A Few More.

With the autumn season progressing things are getting harder to find, these are just a few, mainly from the moth light plus a couple more.

A green lacewing, Pseudomallada edwardsi.

A small Ichneumon wasp, much smaller than the norm to the light.

An Assassin Bug, subfamily Tribelocephalinae.

So far unidentified.

A small night prowling Sac spider, Clubiona sp.

And from daylight hours, a mating wasp pair.

Even More Odd Shots.

The way invertebrates utilise camouflage for safety reasons never fails to impress. Tamopsis spiders are masters of the art, this recently moulted individual is blending in with the bark of the Angophora costata on which it is domiciled.

This small moth is also a master of the art.

Two beetles photographed at night while mothing, first, a darkling beetle.

And a leaf beetle, Paropsisterna intacta.

Two lacewings in to the moth light, Stenosmylus stenopterus

And Stenolysmus extraneus.

Also at the moth light, a native millipede, family Paradoxosomatidae. These have a pair of legs on each side of the body segments and are interesting to watch walking.

The millipede will enlarge.