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David

Green Shield Bug (Palomena prasina) on privet leaf

Green Shield Bug (Palomena prasina) on privet leaf

Green shield bugs are quite common, and (at least when I notice them) can rest on the leaves of various species of trees or bushes.

Don’t try to handle them unless you want to find out why they are also called green stink bugs.

This individual is probably a fourth instar – instars are the growth stages of the nymph (immature).

Green Shield Bug (Palomena prasina) on privet leaf

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David

Shield bugs gathering on alder leaves

Shield bugs gathering on alder leaf

Shield bugs, probably green shield bugs, gathering crowded together in some numbers on the leaves of an alder. Are the speckles on the leaves their eggs, or their faeces?

Shield bugs gathering on alder leaf

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David

Crow on willow branch, preening

Crow on willow branch, preening

Carrion crow on a willow branch directly overlooking Compton Lock, taking care of its feathers and ignoring the human activity on the towpath down below.

Crow on willow branch, preening

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David

Shades of green: backlit nettle leaves

Shades of green: backlit nettle leaves

Nettle leaves, still green and fresh-looking in September, making a pattern of shades of green. Bright where they are backlit by the morning sun; almost black where they are in the shadow cast by another leaf.

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David

Contorted, preening cormorants

Contorted, preening cormorant

Some of the cormorants on Forge Mill Pool at the Sandwell Valley LNR twisting their flexible necks into contorted shapes as they preen their feathers.

Contorted, preening cormorants

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David

Cormorants high in a tree, West Park

Cormorants, West Park

Another one for the West Park species list yesterday. Three cormorants high on the bare branches of one of the trees on boating lake island. The wide-angled shot shows that one of the resident herons was standing on the railing directly below the cormorants.

Possibly young birds dispersing from the parental territory. If the branches directly below where they are perched are marked by their toilet habits, they may already have been here for some days.