Archive for the ‘Bugs’ Category

Hemiptera, “true bugs” of summer 2008

Monday, April 6th, 2009

Reduviidae, Ambush bug, Phymata sp.

Reduviidae, Phymata sp. I most often see this very common Ambush bug sitting motionless on flowers like goldenrod and tansy. The well developed musculature of the raptorial forelegs creates enlarged femora with which it is able to quickly seize its prey. It is capable of catching insects larger than itself, and favorites are bumble and honey bees, solitary bees, wasps and flies.

cercopidae-spittlebug-in-pine

Cercopidae: Spittlebug on pine. There are many species of Spittlebugs, which produce the frothy substance from abdominal and anal secretions. One or more nymphs are concealed beneath the spittle while they feed on plant juices. It protects them from predators while they mature, and after the last nymphal molt, adults emerge from the spittle and actively crawl & fly about.

cercopidae-nymph-in-pine-exposed

Spittlebug nymph on pine exposed

Cercopidae adult, froghopper

Cercopidae adult, froghopper

Cercopidae, Spittlebug

Spittlebug mass on leaves

Spittlebug nymph exposed

Spittlebug nymph partially exposed

Spittlebug nymph exposed

Spittlebug nymph exposed

Margot Monson

St. Paul, MN

Wasps from summer & fall 2008

Sunday, April 5th, 2009

braconidae-agathis-sp-female-searching-for-common-burdock-moth-larvae-to-parasitize

This parasitoid is a female Braconid wasp, Agathis malvacearum, searching for the larva of the Gelechiid moth, Metzneria lapella, which feeds in the seedheads of Common Burdock.  Note her long ovipositor.

braconidae-agathis-sp-ovipositing-on-gelechiid-moth-larvae-metzneria-lapella-feeding-on-seed-heads-of-common-burdock-arctium-minus

This A. malvacearum female has located the larva within the seedhead and now positions her ovipositor vertically and deposits her egg.  When the egg hatches, the wasp larva completes its development by feeding on the still living Gelechiid larva, but by the time it is ready to pupate, the larva is dead.

sphecidae-ammophila-procera-buries-caterpillars-in-sand-burrow

Sphecid wasp, Ammophila sp. gathering pollen & nectar.  They dig underground nests and provision them with insects such as Notodontid moth larvae, which they have paralyzed and on which they lay their eggs.  The wasp larvae feed on the living moth larvae until they are ready to pupate and finish their development, and by which time the moth larva is dead.ichneumonidae-trogus-pennator-searching-for-swallowtail-larvae-on-dill-parasitic

This is the first time I have observed this Ichneumonid wasp, Trogus pennator, which is parasitoid of swallowtail butterflies.  I found it rapidly searching within the dill and fennel of my herb garden in September, most likely for the Black Swallowtail larvae that may be feeding there.  The orange and black coloring were spectacular, almost iridescent in the sunlight.

sphecidae-parasitic-on-grasshoppers-spiders

This large Sphecid wasp, was often seen flying rapidly about my garden and frequently feeding on the pollen and nectar of Gooseneck Loosestrife and Butterflyweed.  In late fall, there were many flying about the Butterflyweed outside the Science Museum in St. Paul. These wasps are commonly parasitoids of large insects such as grasshoppers and also spiders, with which they provision their nests and lay their eggs.

sphecidae-grasshoppers-spiders-parasitoid-spiders

Another large Sphecid wasp, Sphex pensylvanicus,  commonly seen exclusively gathering pollen and nectar on my Gooseneck Loosestrife.  They are also spider and grasshopper parasitoids, with which they provision their nests and lay a single egg.   Interestingly, when the large black wasp with the white patch on the thorax (shown above) entered the garden, the Sphex wasps quickly left.  When the black and white wasps left, the Sphex returned.

Margot Monson

St. Paul, MN

Spring Butterflies and Moths

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

It's spring up here in Wisconsin - for the moment, anyway.  It was 65 degrees for two days in a row, and the overwintering butterflies have come out here at the farm.

This is the first one I saw - sunning itself on a patch of snow - an Eastern Comma.

