James Emerson
@norwichbirder.bsky.social
1.4K followers 740 following 990 posts
Naturalist living in Norfolk (UK) - particularly interested in birds, fungi, psyllids and shieldbugs (also real ale, Forteana etc) Local patch = Whitlingham C.P. and the wider Norwich area. Sporadically updated blog: http://jamesbirdsandbeer.blogspot.com/
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norwichbirder.bsky.social
I've just finished putting together my local patch bird report, covering species seen at Whitlingham & Thorpe Marshes (Norwich) during 2024. It can be downloaded here: drive.google.com/file/d/13pLp... A big thank you to everyone who has reported sightings and allowed photos to be used in the report.
This is the front cover of a local bird report. The backgrouns is a pale purple, and in the centre is a landscape photo showing a flooded path with a bench on the foreground and a bare tree at the back. The text reads "The Birds of Whitlingham & Thorpe 2024" at the top and "Compiled by James Emerson" below the photo.
Reposted by James Emerson
jeremybartlett.bsky.social
The beautifully shaggy Echinoderma calcicola.

Found in a damp woodland on rich calcareous soil in West Norfolk.

First Norfolk record since 1920.

Had a slightly fruity smell. White spores.

I'm drying a fruitbody for verification by our group's DNA team.

#Fungi #FungiFriends
Echinoderma calcicola.
Echinoderma calcicola.
Echinoderma calcicola - cheilocystidia stained in Congo red, x1000.
Echinoderma calcicola. Spores, stained with Meltzer's reagent, x1000.
Reposted by James Emerson
sarahlambert7.bsky.social
Midweek grassland #fungi treat at @wildlifebcn.org Old Sulehay NR - Limestone Waxcap, Mousepee Pinkgill, Persistent Waxcap and Blackening Waxcap. So many in Stonepit Close (a former limestone quarry) this year, especially Persistent Waxcap...

#fungifriends
Three red Limestone Waxcaps snuggled on a mossy bed The charismatic Mousepee Pinkgill (with a Persistent Waxcap in the background) Persistent Waxcap Young Blackening Waxcap emerging from a carpet of Bendy Ditrichum Flexitrichum flexicaule
norwichbirder.bsky.social
Treated here as synonyms - Index Fungorum lists Pluteus chrysophaeus as the ‘current’ name www.speciesfungorum.org/GSD/GSDspeci... but see also the discussion here www.inaturalist.org/posts/87000-...
Species Fungorum - GSD Species
www.speciesfungorum.org
Reposted by James Emerson
velociraptor500.bsky.social
A few more fungi found at Felbrigg NT at the weekend.
Reposted by James Emerson
botanybeck.bsky.social
Not seen this one before #FungiFriends, think it’s Green Brittlegill, Russula aeruginia, found beneath Silver Birch. Caps of the mature specimens were very green, younger ones were paler. Stipe chalk white & tapering at base, gills white & crowded. Such a pretty mushroom 💚
#FungiFriday
Photos of green-capped mushrooms beneath Silver Birch trees. I’ve not seen a Brittlegill with a green cap before! The young specimens were pale minty green deepening to a darker moss/olive green in the more mature examples.
Reposted by James Emerson
britmycolsoc.org.uk
The #UKFungusDay celebrations are not over yet! 🍄 Events still to come include Wandering for Waxcaps at Merry's Meadows, and Wheatfen Fungi Foray at Rutland Water.
👉 Take a look at the list: www.ukfungusday.co.uk/whatson
Yellow-colour Waxcap - credit: Vaughn Matthews / Leicestershire & Rutland Wildlife Trust
norwichbirder.bsky.social
An excuse to post an old photo of mine of Trooping Funnels showing the proportions (tall stipe:cap) but also the impressive 'trooping'.
A line of beige fungi with tall thick stipes and relatively small caps. They are growing up amongst moss and Ground Ivy leaves.
Reposted by James Emerson
biodivlibrary.bsky.social
Did you know that BHL has #FullTextSearch? You can search for scientific names, places, etc, but you can also find all the things that "Alfred Russell Wallace" found "delicious" in his travels (search for "delicious" and then narrow search results by author). #ILoveBHL www.biodiversitylibrary.org 🧪
Reposted by James Emerson
greenleejw.bsky.social
Friends, with the world on fire, it feels useless to be here selling my services. But I do need to keep the lights on, and the #maps pay the bills.

So...if you need a map(s) for a book project, let me know! I have space for new commissions.

