Editor & Proofreader

Editor: Nelson Poirier    Proofreader: Louise Nichols

Friday, 3 July 2026

July 3 2026

 

 

Nature Moncton Nature News

 

Clicking on the photos enlarges them for closer observation. 

 

Nature Moncton members, as well as any naturalist in New Brunswick or beyond, are invited to share their photos and descriptions of recent nature sightings to build a fresh (almost) daily edition of Nature News.

 

If you would like to share observations/photos with Nature News, contact the editor, nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com

 

Please advise the editor at nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com, as well as proofreader nicholsl@eastlink.ca, if any errors are noted in wording or photo labelling.

  

Proofreading courtesy of Louise Nichols at nicholsl@eastlink.ca

 

 

**Sam LeGresley found a structure attached under the blade of a sensitive fern in Parc Haut Du Ruisseau in Memramcook next to Breau Creek recently, but so far our consultants cannot put a handle on it.

Any comments from readers would be appreciated to know who the proprietor is.


WHO OR WHAT IS THE INHABITANT? JUNE 30, 2026.  SAM LeGRESLEY


 

**Joe Foster saw and photographed a one-eyed sphinx moth early Thursday morning at the Maplewood Golf and Country Club in Irishtown. He estimated it was approximately 4 inches wide. Joe’s photo nicely shows the moth with open spread wings to show its distinctive eye spots to ward off predators and “photographers”!



ONE-EYED SPHINX MOTH. JULY 2, 2026. JOE FOSTER


 

**Jane and Ed LeBlanc visited family at a lake near St. Martins and tried to get photos of the resident loons from a canoe. The common loons escaped them, but driving home, they found a beaver in the water, and Jane got photos right from the truck.  At home, they found a casualty...a male black-throated blue warbler had hit their window. Jane got great photos while it got its bearings and finally flew off.





BLACK-THROATED BLUE WARBLER (MALE). JULY 2, 2026.  JANE LEBLANC


BLACK-THROATED BLUE WARBLER (MALE). JULY 2, 2026.  JANE LEBLANC


BEAVER. JULY 2, 2026. JANE LEBLANC


 

**Christine Lever shares an article she recently encountered that many naturalists may want to take note of.  The link is below her explanation.

It’s from The Guardian regarding the loss, over 50 years, of birds in the UK. You can listen to the difference, and it’s startling and immensely sad. Of course, this is happening globally, with each generation growing up with a lower baseline of what it was like a generation or two before them. The losses are accepted as the norm.

 

Christine feels naturalists might be interested in reading about and hearing the difference over the last 50 years. On a positive note, the Merlin app seems to be doing a good job of getting people interested in birds. However, unless there’s a concerted effort in change, we will continue to lose not just birds, but many, many other wild species. We will be far poorer without realizing how rich we all should be.


https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/jul/03/dawn-chorus-uk-birdsong-50-years-audio-landscape?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

 

 **Jessica Belanger-Mainville shares several bird photographs she captured at Wilson Marsh while on the Nature Moncton Wednesday walk at that site.

(Editor’s note: Appreciation to Jessica, who is one of the members of the activities committee that chooses the sites for the Wednesday evening walks.)


TREE SWALLOW. JULY 1, 2026. JESSICA BELANGER-MAINVILLE


RING-NECKED DUCK (MALE). JULY 1, 2026. JESSICA BELANGER-MAINVILLE


PIED-BILLED GREBE. JULY 1, 2026. JESSICA BELANGER-MAINVILLE


PIED-BILLED GREBE ON A NEST. JULY 1, 2026. JESSICA BELANGER-MAINVILLE


EASTERN KINGBIRD. JULY 1, 2026. JESSICA BELANGER-MAINVILLE


** Susan Richards comments with her photograph: “This nature-loving group enjoyed a walk with 22 species of birds recorded at Wilson Marsh on July 1.  The wind kept the bugs away, and the conversation on birds and plants and the life in the marsh was informative and well received.   Thank you, Brian Stone.


NATURE MONCTON WEDNESDAY WALK. JULY 1, 2026.  SUSAN RICHARDS


**Brian Stone sends a few photos from earlier in the week from various areas around Moncton during his fresh air excursions. At Wilson Marsh, he found his first bronze copper butterflies of the season and a female twelve-spotted skimmer dragonfly while birdwatching during previously reported outings. Later, on some ATV trails behind Irishtown Park, he walked through wet, messy terrain a bit off the trails and found a few items of interest to photograph. In one area, he noticed a large number of Harris's checkerspot butterflies along with a few Peck's skippers, long dash skippers, a white admiral butterfly, and some northern crescent butterflies. Some dragonflies seen require further identification before posting. Other items seen were grass pink bog orchids, twinflower plant, and fly agaric mushrooms. It was hot, damp, muddy, and many biting insects ... good conditions for birding. 