Polygonia comma

Polygonia comma

and the first moth - The Infant - a bright colored day-flying moth whose caterpillars eat birch.

Archiearis infans

Archiearis infans

The next day I found 3 Mourning Cloaks battling over a small woodland opening - it seemed like they were having a territorial dispute.

Nymphalis antiopa

Nymphalis antiopa

Nymphalis antiopa

Nymphalis antiopa

Marcie O'Connor

Buffalo County, Wisconsin

Bug Life Cycles

Monday, February 23rd, 2009

I've been working hard on a new web site - so I thought I'd put the link here so you can check it out.  It's BugLifeCycles.com.

It's a site where people can learn more about the lives of insects.  So many insects are only familiar to us in just one of their many life stages.  Some insects we know very little about, and we know nothing at all about other stages in their lives.

I've met several people over the last few months who have been observing and recording the life stages of some of the insects they see.  Their life cycle series are here, as well as some series that I've been working on.

I'd like to get more people involved in this project!  If you'd like us to link to some of your photos, or you'd like to write a life cycle series on the site, let me know.  And please tell other people who might be interested - we'd love to hear from them too.

Marcie

Silk Moth Mating Shots

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009
 Mating Saturnidae:
Here is a rare occasion, an unmated female promethea moth had a male cecropia attatch to it one evening. The female promethea must have been to close to a scenting female cecropia and the male just found the promie more attracting.
Here is another picture of Callosamia promethea pairings from my house. In this photo I used 1/2 cage wire and originally had made it for a bird trap but that was short lived. Now it is my universal silk moth mating cage!
Mating Saturniidae:
Here are some neat pictures to look at of some native silk moths mating!
The fishing basket once again with a female and male promethea moth

The fishing basket once again with a female and male promethea moth

A wild found female Polyphemus that called in a small wild male.
A wild found female Polyphemus that called in a small wild male.

Mating Saturniidae

Here are some neat pictures to look at of some native silk moths mating!
 

Fishing Basket works well with any Species or silk moth except Anisota and Buck moths

The fishing Basket seems to work well with the larger species of silk moths. Hyalophora Cecropias mating.

Another method I will use if a female hasn't mated for the first couple nights is to tie some string around her hind wings and forwings to make a leash around the moth. I secure the opposite end of the line to an anchor point such a branch or screening. I am very gently and dont hurt the moth but I tie it tight enough so it cant slip out of it.  This technique works very well if the males are having a hard time mating through the cages.  The only thing you have to look out for is birds getting their next meal.

You can see that the female is an older one and the male she called in was a giant!

Here are some other photos to look at of silk moths!

Automeris io female

Automeris io female

Callosamia promethea female

Callosamia promethea female

dscf2658a

Hyalophora cecropia male

 

Antheraea polyphemus female

Antheraea polyphemus female

Actias luna male

Actias luna male

Caterpillar Rearing in Georgia Part 2

Monday, January 19th, 2009

Please bear with me as this post may be a bit heavy on photos.  In the last entry, I described my rearing setup and the first two caterpillars which I released to pupate.  The caterpillars shown below are all over-wintering in the "bug cage" I assembled out of a wire trash can and an aluminum mesh lid cut from an old window screen:

The lid is held in place with twist ties; so far it has kept the raccoons and other critters at bay.  There is a raised platform in the bottom to keep the cocoons elevated, and the paper towels provide protection from the elements.  I keep the whole setup under a bench so it doesn't get waterlogged every time it rains (and also to make it inconspicuous to a couple of neighbor kids who kill bugs for amusement.)  I mist the cocoons with distilled water about twice a week.

I found this Polyphemus caterpillar toward the beginning of September while I was looking for slug caterpillars...  I actually thought it was a slug caterpillar at first glance, but its head wasn't drawn into the body.  The host plant is Water oak, Quercus nigra.

He/she didn't change as dramatically as the Hickory Horned Devil between molts.  Even so, the progression is quite apparent.  This photo was taken 9 days later...

And 2 weeks after that...

Within just a few days, he had spun a cocoon amongst the leaves of his food plant...

