6000 species in 2026: 6 week summary

Posted by Graeme Lyons , Thursday, 12 February 2026 19:58

As of today I am on 1,255 species (20.9%) in the first six weeks of the year (665 of which are inverts). The latest addition being a tiny Pseudeuophrys lanigera that was actually sitting on the edge of the key hole on my front door when I got back from training! Yesterday, we had a look around Swanbourne Lake, part of the Norfolk Estate. I was mainly looking inside old tussocks of Greater Tussock-sedge. They were insanely productive, the highlight being this adult female Donacochara speciosa which was new to West Sussex!

Before that though, I pulled over by a flooded field along the Arun just south of Arundel WWT. There were hundreds of Black-headed Gulls and I was hoping to get Med Gull, which I soon did. I wasn't then expecting to get 80 Cattle Egrets!!! Followed by Gadwall and finally...Greylag (?). That's Little, Great White and Cattle Egrets before I got Greylag Goose. I am out of touch with looking for birds though, here I am trying to get on to some distant swans. My top target on the PSL website for the year is now Pochard.


Other spiders NFY included Rugathodes instabilis, Panamomops sulcifrons, Antistea elegans, Hahnia nava and Gongylidiellum vivum. That's 190 arachnids and 176 spiders for the year. I just love these tussocks. Water-measuers, Drinkers, Glow-worms - they contain multitudes!

I found a couple of these odd looking dung beetles in the tussocks, it's the non-native saproxylic species called Saprosites mendax. I though this was a lifer but remembered catching one by hand in the park by my house a couple of years ago. Turns out Arundel Park is well known for it. Saw-sedge was a surprise too, apparently it has been introduced there for over 150 years.


I did get a couple of lifers in the tussocks though. The NR carabid Badister peltatus and the centipede Strigamia crassipes.  I think this is the first time I have seen Rosy Woodlouse in a tussock. 


I swear these tussocks move when you're not looking. I always imagine Jim Henson lives on in them.


I beat some Box and immediately got a rather nice moth tick, which I was really not expecting. The big micro Ypsolopha mucronella. But even better than that, Anthocoris butleri new for me and all of Sussex. This species only feeds on Box and as I rarely see it in any abundance, I have never seen the bug before. Four invert lifers, one species new to Sussex and another new to West Sussex was not what I was expecting! It pays to go to sites you don't normally visit. I think I only ever visited here once 12 years ago but remembered the Box and tussocks.


In other news. the garden actinic has been super quiet since a Dark Chestnut in January but earlier this week I had a Southern Green Shieldbug.

And I went bryologising again with the local group in what was at first awful weather (I greeted Brad with "I've gone bryologising by mistake"). It turned out to be a top day, and I got a few lifers. Ben also spotted one of my favourite mosses on the side of a ghyll. Hookeria lucens. I couldn't get any closer with my camera though. Wild Garlic, Opposite-leaved Golden-sax and a Dolichovespula media queen were also NFY.

And that's my first target reached! I was aiming for 100 bryophytes for the year and with a little help, I have got to 107 species. So anything I can gain here I can take off my ridiculously high moth target of 850 species. Here's the totals so far...


Many thank to everyone who has sponsored me so far, please do consider sponsoring me if you can, I am fund raising for Sussex Wildlife Trust's reserves here.

You can sign up to the pan-species listing website here, it's totally free (although donations to the team are welcome).

And finally, my book is due to be released on the 26th Feb, two weeks today!!! You can order it here, directly from Pelagic. Getting some great feedback.

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