Saturday, March 18, 2023

For the Love of Caterpillars - superheroes for kids and adults. From sun to plants to meat - how to feed the food web.

Jericho Conservation Newsletter

 Earth Day

 April 22, 2023 

Soft, squishy, like a tootsie roll on legs. They are transformation specialists; transforming themselves and transforming energy from plants to other animals.  

They have as many as 4,000 muscles, and 12 eyes (to differentiate between light and dark). They sometimes move their head from side to side. This most likely helps them judge depth and distance as they navigate somewhat blindly. They have way more than 6 legs, but most of those legs are false legs called prolegs, which help them hold onto plant surfaces and allow them to climb. The 3 pairs of legs on their thoracic segments are the true legs, which they will retain into adulthood. Welcome the mighty but often under-appreciated caterpillar.

The shortest path to a butterfly is to follow a caterpillar. Honor Earth Day.

The kid in me likes (native) caterpillars because they are easy to catch and observe up close for a long time. And they are like Clark Kent going into a phone booth and coming out as Superman - the caterpillar stops eating, hangs upside down from a twig or leaf, and spins itself a silky cocoon or molts into a shiny chrysalis. Within its protective casing, the caterpillar radically transforms its body, eventually emerging as a butterfly or moth. It even retains its memory through the transformation, though not the same brain. 


Even before caterpillars become butterflies or moths (complete their metamorphosis), they change themselves many times. Consider this from the New Yorker article “The Little-Known World of Caterpillars” by Elizabeth Kolbert. 


“Caterpillars, for their part, are continually reinventing themselves. They emerge from tiny, jewel-like eggs and for their first meal often eat their own egg cases. Once they reach a certain size, they sprout a second head, just behind the first. They then wriggle free of their old skin, the way a diver might wriggle out of a wetsuit. (In the process, the old head drops off.) In the course of their development, they will complete this exercise three, four, and in some species sixteen times, often trying out a new look along the way. The spicebush swallowtail, for example, which is found throughout the eastern U.S., emerges from its egg mottled in black and white. This color scheme allows it to pass itself off as a bird dropping. After its third molt, as a so-called fourth instar, it turns green (or brown), with two yellow-and-black spots on its head. The spots, which look uncannily like a pair of eyes, enable the swallowtail to pretend it’s a snake.”


The Marvels of Caterpillars: (as reported by Elizabeth Kolbert)

  • The silver-spotted skipper uses an air-gun-like appendage in its anus to send its frass pellets soaring. This practice, known as “fecal firing,” discombobulates parasitic wasps.
  • The silvery blue caterpillar possesses a “nectary organ” that dispenses a sugary liquid; ants attracted to the liquid are enlisted as bodyguards.
  • The camouflaged looper confuses potential predators by chewing off bits of plant matter, like petals, and attaching them to its back. 
  • The catalpa sphinx caterpillar, when threatened, spews out green goo and thrashes around violently.
  • The walnut sphinx caterpillar whistles through its air holes, or spiracles.
  • The lace-capped caterpillar is colored to look like a piece of dying vegetation.



Why they are important


We depend on the life support of functioning ecosystems.


By chewing and digesting leaves, caterpillars cycle nutrients and energy through the ecosystem, making valuable sources of nutrition available to other plants and living organisms.


Collectively, insects transfer more energy from plants to animals than any other group. They are the solder that holds food chains together. Ninety-six percent of our terrestrial birds rear their young on insects. Before they fledge, a clutch of young chickadees will consume as many as six thousand caterpillars. Think little sausages with a thin wrapper, soft and chewy, perfect for a mother bird to stuff down the hungry chick's mouth.


How are they doing?

There are indications that species losses are higher among species that prey on other insects. This may suggest that food webs were starting to break down.


Both species decline and mass declines of insects are being reported. Stressors include lights, pesticides, habitat loss, climate change, pollution, exotic species, and the industrialization of agriculture.


Two years ago the UN said one million species face extinction in the next 20 years. Many flowering plants are so closely linked to butterflies (and vice versa) that one cannot survive without the other. Monarchs have declined 85% in two decades.


What can we do to help?

As Doug Tallamy, entomologist and author says, we need a new approach to conservation. The ability to do so is on us, the location is in our yards. We need to change the way we landscape to save nature, to save ourselves. We need a land ethic where we live with nature. Much of conservation depends on the accumulation of small-scale advances.


Yes, we need flowering plants to turn the sun into food (along with the ever-important pollinators). We also need insects that turn plants into food that other animals can eat. Caterpillars transfer more energy from plants to other animals than any other plant eater. They are one of The World’s Greatest Super Heroes. Not only do they go into their own phone booth and come out totally transformed, but they also become beneficial pollinators as well as sources of food for birds, predatory insects, and other animals. Caterpillars can be the foundation of the biodiversity of our gardens and landscapes. 


Caterpillar diversity is near if not equal to the diversity and beauty of butterflies and moths. Whether watching a caterpillar eat a milkweed or finding a chrysalis hanging from a leaf, or following a Monarch floating in the wind, we can imagine we have the superpower to find and express our own identity in a complex and ever-changing world. And we can realize like us, not every caterpillar species is the same, each has its own special powers, its own unique look, and its own way of making its way in the world; each contributing to a biological diversity that supports all life on earth.  