The next caterpillar I brought home to raise really was a slug caterpillar: a Smaller Parasa.  I told my husband I wouldn't keep any stinging 'pillars, but it was just too neat to resist!  :-)   This one was discovered in early October and ate American hornbeam, Carpinus caroliniana.

After 4 days...

Another week later...

He only molted once after I acquired him.  When the time came to form a cocoon, he spun it against the lid of the container.  You can see the green lid inside the "cage" in the first photo.

In mid-October, I came across some Giant Swallowtail caterpillars on Common Hoptree, Ptelea trifoliata.  Since I've never seen the adult butterfly, I decided to add one to my growing menagerie.

It only took 2 days to start pupating...

I started to worry that something had gone wrong when it stayed like this for another 48 hours; however, on the third day, it became a proper chrysalis...

I found the final caterpillar in late October: a Frosted Dagger moth.  As far as I can tell, these guys only eat Hazel Alder, Alnus serrulata, and there are no photos of the adult anywhere on the internet.  The larva looks like this...

I had read in David L. Wagner's book Caterpillars of Eastern North America that most dagger moths require "soft (dead) wood in which to tunnel," and that "some make a hardened cocoon by adding bits of chewed wood to the wall of the cocoon as it is being spun."  That is exactly what this one did...

Hopefully they will all emerge successfully when they're ready, and I'll be able to add images of the adults!

Carmen Champagne

Caterpillar Rearing in Georgia

Friday, December 19th, 2008

I've been a major bug enthusiast for a while, but this year was my first attempt at rearing. It started with a Hickory Horned Devil... I'd been practically obsessed with finding one ever since I first heard about them, and in mid-August I discovered two on a persimmon tree. I was thrilled, but these caterpillars were newly hatched/first instar. What I had always envisioned was a hot-dog-sized behemoth of a caterpillar, so I decided to take one home and raise it.

The setup I put together was fairly simple: an old plastic fish bowl with some sheer fabric over the top secured by a rubber band. Later on, I acquired (and in some cases improvised) other rearing containers including the ones in the photos below. I would line the bottom of the container with some moist paper towels. Besides providing food, maintenance consisted of removing frass and lightly misting the 'pillars with distilled water every couple of days.

In order to keep the foodplant clippings fresh, I bought some little plastic bottles for fifty cents at a craft store and filled them with water. After removing the screw-on caps, I carefully sealed off the tops with duct tape. This works well; however, the caterpillar can get stuck if the corners of the tape start to lift... I always add an extra strip around the rim to keep that from happening. The clippings are inserted through a hole poked in the duct tape.

Watching the Hickory Horned Devil grow and change was an amazing experience.  To give you some idea of the progression, here is how he (or she) looked when I found him...

5 days later...

Another 5 days...

9 more days (just before a molt)...

A week later...

On the 36th day, he was finally ready to pupate...

By this time, I was also keeping an Imperial moth caterpillar.  This one was eating boxelder; I've never been able to persuade any of these guys to switch host plants.  This photo is from the beginning of September, his/her first molt...

8 days later...

And shortly before pupation, 17 days after that...

Since both Imperial moths and HHD pupae pass the winter underground, I eventually decided that releasing them would be the best thing to do.  As much as I wanted to see their adult forms, I knew I would feel awful if I bungled their care.  When it was time (caterpillar wandering off the foodplant/ emptying its digestive tract,) I took each of them out into the woods and waited for them to start burrowing.  Neither took long to choose a spot, but the digging was a very slow process.

I did end up keeping cocoons from a few other species I was more comfortable trying to over-winter.  I'll try to post photos of them soon, but I think I've taken up enough space for one day.  :-)

Carmen Champagne

2008 Cocooning Update!

Monday, November 24th, 2008

Promethea and polyphemus cocoon

Went walking down by the chippewa river on sunday to look for silk moth cocoons and didnt come back empty handed!  It was neat to see huge flocks of geese moving all around along with hundreds of mallards trying to find a spot on the river with no ice.  I had all my luck right up close to the water where in the spring the cocoons would be submerged for a few weeks as the snow melts.  My first cocoon came on a paper birch sapling followed by another one right next to it that had been subjected to disease or parasites. A few birch trees down the bank i found a cecropia but it looked faded and had holes in it so i just left it.  I kept walking along the banks and stumbled across 2 promethea cocoons hanging on a sapling ash tree( not to common to find them on ash around here usually cherries).

