Home » 2013 » April (Page 2)

Monthly Archives: April 2013

Gray Kingbird

When people say there aren’t so many birds on St. Martin, they’re right in many ways. There are 150 species ever recorded on the island, including rare vagrants seen only once or a few times, which is not a lot of species. Also, there are not very many species that hang out around people. Anyone not looking for birds on […]

read more

Micropezid Fly

There are many beautiful flies on St. Martin, but I think the micropezid flies are my favorite. I find them only in the forest, most often around Pic Paradis and Colombier. I have found almost no information about the micropezids we have on St. Martin, but many species from this family are wasp mimics, and a few are wingless ant-mimics. […]

read more

Social Roaches

There are at least a few different termite species on St. Martin, and to be honest I haven’t figured out how to identify them yet. One interesting thing I have learned about them is that they have recently been reclassified because we have discovered that they are very closely related to cockroaches. It is perhaps a bit of an oversimplification, […]

read more

Young Night Heron on the Wing

An immature yellow-crowned night heron at Salines de l’aéroport in Grand Case. Even before they get their distinctive head plumage and “crown” they are easy to identify by their stocky body and thick bill. I’ve seen a number of nests in the bushes on Petite Clef, the little island on the way to Pinel.

read more

Green Grasshopper Nymph

I love the color of these grasshoppers when they are young. Nymphs (immature stages of an insect that doesn’t go through a complete metamorphosis) of the grasshoppers from this genus (Schistocerca) are usually bright green, while the adults are typically brown. This genus of grasshoppers are also known as locusts, because when the conditions are right they will form swarms. […]

read more

Palm Jumper

Here’s a female jumping spider hiding in a palm frond. At times I’ve seen five or six species of spider living in the fronds of a single palm tree, and there are probably more than that on some. Although they aren’t as diverse as insects, there are still probably several hundred species of spiders on St. Martin, easily enough for […]

read more

Stilt Sandpipers

Stilt sandpipers winter in the Caribbean, Central America and South America, and spend the summers in North America where they breed. There were twenty or thirty on Grand Étang in Terres Basses a couple days ago. As their name suggests, they look like other sandpipers but have very long legs. Like many shorebirds, they have long bills, and use them […]

read more