Tristan Bantock
@britishbugs.bsky.social
440 followers 110 following 93 posts
Ecologist/Entomologist
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Reposted by Tristan Bantock
The Government has tabled 67 last-minute amendments to the Planning & Infrastructure Bill.‼️

Rushed through with little scrutiny, it’s a shambolic way to reform the planning system.

It creates confusion, sidelines science and leaves nature dangerously exposed.

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A Wren stands upright on a mossy branch, beak open in full song, small but defiant. Against a soft golden blur, it seems to speak out for nature itself: a clear voice cutting through the noise, refusing to be ignored.
Reposted by Tristan Bantock
Don't care about the massive damage done to native ecosystems by the constant release of vast numbers of invasive pheasants for shooting?

Maybe you'll care about catching Lyme disease instead.
Ticks are more likely to carry the bacteria that cause Lyme disease in areas where Common Pheasants Phasianus colchicus are released, according to new research.

Read more: britishbirds.co.uk/journal/arti...
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Reposted by Tristan Bantock
On yesterday's @kentfieldclub.bsky.social meeting at Castle Foote on the North Kent coast, I was really pleased to find the rare ground bug Henestaris halophilus in numbers across the saltmarsh. Habitat shot has notes in alt text. #bugs #truebugs #Hemiptera #KentNature @britishbugs.bsky.social
A small, brown bug on the fabric of an insect net. Its head, with eyes on protruding stalks, is lower left. A stretch upper saltmarsh sward, consisting of a mix of grasses and fairly low-growing Sea-purslane. The bug was swept easily from this vegetation. However, it was not found where Sea-purslane grew in dense, shrubby, single-species stands.
Reposted by Tristan Bantock
Spent the afternoon in part of the new North Kent Woods & Downs NNR. Was looking for Hop-garden Earwig (a no-show) but did find some nice bugs: Iassus scutellaris, Vernal Shieldbug Peribalus strictus & Asiraca clavicornis. #KentNature #NNR #bugs #Hemiptera @naturalengland.bsky.social
A view from Ranscombe Farm towards Luddesdown. Most of what's visible in the picture is core NNR or associated land. Rough grassland in the foreground, woods and open grassland in the background. Iassus scutellaris - a leaf-hopper with green body and brown head, on an Elm leaf. Vernal Shieldbug Peribalus strictus. A mid-sized shieldbug with a largely brown body and characteristic pale margins to the 'shoulders' of the pronotum. Asiraca clavicornis, an unusual looking planthopper with expanded antennae and leaf-like front legs.
Thanks Andy. Hoping both these will be written up - nipponicus found NTB by Max Barclay in 2021, the earwig more recent.
Reposted by Tristan Bantock
14 adult Trapezium Shieldbugs were found at Samphire Hoe, near Dover on 10th Aug 2025.
Reposted by Tristan Bantock
Counted 37 nymphs and 60 adult Striped Shieldbugs (Graphosoma italicum) at Ninefields, Waltham Abbey today. This has been the primary population this year, numbers down in other areas and no new spread to other nearby habitat patches that I have been checking. #EssexWildlife #UKBugs
Adult Striped Shieldbug on Hogweed leaf Nymph of Striped Shieldbug on nettle leaf Newly emerged pale orange Striped Shieldbug nymph on Hogweed stem next to its shed skincase. Hogweed stem with numerous adults and nymphs of Striped Shieldbugs.
if you email the britishbugs website I will send you something
not from those photos. Have you tried keying it out? If it doesn't have a dark base to A1 it might be cymoides
Reposted by Tristan Bantock
Edwardsiana rosae.
Common as muck, nightmare to I.D. :-)

#Bugs #Hemiptera #VC55 #Cicadellidae
Edwardsiana rosae Edwardsiana rosae aedeagus
Reposted by Tristan Bantock
I’ve always wanted to see a Blue Shieldbug, Zicrona caerulea, and now I have! Saw this one on our walk at the weekend. Such a stunning little creature! #InsectThursday #Bugsky
Reposted by Tristan Bantock
Does this look good for Ortholomus punctipennis @britishbugs.bsky.social ? Brownfield site, South Cambs.
without a doubt - please do iRecord this
Finally made the pilgrimage to Purflleet for Sciocoris sideritidis and Southern Sickle-bearing Bush Cricket with @sjb2010.bsky.social today.
Southern Sickle-bearing Bush Cricket
Reposted by Tristan Bantock
@britishbugs.bsky.social I think I’ve finally reached a conclusion on this bug I found at Spurn, is it just Megalonotus chigara? On the first photo it is on the right, with a specimen of M.chigara on the left. I was hoping it was a very lost Eremocoris plebejus but I think that’s wishful thinking
possibly. put it on irecord and see what Jim thinks. I'm pretty sure Bill Dolling recorded this at Spurn
Reposted by Tristan Bantock
My first sighting of Rhaphigaster nebulosa (Mottled Shieldbug), in my S. Cambridgeshire garden this afternoon. A recent arrival to our shores, with the first mainland record in London in 2010.
Following its rapid northwards expansion on the continent, it's doing the same here in the UK.
looks like Drymus latus to me - v nice record
Reposted by Tristan Bantock
If you want to identify, well, anything, I recommend this post from @weevil-see.bsky.social. His choice of weevils to illustrate it is of course excellent, but it applies to everything from mushrooms to marsupials. This is how you can be a good identifier of things.

[Link contains spider]
I started a blog and my first post is online!
The posts will try to explore topics which are not typically covered by introductory literature and textbooks, e.g. because they are considered to be "too basic". Let me know what you think!

weevil-see.github.io/taxonomy/Ide...
Species Identifications: Common Pitfalls
Some thoughts about Identifications. How do we identify properly? How do we avoid mistakes?
weevil-see.github.io
yes a female. Likely to be ribauti