After that i was cold and headed back to my girlfriends house to drive deer for her father.  Saw one buck but he didnt get a shot and during the drive i stumbled across a large almost circular shaped cecropia cocoon.  I have found cecropia cocoons like this before but they have all been dead.  I grabbed it and pulled it off the willow branch and gave it a shake and to my surprise sounded promising.  It also had a decent amount of weight to it.

Left: loose baggy wild cocoon.Right: wild compact cocoon

Ian Miller

Fall in Eastern Canada

Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

We spent a few weeks in Eastern Canada in late September and early October.  Not many insects - it was cool and breezy much of the time.  But I did see a few nice ones.

This is a Beach Wolf Spider (Arctosa littoralis) that I found on a beach along Lake Superior, in the upper peninsula of Michigan.  (Not an insect, but close enough.)  It was quite large - the body was more than an inch long.

I found it by following some odd tracks in the sand.

There were tracks like this all over the beach, but no indication of what made them.  I dug in the sand at the end of several of the tracks, but didn't find anything.  At the end of this one, I found a pile of damp, stringy sand - it looked like it was held together with spider webbing - with the spider in the middle.  This is the damp sand after the spider got out.

I looked hard for more spiders, but couldn't find any.  So I'm still not sure what made the tracks.

This is another spider from northern New Brunswick.  (It was a very dark rainy day - we had just spent the day hiding out from Hurricane Kyle, which had been heading toward Nova Scotia - so the photo isn't very good.)  I think it's another species of Wolf Spider, but I don't know for sure.

Here are a few butterflies from Bic, Quebec.

Mourning Cloak(Nymphalis antiopa)

Clouded Sulphur (Colias philodice)

The only other butterfly I saw was a Cabbage White.

It was late enough into the fall that there weren't many flowers blooming.  When I did see flowers, they were covered with nectaring insects.  This clump of daisies was in Bic, Quebec.

Marcie

Late Season Insects

Saturday, October 18th, 2008

We’ve had several hard frosts now, so most of the summer insects and most of the flowers are gone.

I’ve been taking photos of some of the late blooming flowers, and I’ve discovered that most of them have at least one insect – trying to get a last taste of nectar, or a last capture of a nectaring insect. So many miniature dramas!

This is the most complicated one I found – I don’t completely understand what’s going on. I think it’s two Ambush Bugs (maybe mating?), and the lower one is eating a fly. (Here’s a link to a photo of mating Ambush Bugs on bugguide – it looks similar to my photo.) What do you think?

 

This is a fly – also on New England Aster. The wind was blowing hard, so it’s not in focus, but it’s an interesting fly.

Here’s another view of the same fly.

 

Another New England Aster with a bee and two beetles

 

And a Sweat Bee (family Halictidae) on a Brown Eyed Susan

Ids anyone? 

Since we were going to be gone so long, I had to find a way to feed my caterpillars. I tried putting them in cloth bags tied over branches of their food plants. It worked very well – the bags were easy to make and use, and most of the caterpillars survived.

I made the bags from tulle – the gauzy material that you can buy in the bridal section of the fabric store. They’re about 24 inches long and 20 inches wide.


 

I put the Monkey Slug Caterpillar, and all my Giant Swallowtail caterpillars in bags on their respective food plants – one or two caterpillars in each bag.

 

The Monkey Slug Caterpillar made a cocoon.

 

Two of the Giant Swallowtail caterpillars made chrysalises.

 

I still have 6 Giant Swallowtail caterpillars left, at various instars.

Here are two. An earlier instar

 

And a later one

 

I put them back in bags to see if they can make chrysalises before they freeze, or before the leaves all fall off the Prickly Ash bushes.

Marcie - at the farm