Showing posts with label hoverfly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hoverfly. Show all posts

Sunday, September 20, 2015

Insect Hunting

I spent part of today hovering around late summer flowers, looking for the last of summer's insects. 
I saw the lovely bumblebees pictured above. Click to enlarge. 
And a cool scape moth. 
And hoverflies in lots of colors and styles. This one was gleaming in the sun.  
There were a lot of milkweed bug nymphs out today, and a dozen more things that flitted by before I had a chance to photograph them. 
I was walking to another spot when something on the side of a rock landscape  feature caught my eye -- inside that red circle. 

It was this! It's a European paper wasp's nest with two male Polistes dominula wasps on duty.  (At least there were two outside, but I think others were watching from the shadows.) 
Curled orange antennae...  
I flipped this shot. They look like they are coming for me, right? 
Look at that face! 
And I noticed I was not alone. I saw two praying mantises searching the bushes right along with me. This is mantis number one -- waiting to catch an insect to eat. 
And here's mantis number two holding something it caught. It left off eating when I walked over to snap the picture, then it went back to  eating as I backed away. So -- the bushes are still full of insects. Summer is not quite over. 

Sunday, July 17, 2011

The Black-eyed Susan Universe

I followed a butterfly into a patch of black-eyed susans this morning. Then I spent the next hour finding interesting things there. Here are pictures of everything that sat still long enough to be photographed.

The painted lady butterfly, Vanessa cardui. 
A Eupithecia caterpillar that will soon become a small drab moth. 
Lygus lineolaris, the notorious Tarnished Plant Bug. This bug is so famous that it has a nickname -- TPB. It is one of the most serious pests of vegetable and fruit crops in North America. 
This pollen-covered bee is a female in a genus of "long-horned" bees, Mellisodes. Males in the genus are famous for their long antennae. (Which seem long only by bee standards.) 
A honeybee, Apis mellifera
A hoverfly -- easily mistaken for a bee. 
A hoverfly with a red mite attached to its leg. Oh no! 
A question mark butterfly, Polygonia interrogationis
The question mark butterfly gets its common name from a mark on its wing (click on the photo to enlarge it) -- a silver mark broken into an arc and a dot. Looks like a question mark, doesn't it?

Question marks are part of a larger group known as anglewing butterflies,  which all live in the northern hemisphere, have jagged looking wings, and spend the winter hibernating in shelters as adults. Their camouflaging colors help to conceal them when they settle in cracks and crevices for winter. Although they are not big nectar eaters (usually preferring overripe fruit, tree sap, animal feces, and carrion) they clearly sometime sip black-eyed susan nectar -- perhaps to clear the palate.

When you are checking the wings of brown butterflies for question marks, be prepared to find the question mark's close relative, the comma. Comma butterflies look similar except their silver wing mark is a one-piece comma-shaped arc.

Question marks and commas are called punctuation butterflies. There are just question marks and commas -- no apostrophes, which is probably good because they would likely be misused. But if there were periods, I would have put one right here at the end of the black-eyed susan story.