Saturday, 18 April 2026

An early feast

Today, whilst out birding, something caught my eye. I have started visiting Warwick Racecourse more often this past year, mainly to build up a species list for the site and to get some nice photographs of different birds. 



At this time of year, I am usually focused on the Skylarks and the returning warblers; however, today, what caught my eye first was a flock of Starlings. Starlings are not unusual on site. They are present all year round in small flocks, usually on the short turf by the football ground. Here they potter over the grass, looking for insects and probing for leatherjackets. Today, however, they were further over near the water channel. They sat along the fence line, some of them shooting into the air, hovering and then returning to the fence. If I couldn’t see directly that they were Starlings, I would have identified them as stocky flycatchers, twitching into the air, fluttering and returning to a perch. It was this odd behaviour and that thought of the flycatcher that held the answer. 

Taking a moment to look around me, I noticed that the air was filled with black flies. Flies are often a very overlooked taxon, unless they are flying around your food, but they are incredibly important ecologically. The flies I could see were familiar to me. 

They were jet black, some about an inch long. They floated in the air with their legs dangling, looking like some kind of drone. They seemed to bob on the air currents, settling occasionally on vegetation. These flies are known as St. Mark's Flies (Bibio marci) or the hawthorn fly. They are called St Mark’s flies because their emergence flight period usually coincides with St Mark’s saint day (25th April). 

Image from Warren Photography - https://www.warrenphotographic.co.uk/28027-st-marks-fly-in-flight

The fly is known for its spring appearance. Its larvae live in the soil, feeding on roots and decaying vegetation before pupating into their adult forms, which then take to the air, slowly drifting in swarms with their legs hanging down. This stage is short-lived, lasting perhaps a week as they search out a mate. During this week, they sustain themselves by feeding on the nectar of fruit trees and hawthorn flowers, making them important pollinators for these species. 

In many ways, this display of floating dancing flies is a terrestrial form of that exhibited by Mayflies over our rivers. These swarms form an important food source for many species. The Starlings had identified this and left their usual spot to take advantage of the glut of food.

It's one of nature's miracles, the ability of such tiny organisms to synchronise and emerge together. Sometimes it's the small things that reveal the most.

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