murinum. The ear of grass shown here is still juicy and green, but ...

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... but the Hordeum murinum grass near the pine tree was, for the most part, brown and dry. If you feel like thoroughly exploring all the small details in the above picture, you may notice an insect near its center. In the following photograph ...

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... you can take a much better, up-close look at the insect I mentioned before. It belongs to the Tettigoniidae family. It's a bush cricket nymph. The scientific name of the species is Tettigonia viridissima.

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In this shot, the focus is on only two of the many ears of Hordeum murinum grass present in the area. If you take a good look at all the little details in the picture, you may notice a small green insect on one of the ears.

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In this macro shot, you can see the tiny bush cricket nymph in all its minuscule glory. This is a very young, wingless version of the Tylopsis lilifolia bush cricket.

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Here you can see a Messor capitatus ant harvesting the grains.

This is the Oedemera flavipes, a small, iridescent beetle from the Oedemeridae family. The beetle shown in this photograph is a female. Male have very thick, noticeable femora on their hind legs.

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Not all the grass in the area was dry or semi-dry in the second half of June. Actually, Hordeum murinum was the only one. Small patches covered prevalently with it looked like brown islets in the sea of green.

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This is a different kind of grass.

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Here you can see how it looks in the scenery.

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The scientific name of the species is Lolium rigidum. In the following photograph ...

... I used the macro lens to make the small details look bigger.

Here you can see the tiny Lolium rigidum flowers.

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There, in the area covered predominantly with Lolium rigidum, I also photographed these lovely Centaurium erythraea flower buds.

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These interesting little things that resemble some kind of modern-day trilobites are the ears of the Briza maxima grass.

Here you can see a male Oedemera flavipes hanging on the Briza maxima.

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This is another, this time nicely illuminated, portrait of the same kind of grass.

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