Here are a few of my favorite maps I've done lately:
1/2
Grayscale map of the Atlantic showing most of the Americas, Europe, and Africa. There are arrows showing the direction of trade, and each arrow has at least one number attached to it. The numbers match a key on the side that lists the products being traded and their place of origin. There are 15 different sets of commodities listed:
1:Midlands & Birmingham: Guns, Gunpowder, Metalware, Silks
2: Liverpool & Lancashire: Cotton-linens
3: Lancashire: Linens, Cottons, Cotton-linens
4: India: Cottons Cowries
5: Midlands & London: Metalware, Silks, Ceramics, Glassware, Guns
6: London & Glasgow: Credit, Shipping Insurance
7: New England: Beef & Pork, Fish, Rum, Wood, Whale products
8: Mid-Atlantic: Grain
9: Chesapeake Colonies: Tobacco
10: Carolinas, Rice, Indigo
11: Caribbean: Sugar, Molasses
12: Brazil: Coffee
13: Brazil: Gold
14: Mexico / Peru: Silver
15: Britain: Grain, Manufactures

The map has a set of grey arrows going from West Africa to the Americas showing the number of enslaved workers transported. The arrows are sized relative to the numbers. The largest arrow shows 6 million enslaved workers going to the Caribbean. 3.5 million went to Africa, 650,000 to the Spanish colonies in Central and South America, and 400,000 to North America.

A key in the bottom right lists a set of African kingdoms that participated in the selling of enslaved workers, including Benin, the Oyo Empire, Dahomey, the Ashanti Confederacy, the Kingdom of Allada, the Kingdom of Whydah, and the Nupe people. These kingdoms are outlined on the map. Greyscale drawing of a floor plan of what looks like the first floor of a house, with ten rooms and a flight of stairs. The title at the bottom reads: "The Magic Bookshop." There are two exterior doors: a front door and a back door. The floor plan is on a tattered piece of paper that looks as if it is being unrolled from the top, so there is a curl of paper, or a scroll, at the bottom. Around the floor plan are four animals. A cat, labeled Angel, is resting on top of floor plan, dangling a paw down. To her left is a huntsman spider named Drusilla. At the bottom of the page on the left is a golden retriever named Willow, sitting behind the scroll like a good boy. On the right side is a cat named Spike, who is sitting on top of the scroll and crushing it like an jerk. Typical dog and cat stuff. There are four piles of books around the outside of the floor plan: two large, and two small

From top left down in a switchback pattern, the rooms are labeled:
Yellow: Books with gold covers
Possibility: Mystery, Crime (where they do the spell)
Exeunt Omnes: Older books (where Kennedy finds the magic book)
The Office (where hazel makes tea)
Bathroom
Gurgler: Sci-fi, Fantasy (where Hazel goes to hide out)
The Scriptorium: More modern books (where Hazel sends Luke to find a book for his niece)
Taboo
The Fishbowl: Romance (where Luke makes a pink and purple bookcase)
Pooh Corner: Children, Young adult (where Bob has his armchair and the silent book club happens)

A label in the central hallway reads: "(where they put a bookcase for Today's Donations). Another label on the stairs reads "Hazel's loft apartment" and there is an arrow pointing up the stairs. Art. A greyscale map of southern Africa showing different biomes. The map map key indicates 7 different biomes: Succulent Karoo; Fynbos; Albany Thicket; India Ocean Coastal Belt; Mixed Woodland; Grassland; Nama-Karoo; and Kalahari Savanna. Each is represented on the may by a different shade of grey, with areas of more rainfall being darker, and areas of less rainfall being lighter. Several of the rivers are labeled, as is the Indian Ocean. Art. Colored map showing the locations of Alderely Edge, done in a fantasy style. The map is drawn to look like an old map done on parchment, with torn edges curling up. Two bars with ribbons wrapped around them form a frame at the top and right sides of the map. The ribbon on top is blue, the one on the right is a dusty red. On the right side of the map, between the frame and the edge, the map is colored turquoise and does not show any land forms. Written in large vertical letters in this space is the maps' title: "The Edge".

