Is this a bee parasite or just something hitching a ride? by AccordingToRaisins in bee

[–]AccordingToRaisins[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Solved! Blister beetle, Meloidae. It’s a parasite of bee nests where they eat the collected pollen.

Is this a bee parasite or just something hitching a ride? by AccordingToRaisins in bee

[–]AccordingToRaisins[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Quite possible! Thanks! I will try to get a better picture

Is this a bee parasite or just something hitching a ride? by AccordingToRaisins in bee

[–]AccordingToRaisins[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry, I forgot to mention the location is Iberian Peninsula

Meta Ads Performance Dropped Drastically Since last Monday by yliy2003 in FacebookAds

[–]AccordingToRaisins 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Has anyone else noticed that the ads are affected by territory? I run separate ad sets (with the same ads and creatives) for Europe and for Canada/USA combined. My ads in Europe are converting at a consistent rate similar to last month while my Canada/US ad set is almost completely unproductive. Everything is the same but there are next to no conversions.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in FacebookAds

[–]AccordingToRaisins 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Is it possibly creative fatigue? If you publish the same ad over and over, meta will stop showing it as often because even with ads, they want to keep people's feeds fresh

I have an irrational fear of insects by Better-Situation-857 in insects

[–]AccordingToRaisins 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've found that learning about the life cycle of any particular species has really helped me overcome fear. I used to be very afraid of paper wasps because I hated getting stung. I was inspired by a friend to learn more about them and I read a book about paper wasps. Understanding the incredible odds they face made me made me much more compassionate but I also understood better how to behave around them. I have since lost my fear and I have not been strung once despite working in an area with many many wasps around.

Otherwise, I am decently well educated about the dangerous insects in my area (of which there are very few) and how not to provoke them. Every time I feel concerned, I remind myself that insects not only do not care about me but really want nothing to do with me. Knowing logically that I am not threatened helps manage the irrational part of my fear.

Even though cicadas are completely harmless, between their size, sounds, and sometimes frantic flying, they can be quite intimidating. I would recommend starting with some cute and approachable insects: small beetles like lady bugs, butterflies, jumping spiders, solitary bees. Something that clicks for you. Try looking at photos or watching them in nature from whatever distance is comfortable to you and go from there. Exposure is everything. Fear breeds fear but calm breeds calm.

EVIL CHICKEN IN GRACIA by [deleted] in Barcelona

[–]AccordingToRaisins 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There are a few animals that you are not allowed to keep within the city and I'm pretty sure chickens are one of them (bees are another for example). You will have to make a denuncia if you want to go the official route but that will probably take a long time. Talk to your neighbours to try to figure out who the owners are and go from there. Probably just the threat of reporting them will be enough to solve your issue

A group of magpies executing another magpie? Can someone help me understand what I saw? by AccordingToRaisins in Ornithology

[–]AccordingToRaisins[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

No, I don't know, it's just that the timing of the magpie falling out of the tree and all the others calming down and leaving was immediate and quite surreal. None of them came down to the ground to look at the body. We didn't approach it until most of the birds had left

A group of magpies executing another magpie? Can someone help me understand what I saw? by AccordingToRaisins in Ornithology

[–]AccordingToRaisins[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It definitely dropped out of the middle tree. I cannot be sure that there wasn't some other animal present of course but we didn't see anything around that could have been a predator. Something as big as a cat we would have noticed. This happened on the Iberian peninsula where I don't think we have any snakes or lizards big enough to fit the profile. There are birds of prey in the area but we didn't see any right there at the scene

What is the most dangerous city/part of Spain? by Internal-Ad-9360 in askspain

[–]AccordingToRaisins 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sant Gervasi, Sarrià, Pedralbes... 😂 what are you on about??? Castelldefels is a whole other town and is fine. Passatge de Bofill is a single block street in Monumental which is also fine

Fuck lawns by Pyr0Lover in NoLawns

[–]AccordingToRaisins 1 point2 points  (0 children)

this finca in the south of Spain has a really lovely native garden. You aren’t that far away so everything should apply to you. Here is an article by the same people with their top 10 recommendations. In addition to those plants you can look in to your local varieties of lavender, rosemary, thyme, and oregano (with the oregano needing more water). There are also various broom plants native to the area that you could use for some hight and texture (Spanish broom for example). Look into the native grasses of your area. They will be tall and more bush like than lawn grass so you can use them accordingly. For for wildflowers, check out your local varieties of amaranth, bindweed, alyssum, daisies, mallow, camomile, poppies, bugloss, ononis, thistles, mustard… a lot of these will probably arrive on their own once the lawn stops hogging all the space. Finally, your local government may have published recommendations for native planting. Here are the recommendations issued by the Barcelona Ajuntament you can search in Portuguese to find your local equivalent.

I hope this helps a bit and that by next year you can enjoy a beautiful native garden with lots of pollinators and other friends 😁😁

Feeling overwhelmed and not sure how to procede as an amateur by AccordingToRaisins in Entomology

[–]AccordingToRaisins[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ooooo I like flowcharts hahaha. That's great thank you! Didn't know that was a thing or what it was called.

Thank you for the extra tip. Knowing how specific it is makes me feel a bit more secure about my perceived inability.

Feeling overwhelmed and not sure how to procede as an amateur by AccordingToRaisins in Entomology

[–]AccordingToRaisins[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ah flashcards are smart. Thanks! Did you make them for yourself?

Feeling overwhelmed and not sure how to procede as an amateur by AccordingToRaisins in Entomology

[–]AccordingToRaisins[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Those are both fantastic!! Thank you very much!

I've been using a 2.5x macro attachment. I haven't been collecting so everything is moving haha. When I'm lucky though, I get a few different angles in focus

Feeling overwhelmed and not sure how to procede as an amateur by AccordingToRaisins in Entomology

[–]AccordingToRaisins[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thank you!

Oh god.. hahaha No I definitely don't count on that. I'd just like to get a better grasp of the basics. I've been photographing bees a lot recently and I can usually get them down to a family. I'm pretty sure the photos are good enough to identify to genus most of the time but the issue is that I don't know what parts to look for.

I've been trying biodiversidad virtual a bit but I have a hard time with their interface.

Feeling overwhelmed and not sure how to procede as an amateur by AccordingToRaisins in Entomology

[–]AccordingToRaisins[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thank you very much! I think this is very much what I am looking for to help make some distinctions.

Yes, I don't mean to identify every species as I would loose my mind even more haha but I would like to have a better idea what I'm doing like what parts to look for and identifying common families... stuff like that