30 September 2006
Sunrise
Still on the holiday photos. This was the sunrise on my last day at Caloundra.
Nikon d70 : 1/320 : f/9 : 18mm : iso200
29 September 2006
Takeoff
28 September 2006
Storm
24 September 2006
Ichneumon Wasp
23 September 2006
Dragonfly
I can tell you that there are about 300 species of Dragonfly in Australia, of which, about 130 occur in South East Queensland and of these 27 are illustrated in my reference book. I can also tell you, I have no idea which one this is! The photo was taken along Enoggera creek in the Ashgrove area.
Nikon d70 : 1/250 : f/5.6 : 270mm : iso200
22 September 2006
Katydid
21 September 2006
Welcome Swallow
20 September 2006
Ichneumon Wasps
Not sure of the true indentity of this wasp, but it looks to be from the Ichneumon family. The long sting looking thing is an ovipositor, which is used to insert eggs into a host. Because of this practice, they are considerd parasitic. The small photo is of the wasp inserting her ovipositor into a host below the surface of a paper bark tree.
Nikon d70 : 1/200 : f/7.1 : 90mm : iso200
19 September 2006
Robber Fly
When I first saw one of these guys I though “you look like a nasty bugger”. And in terms of the insect world, it is. The Robber Fly is very fast and very strong and grabs other insects out of the air. It injects its pray with a poison to paralyse it, before injecting an enzyme, which starts to decompose the pray to enable the fly to suck its insides out, leaving only the ectoskeleton after it has finished feeding. Nice.
Nikon d70 : 1/200 : f/7.1 : 90mm : iso200
18 September 2006
Gone!
This water feature no longer exists! It was located in the CBD area of Brisbane near the Roma Street Parkland, and I have the inpression that is was feed by storm water run off. I took the photo a few months ago, and I was suprised to drive past the location today and see that they have dug it up to make way for the new busway tunnels that will run under the CBD.
Nikon d70 : 1/8 : f/25 : 29mm : iso400
17 September 2006
The House Cat
16 September 2006
Eastern Water Dragon
15 September 2006
Storm Flight
14 September 2006
Female Superb Blue-wren
This is the female mate of last weeks Superb Blue-wren. The female isn’t as colourful as the male, which is typical in the bird kingdom. The reason for this? Well, the male has to be good looking enough to attract a mate, and he has to look more appertising, in order to distract a predator’s attention away from the female.
Nikon d70 : 1/250 : f/11 : 300mm : iso200
12 September 2006
Mantis
11 September 2006
Bush Stone-curlew
The Bush Stone-curlew (Burhinus grallarius) is a nocturnal ground bird and is found in just about any place that has ground litter. Often heard and not seen, announces its presence with and eerie "weeloo, will-aroo" call. This one and its mate have been nesting in the carpark at work for years.
Nikon d70 : 1/250 : f/5.6 : 300mm : iso200
10 September 2006
Pacific Black Duck
09 September 2006
Variable Ladybird
08 September 2006
Bee
Ya gotta love bees. They pollinate flowers, and in this case, the orange blossoms in the back yard, so we might get fruit this year! Then we get to steal their honey for our morning toast, mmm yum.
PS There is a PG rating on tomorrows photo, just giving the heads up for parents.
Nikon d70 : 1/400 : f/10 : 90mm ; iso200
07 September 2006
Meadow Argus
The Meadow Argus (Junonia villida) is a low flying butterfly. It will open its wings and put its back to the sun to sunbath, but will close its wings in shade. The "eye-spot" pattern on its wings is a defence mechanism, and when it feels threatened, it will open its front wings to reveal extra "eyes".
Nikon d70 : 1/400 : f/9 : 300mm : iso200
06 September 2006
Wandering Ringtail Damselfly
05 September 2006
Superb Blue Wren
04 September 2006
Superb Blue Wren In Flight
03 September 2006
Scarlet Jezebel
02 September 2006
Riverfire
Sorry, cheesy photo today. It is River Festival time in Brisbane, and it started tonight with a 30 minute fireworks and music display, which we call "Riverfire". The fireworks symbolically get lit by two F111 fighter planes soaring up the river doing a dump and burn. The whole show gets extinguished the same way. The whole event is quite a big deal around here.
Nikon d70 : 5sec : f/16 : 25mm : iso200
01 September 2006
Scaly-breasted Lorikeet
It is amazing what people don’t see. There were several of these Scaly-breasted Lorikeets sharing a tree with Rainbow Lorikeets at a local sports park. Many of the birds were hanging upside down and feeding on low branches. People were walking right by, the bird right next to their ears and they didn’t even notice! Their loss.
Nikon d70 : 1/200 : f/7.1 : 250mm : iso200
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