The Flying Saucer At Sunset

Lenticular clouds (Altocumulus lenticularis) are stationary lens-shaped clouds with a smooth layered appearance that form in the troposphere, usually above mountain ranges. One was spotted in Singapore recently...

Eyes Of 30,000 Honeycombs

With 30,000 individual facets, dragonflies have the most number of facets among insects. Each facet, or ommatidia, creates its own image, and the dragonfly brain has eight pairs of descending visual neurons to compile those thousands of images into one picture...

A Kaleidoscope Of Colours, Shapes And Patterns

Spectacular and innovative in design, the Flower Dome replicates the cool-dry climate of Mediterranean regions like South Africa, California and parts of Spain and Italy. Home to a collection of plants from deserts all over the world, it showcases the adaptations of plants to arid environments...

Lightning Strikes, Not Once, But Many Times

Unlike light, lightning does not travel in a straight line. Instead, it has many branches. These other branches flashed at the same time as the main strike. The branches are actually the step leaders that were connected to the leader that made it to its target...

Are You My Dinner Tonight?

A T-Rex has 24-26 teeth on its upper jaw and 24 more on its lower jaw. Juveniles have small, sharp blade-shaped teeth to cut flesh, whereas adults have huge, blunt, rounded teeth for crushing bones. Is the T-Rex a bone-crushing scavenger?

Showing posts with label Salticidae. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Salticidae. Show all posts

Lower Peirce Reservoir - Monkeys Basking In The Sun

Lower Peirce Reservoir
North, Singapore
March 2015

On the fringes of the forest, this is a common sight - A pack of Macaca fascicularis (Long-Tailed Macaque) basking in the sun. Being a complete family unit, the pack consisted of the alpha male, several females, and young, some of whom were still carried by their mothers.

Oblivious to the danger, a jogger runs by with her young child in a pram.
She stops to point out the "cute monkeys" to her toddler...

In a Straits Times report ("Monkey see, monkey do: 5 monkey hot spots in Singapore"), Upper Thomson was listed as a "monkey spot". Residents reported incidents where monkeys smashed their flower pots, gnawed through water containers, upset pots of plants and stole fruit from the trees they planted.

Most macaques are non-aggressive, as long as they are not threatened and food is not carried in front of them. Once past the danger post by them, a regular visit to Lower Peirce Reservoir is always a treasure trove of small finds.

A curious female Telamonia festiva (Jolly Telamonia) peers from bneath a leaf...

A moth caterpillar balances itself at the edge of the stem...

This bug is big - With legs extended, it was almost the size of a human palm...

If you see a beetle with bright yellow spots on its back but much larger in size than a typical ladybird beetle and having a slightly more elongated body, it may be a fungus beetle. Fungus beetles, as the name implies, are affiliated with fungus. However, they are not always seen on fungus as they do fly around and land on some other surfaces. They belong to the family Endomychidae, commonly called Handsome Fungus Beetles.

The Lower Peirce version of Eumorphus quadriguttatus (Handsome Fungus Beetle)...

A male Tyriobapta torrida (Treehugger) Dragonfly from Libellulidae family. They are found in forest swamps and near waterways, guarding small territories in shaded areas...

A juvenile Argiope (St Andrew's Cross Spider) resting in a dark corner...

A cheeky Chrysilla lauta (Elegant Golden Jumper) Male Spider glaring back...

A grasshopper-like Cicadellidae (Leafhopper) resting in a very prominent location with the colour contrast...

March is certainly the spiderling season with lots hatching. On the web, dew drops can be seen collecting in big puddles...

A delicate damselfly rests by the water edge...

An Ampullariidae (Apple Snail) slowly gliding along a stalk...

A parting tribute to Mr Lee as the skies turned dark with rain clouds...

Sources




Central Catchment Reserve - Full Of Surprises

Central Catchment Reserve
Central, Singapore
October 2014

The Central Catch Reserve is always full of surprises. On a Sunday morning, these were the surprising finds in the northern part of the Reserve...

Oriental Whip Snake

If there is a favourite snake category, this will be one of Merlion Wayfarer's favourite snakes, for its sheer elegance and beautiful eyes.

The Ahaetulla prasina (Oriental Whip Snake) is arboreal and lives in bushes and trees.

Normally shy creatures, they are not that easily spotted, as they blend well with the environment, with their vine-like body, are usually found above or below eye level, and do not stay still long. They can climb extremely fast up a tree, or across branches.


Little Surprises

An adorable little grasshopper...

It was the season for pondskaters (Gerridae). They were there by the thousands...

The melodious call of a male Dicrurus paradiseus (Greater Racket-Tailed Drongo).
Survival here must be tough; half its tail feathers were missing...

Butterflies & Moths

Pausing on a leave, a male Tanaecia iapis puseda (Horsfield's Baron) shows off its velvety black upperside with a broad bright blue marginal border on its hindwings...

A caterpillar caught in a web that it spins, ready for pupating...

A colourful little caterpillar looking lost...

Dragons 

A male Tyriobapta torrida (Treehugger) Dragonfly resting on, what else, a tree...

A male Trithemis aurora (Crimson Dropwing) Dragonfly lands and assumes the obelisk position to exposure to the weather on a hot day...

Froghopper / Spittlebug

Seeing the spit-like foam is an indication that there are spittle bugs around. The foam is where young spittlebugs live. These insects are protected by the foam. They usually do not do much harm to the plants.

The space inside the foam is moist to keep the bugs’ soft bodies from drying out. And the foam tastes bad, so it keeps away most animals that would eat the bugs.

Looking a puddle of foam are spittle bug eggs....

Spiders

Clasping a thin blade of grass with four of its legs,
this Tylorida striata (Striated Tylorida) rests almost hidden...

A playful male Phintella vittata (Banded Phintella) Spider hops about from leaf to leaf, brilliant against the light in its shimmering colours...

The Flying Lemur was sighted too!

Sources


Punggol Beach - Mainly Crustaceans Left

Punggol Beach
North East, Singapore
February 2015

It does seem that crustaceans and a host of smaller organisms survive well despite the pollution on Punggol Beach. (See "Punggol Beach - Polluted & Deforested").

Crabs

Hermit crabs with their pearly bead-sized eyes...

What a beard!

A crab with a bleached claw and another one with a white stripe down its face...

Hairy Crab...

A whole host of other crabs...

Some well-hidden by camouflage or in crevices...

Myomenippe harwicki (Thunder Crab)  

When a stone is overturned, other crabs usually madly dash out helter skelter. The Thundr Crab merely tucks its limbs under its body and remains motionless. In this way, predators overlook it as they focus instead on the more nervous crabs.

"Mini-Me" Thunder Crabs...

The size compared to an adult's thumb - Its body is the length of the thumb...

The muscularity of its huge pincers...

There are lots of ways to make the crab angry...

Nasty look from the crab when disturbed - as if looks can kill...

Alpheidae (Snapping Shrimp)

This Snapping Shrimp was spotted wandering out of its burrow. It appeared lost. There was no Goby watchdog to keep a lookout. Could it be because the Goby did not survive the polluted waters?


Other Shore Life


A coin-sized mollusk plastered onto the surface of a rock...

A stubby Aquilonastra coronata (Crown Sea Star)...
 

A deceptively long Eurythoe complanata (Reef Bristleworm) spiraling out of its burrow...

The Land Creatures

On land, due the heavy deforestation, only several creatures were spotted along the regular Park Connector paths.

 An adorable Planthopper (Fulgoromorpha) looking back with its "crossed eyes"...

A female Hasarius adansoni (Adanson's House Jumper) Spider devours its freshly-caught prey...