Was on my bag so may have travelled with me instead of being located on the beach
This observation is of the female peregrine falcon located on the right side of my fist picture. The female peregrine falcon in my pictures attacked the bald eagle multiple times.
Rescued from a celery forest left outside in a crate. It was hunkered down in between celery ribs. In photos with two isopods, it is the one on the left (the one on the right is Armadidillium vulgaris, whose observation is here https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/73877976).
This is a racing model. Very energetic. Climbed all over the place and on top of the other isopod who I had just rescued from drowning. It came over and checked out the sleeping millipede I had just rescued as well, ran its antenna over it and circled around it for a bit. It then went back to accosting the A. vulgaris -- instead of just climbing on it and sitting there, it grabbed it from behind and seemed to flip it over, at which point I gently but firmly intervened with a chopstick. Not on my watch little friend. This is a hospital, not a wrestling ring.