UNDER THE OAKS OF NESACTIUM

@borjan · 2023-07-08 13:46 · MacroPhotography

Nesactium is an archeological park. A place where once stood the capital of the people called Histri, and then after the Roman conquest in 177 BC, a fortified Roman town rebuilt upon the original Histrian pattern with some new content brought by the conquerors. The place was abandoned in the 6th century and then rediscovered by archeologists in the first years of the 20th century.

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On the 16th of September last year, I spent a couple of hours exploring insects, spiders, and various small details under the oak trees on the edge of what remains of the ancient city. Enthralled with what I found on that occasion, I returned the next day, and then on the 18th of September, you could see me sniffing around the same place again.

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In today's post, I'll show you what I photographed back then in September of 2022 under the oaks of Nesactium. Have a good viewing.

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This is the Phlegra bresnieri, a lovely little spider from the Salticidae family.

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The spider was jumping around and I spent a couple of minutes following it through the macro lens. At one point, the jumping spider entered one of the many acorn caps accumulated under the tree ...

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... and assumed the ideal pose for a portrait. In the following photograph ...

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... I got a bit closer.

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Here you can see the tiny spider in the wider macro-scenery made of acorn caps.

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A couple of minutes later, Phlegra bresnieri continued jumping around the pile of acorn caps and other fragments that have fallen from the tree and I continued searching for something else to photograph.

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Here you can see a grasshopper.

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This is the Oedipoda caerulescens, a well-camouflaged grasshopper from the Acrididae family. This one is brown, but a grasshopper from that same species can have a slightly different appearance.

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In this case, for example, the colors are different ...

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... but the camouflage still works well enough.

Here you can see an Oedipoda caerulescens grasshopper in a slightly different version of completely brown.

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This one is also brown but has a distinctive yellow detail on the edge of the pronotum, a detail absent in other grasshoppers of the same kind I encountered that day. In the following photograph ...

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... you can take a break from the macro-view by staring at the tree under which the grasshoppers and the jumping spider were photographed for at least ten seconds. The tree in question is a Quercus pubescens, commonly known as the Downy oak.

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Here, in this set of four similar photographs, you can take a look at the textures & patterns created by twigs and acorns that have fallen on the ground.

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The next day, under the same tree, I found something that looks like a piece of viscera that belonged to some small mammal caught by a predator.

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The thing was laying on the layer of acorns and twigs.

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It wasn't a pleasant site for me, but some insects are attracted by this kind of stuff ...

... so I came closer ...

... in the hope to catch some interesting scavenger activities. In this and the following photograph ...

... you can see a group of ants collecting the food.

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In this tryptich, one of those ants is cleaning its feet and antennae.

When it comes to the name of the species, I can't tell you that. But I'm pretty sure that the genus is Tetramorium and the family - Formicidae.

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These ants are pretty small.

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Comparing them to the small and medium-sized flies that soon came to feed on that piece of entrails can give an idea about their size. In the following photograph ...

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... you'll find everything you need to do that comparison.

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Here you can take a better, more up-close look at the smaller of the two flies shown in the previous photograph. The name of the species ...

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... is Adia cinerella. The family - Anthomyiidae.

The bigger fly ...

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... belongs to the Muscidae family ...

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... to the genus Helina of that family which includes the ordinary houseflies.

I can't tell you what species exactly is this ...

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... but if I would have to guess, I would say that is the Helina allotalla.

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The flies and the ants weren't the only scavengers that have found this nutrient piece of viscera.

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A wasp was also there.

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This is the Vespula germanica, a paper wasp from the Vespidae family.

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The ants were taking very small chunks. The flies were feeding only on goo and liquid. The wasp, on the other hand, was cutting much bigger pieces with its mandibles.

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In this, the previous, and the following photograph ...

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... you can follow the process of cutting and removing a chunk.

And now, before leaving the scavengers...

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... you can take one last look at the Adia cinerella fly. In the following photograph ...

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... you can take another short break from the macro view and slimy, partially eaten body parts by taking a look at the layer of acorns & twigs from a different angle.

Here you can see a beetle that I photographed on the 18th of September.

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I'm still unable to identify the species.

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The family is probably Tenebrionidae.

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I mean, I'm pretty sure about the family.

This small cockroach belongs to the Ectobiidae family. The name of the species is Loboptera decipiens.

I came across some mushrooms on that day, the 18th of September.

Crinipellis zonata is the name of this species from the Marasmiaceae.

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The pale shape, blurred in the background of this shot in which the focus is on the mushroom, is an insect. In the following photograph ...

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... the same insect is clear and sharp. The focus is on the Metcalfa pruinosa, a planthopper from the Flatidae family.

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This slimy green thing that looks like some kind of algae ...

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... is the Nostoc commune ...

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... a colonial species of cyanobacterium. The slimy formations shown in these photographs, taken on the 16th of September ...

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... are made of bacteria that can't be seen with the naked eye.

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Here you can take yet another Oedipoda caerulescens grasshopper.

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This one was resting on a patch of terrain covered with cyanobacteria.

In the same area, I also found this small, photogenic spiral shell.

This is an empty shell of Theba pisana, a snail from the Helicidae family.

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Here you can see the Nostoc commune next to a young herbaceous plant that has spread its stems and leaves horizontally, across the ground.

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The well-camouflaged, almost invisible spider shown in this and the following five photographs ...

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... is the Pardosa amentata ...

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... a species from the Lycosidae family.

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