The main part of the map is cut with forests and cliffs, and has 13 locations noted. Each location name is in a small frame that looks like a torn piece of parchment. Two roads cut across the map, one labeled Macclesfield Road and the other labeled Artists Lane. They meet in the bottom 3rd of the map by a location called "The Wizard Tearoom."  An arrow at the top left points up one of the roads and has a label reading "to Alderely Edge (village). An arrow a the other end of the road, at the bottom of th emap, reads: "To Macclesfield."
Reposted by James Emerson
chrisddarby.bsky.social
Red-tailed shrike
Dunwich, Suffolk, 05/10/2025
"Showing well"
@suffolkbirdgroup.bsky.social #suffolkbirding #birds
Reposted by James Emerson
akeewales.bsky.social
Storm Amy last weekend meant sessions planned had to be postponed 😢 as it wasn't save to take people into the woods. So with a free weekend, when the weather cleared, it was lovely to spot many different fungi & slime mould about. #natureconnection #fungimatters
Reposted by James Emerson
paganbirder.bsky.social
Treasure hunting again on the magical Quantock Hills, a very good year for fungi 😀 #quantockhills #ukfungi
Reposted by James Emerson
lukaslarge.bsky.social
I think this is Volvariella murinella - grey streaked cap, volva at stipe base and pinkish gills when mature #FungiFriends #mycology #fungi #ukwildlife #UKFungi
norwichbirder.bsky.social
Those are Saffrondrop Bonnet M. crocata I think? It's locally common with Beech around Trowse & Whitlingham so I see it quite a bit.
Reposted by James Emerson
mattrjones.bsky.social
Some fabulous stands of Hog's Fennel (Peucedanum officinale) in Kent including many hosting the rust fungus Puccinia rugulosa 😍 #wildflowerhour
norwichbirder.bsky.social
In addition to the things you would normally photograph (an in situ shot, one showing the cap and one showing the pores & stipe) it is useful to photograph the base (some have pink or white mycelial strands visible) and a cut-in-half picture is often useful, e.g. www.researchgate.net/figure/Types...
Figure 4: Types of color change of context in Boletaceae. a–f Boletus...
Download scientific diagram | Types of color change of context in Boletaceae. a–f Boletus s.l., g Pulveroboletus, h Boletellus, i–l Xerocomus s.l., m Phylloporus, n–o Strobilomyces, p–q Porphyrellus, ...
www.researchgate.net
Reposted by James Emerson
paulgreenwildwire.bsky.social
Some more Autumn Colour from Coastal Suffolk today. #october #rarebirds #birding #suffolkcoast
norwichbirder.bsky.social
Yes, there isn’t enough detail to identify the bees with certainty, but based on time of year and the behaviour Ivy Bee (Colletes hederae) is highly likely. They nest in large aggregations in sandy soils and fly in autumn to coincide with Ivy flowering times.
Reposted by James Emerson
duleyp.bsky.social
My luck was back this PM. Managed to find 2, with the same characteristics. Side light and flash showed up the hairs. I think you're right (unsurprisingly!), clubbed setae, and trichobothria on the abdomen and 4th tarsus, so pselaphochernes scorpioides. Do you concur? I have other 📷 if needed.
A view from above of a tiny arachnid. It has long arms at the front ending in crab like claws. The abdomen is segmented with the red-brown plates separated by lighter lines. The lighting is set to highlight the tiny hairs that cover its body, which allow it to sense what is happening around it.
Reposted by James Emerson
acorncarver.bsky.social
If you’re near RSPB Titchwell on the 11/12 October in the afternoon pop in and catch my video/photo presentation about RSPB Snettisham, and it’s free😀
Reposted by James Emerson
lukaslarge.bsky.social
Nature book challenge. A book per day in no particular order, until you've shared ALL of the best nature books in your personal library. No explanations, no reviews.
#Books #Nature #Naturewriting #naturebooks #conservation #naturebookchallenge #booksky #MycoBookClub
Book cover: Faszinierende Pflanzenpilze Erkennen und Bestimmen by Julia Kruse
Reposted by James Emerson
fayrnhawk.bsky.social
Only three days now until our first online session on #AquaticHyphomycetes There’s still time to sign up by emailing [email protected] Andi Bruder will be giving us a quick overview of this special ecological group...
fayrnhawk.bsky.social
A new Zoom-based chat group focussing on #AquaticHyphomycetes will be starting on 8th October. Join us in the evening (BST) to chat and learn about this fascinating group of fungi. Contact me at [email protected] if interested. @britmycolsoc.org.uk @funaction.bsky.social
Aquatic hyphomycete spores from Parc Natur Penglais. Including: Anguillospora crassa, Tricladium splendens, Neonectria lugdeunensis, Tetracladium marchalianum and Articulospora tetracladia. Dyed with cotton blue.
norwichbirder.bsky.social
Yes in that case I’d say just enjoy what you see and putting names to some of them is a bonus!
norwichbirder.bsky.social
Yes I can imagine that would complicate things! There can be overlap between Galerina and Mycena in general appearance but in the field a check of the gill colour should separate them (I sometimes carry a small extendable mirror for this purpose if I don’t want to pick something)