PECK'S SKIPPER JUNE 29, 2026. BRIAN STONE 


PECK'S SKIPPER JUNE 29, 2026. BRIAN STONE 


NORTHERN CRESCENT BUTTERFLY. JUNE 29, 2026. BRIAN STONE


LONG DASH SKIPPER. JUNE 29, 2026. BRIAN STONE


HARRIS'S CHECKERSPOT BUTTERFLY. JUNE 29, 2026. BRIAN STONE 


HARRIS'S CHECKERSPOT BUTTERFLY. JUNE 29, 2026. BRIAN STONE 


HARRIS'S CHECKERSPOT AND NORTHERN CRESCENT BUTTERFLIES. JUNE 29, 2026. BRIAN STONE


BRONZE COPPER BUTTERFLY. JUNE 29, 2026. BRIAN STONE 


BRONZE COPPER BUTTERFLY. JUNE 29, 2026. BRIAN STONE 






WHITE ADMIRAL BUTTERFLY. JUNE 29, 2026. BRIAN STONE


GRASS PINK BOG ORCHID. JUNE 29, 2026. BRIAN STONE 




GRASS PINK BOG ORCHID. JUNE 29, 2026. BRIAN STONE 


TWINFLOWER. JUNE 29, 2026. BRIAN STONE


TWELVE-SPOTTED SKIMMER DRAGONFLY (FEMALE). JUNE 29, 2026. BRIAN STONE



FLY AGARIC MUSHROOM. JUNE 29, 2026. BRIAN STONE 



FLY AGARIC MUSHROOM. JUNE 29, 2026. BRIAN STONE 




WILSON MARSH. JUNE 29, 2026. BRIAN STONE

 

 

**This Week’s Sky at a Glance, 2026 July 4 – July 11 
Galaxies are favourite targets for amateur astronomers and many are visible with just binoculars. Two are seen easily with the naked eye in the southern hemisphere: the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds. The Andromeda Galaxy is a naked-eye blur for rural New Brunswickers and it looks majestic in binoculars, but there is one galaxy that is spectacular from a reasonably dark location regardless of your observing equipment and that is our home galaxy.

The Milky Way is at least 110,000 light years across, and although it is composed of perhaps 400 billion stars we can distinguish only about 4000 unaided as individual stars from a rural area. The Sun is 27,000 light years from the galactic core, within a spur between the inner Sagittarius and outer Perseus spiral arms. When we look above the spout of the Sagittarius Teapot asterism we are looking toward the galactic core, but vast clouds of dust hide the stars between the spiral arm and the core. South of the head of Cygnus the Swan we see the Milky Way split in two by the Great Rift, one of those dust clouds.

Star formation occurs in clouds of gas and dust within the spiral arms and some can be seen as bright patches with binoculars. Just above the spout of the Teapot is M8, the Lagoon Nebula; and a hint of M20, the Trifid Nebula, can be seen in the same field of view above. Scanning to the upper left up the Milky Way you encounter M17, the Swan (or Omega) Nebula; and star clusters M16 in the Eagle Nebula and M11, the Wild Duck Cluster. A tour of the Milky Way under a dark sky can keep a binocular stargazer engaged for an evening.

This Week in the Solar System
Saturday’s sunrise in Moncton is at 5:33 and sunset will occur at 9:13, giving 15 hours, 40 minutes of daylight (5:41 and 9:14 in Saint John). Next Saturday the Sun will rise at 5:39 and set at 9:09, giving 15 hours, 30 minutes of daylight (5:47 and 9:11 in Saint John). Earth is at aphelion, its farthest distance from the Sun, on Monday afternoon.

The Moon is at third quarter and above Saturn on Tuesday, and it visits the Pleiades and Mars next Saturday. This Saturday morning Mars is a third of a moon-width below Uranus. Venus is within a binocular view of Regulus all week, passing just above that star on Thursday. Jupiter is low in the northwest in evening twilight, while Mercury is too close to the Sun for observing.

The Saint John Astronomy Club meets in the Rockwood Park Interpretation Centre this Saturday at 7 pm.



Milky Way 2026


 

 

nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com

Nelson Poirier

Nature Moncton