Monday, January 12

Marmalade Hoverfly (Episyrphus balteatus)

Marmalade Hoverfly (Episyrphus balteatus) Wing length: 6-10.25mm. Flight: All year.

Species to spot in January

If there is one hoverfly everyone probably can spot and maybe even identify it's the Marmalade hoverfly. It is found in most habitats, but especially common in and around the flowers in one’s garden and by far the commonest hoverfly in the country. It is also migratory and has on occasion caused alarm when they invade from the continent in their thousands. They even reached the broadsheets one year causing mass panic to the un-informed, who mistook them for wasps.

https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2004/aug/03/sillyseason.science

Yellow Poppy full of Marmalade Hoverflies


They are not only great pollinators but are also, due to volume in numbers, a superb natural pest controller, worthy of attracting to the garden. Encourage them to lay their eggs (white) so that the emerging larva can feast on the aphids in your vegetable patch, and you may get a better crop of cabbages, as they particularly like those aphids (Brevicoryne brassicae). The larvae which are legless, translucent with orange markings, can eat up to 400 aphids during development to adulthood. It would be nice to think that gardeners and farmers could leave these little ‘superheroes’ to resolve these pest problems, rather than with artificial solutions, especially during their peak months July to August.

Thursday, January 8

Facts about Hoverflies Volume 2

Proximity to humans

Hoverflies are drawn to humans for various reasons, but when captured, they employ clever tactics to deceive and defend themselves. Discover their surprising strategies below.

Dabbers: 

Hoverflies unlike some other flies don't bite but rather have short spongy mouthparts that dab. They dab the surface of your skin, likely seeking salt and moisture. This dabbing habit can tickle. At a flower they will be dabbing up nectar.

Snout hoverfly dabbing up nectar
Photo Credit: K.Hinchcliffe

Tuesday, January 6

New Year in Bloom: Sightings 2026

Hoverfly Sightings W/C 1st January 2026

Happy New Year everyone!

Hope all my readers have had a great festive season and are ready for new adventures to begin in 2026.

It’s not been the best of weeks for me with regards getting out and about nature spotting, but I did get out New Years Day and the 2nd of January, so below are the listings for those days. As I sit here and write up my sightings, I am looking out on a dusting of snow which always makes a lovely, picturesque setting, until someone goes out and puts boot prints all over the place.

Click below to find out what I found.

New Year Plant Hunt BSBI webpage


Tuesday, December 30

Christmas in Bloom: Sightings 2025

Hoverfly Sightings W/C 22nd December 2025

It has been a while since I did a sightings blog, but it being Christmas I thought I would go out spotting in and around my locality in order to finish off the records for the year.

Often people will go out on New Years Day to log flowers and birds they have seen. I thought I would do this throughout Christmas week. Over the last few years a few botanical groups have started doing these types of logs, as seen on social media, but I haven’t seen many birding groups doing the same has yet. I am sure it will become popularised over the next few years.

Click below to find out what I found.

Photographs of the Left Garden and Right Beyond the garden gate

Sunday, December 21

The HoverflySpotter logo

What Hoverfly species are to be found in the logo below?

The site has been up a few months now and let me start by thanking all those people that have visited, followed, subscribed and even re-visited, it really does help the channel grow and inspire me to produce more content. If you have not followed or subscribed, please consider it.

🎄 Something a bit lighter today, a little Christmas challenge. 🎅

For those of you who have noticed the logo to the site or the little favicon icon specific to the internet page on your desktop, you might have been wondering what hoverfly species this is…. Well, its no particular species at all it is a mishmash of many species all amalgamated into one.

Logo showing the main parts of the hoverfly

 I wonder if you can guess which species……. Answers below… 📝

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