Together we can protect this species; as a community of people who care about wildlife, there are actions we can take to help. 


Most of our birds nest a short distance from where they find food to feed their young. Want birds to breed in your yard? Consider shrinking lawn space. Put the native plants back. Feed the caterpillars to feed the birds and other animals. 


Let's say "Yes in my backyard 

- to Nature and Rewilding". 








I have observed in our 1.3-acre yard and recorded on iNaturalist, 197 species of Lepidoptera (Lepidoptera is the order of insects that butterflies and moths are assigned). 

Virginia Ctenucha Moth Ctenucha virginica
According to VCE  Vermont is home to over 2,200 species of moths
 and 115 species of butterflies. 

Rewilding

Each year we add a few more native plants (and remove invasives). The insects including caterpillars are responding as are the birds and other animals. We are seeing an increase in the number of species in our backyard sanctuary. Save wildlife where you live. Then step out and enjoy your living functional ecosystem. Nature’s fate is our fate. 

From sun to plants to meat - caterpillars feed a lot of the world's creatures.

However, the caterpillars must have access to the right kind of food and habitat. View a list of Vermont plants that will support caterpillars and how many species of caterpillars each plant genus will support at https://vtbugeyed.blogspot.com/2023/03/vt-native-trees-and-shrubs-as-moth-and.html. These are plants that contribute to the (Vermont) local food web. Most of the insects that eat plants are host-plant specialists, they can only eat particular plants.  That is why we focus on a diverse mix of native plants that support insects, especially those soft squishy tootsie rolls on legs. Bon AppΓ©tit ma/mon chenille! 


Join in: The Vermont Butterfly Atlas returns and is scheduled to kick off in April. For those wishing to participate in this butterfly atlas contact Nathaniel Sharp at nsharp at vtecostudies.org. (change the at to @) or visit The 2nd Vermont Butterfly Atlas (2023-2027) Read more at Vermonters Invited to Help Search for Butterflies

The shortest path to a beautiful butterfly or moth is to follow a caterpillar.
Photos below are from observations at Kikas Valley Farms Trail, Jericho, Vermont on March 20, 2023. Both caterpillars were on the snow about 300 feet from any trees.




References


The Little-Known World of Caterpillars (The New Yorker article)

***Nature's Best Hope with Doug Tallamy (VLT video recording)

Rare, Declining, and poorly known Butterflies and Moths of Forests & Woodlands in the Eastern U.S.

VT Native Trees and Shrubs as moth and butterfly hosts (Plant list)

Butterflies of Vermont

10 Fascinating Facts About Caterpillars

Moth decline in the Northeastern United States


  • A note on invasive caterpillars like the Spongy Moth introduced to the United States from Europe during the 19th century. Many of its important natural enemies were left behind in its native lands when the gypsy moth became established here. However, there are some natural enemies of spongy moths - some, birds, mammals, parasitoids, and pathogens - in Vermont. 

Tuesday, March 14, 2023

Nature-inspired Comics (Vol III) by Bernie

Laugh and Learn  

  Comics by Bernie and Nature! 

De-bugging insects

   Vermont single-panel comics. Captions by Bernie, images by nature. Sponsored by the Insect Alliance, Solidarity for All Life, and our highly valued Local Pollinators with special thanks to iNaturalist and all the volunteers who help with the ID of postings. 

Let's recognize our bond with all living species in nature.
See #54, #53, and #52 Special Children's editions further below.

Nature Comic #69 Mar 25, 2023

I shiver to think how much longer winter will last. 
Bumblebees can shiver using their flight muscles, heating up to over 35 degrees C above air temperature. As on other hot-blooded insects, heat is generated in the thorax prior to flight by contracting the up- and down-stroke muscles against each other to produce a tetanus. Bumblebees require a flight muscle temperature of at least 30 degrees C in order to fly. But flight is slow and clumsy at such relatively low muscle temperatures, and fast-flying bees heat up those muscles to at least 35-37 degrees C - nearly the same as our own body temperature. 

This and other more specialized adaptations and life strategies allow Arctic Bumblebees to live in the arctic, albeit a whole colony's life cycle within one single brief summer season. 

A Naturalist At Large, by Bernd Heinrich

Nature Comic #68 Mar 18, 2023

Forget the Leprechaun, just drop an Irish pint onto my pincers and I'll show you the gold ye be looking for.
 
The first of the Scudderia katydids to sing during the summer, the Northern Bush Katydid prefers the tops of small trees or shrubs in open habitats or open woods.
 
Song: The most accomplished singer of the bush katydids. The very high-pitched song, given only at night, is a series of soft ticks followed by about 5–10 lispy buzzes that are given in quick succession and are usually followed by a series of very loud ticks. The dominant frequency of the buzzes is about 12–15 kHz. - Songs of Insects


Nature Comic #67 Mar 11, 2023

Got no wings or skis 
but I can do 1.30 m per minute
on snow.
When the snow flies...
Watch for Snow Flies - Genus Chionea
Snow Flies Genus Chionea
Observed in Jericho, Vermont on March 2, 2023
Adults seem to actively seek out the coldest place they can find and drink water by pressing their proboscis against the snow (Marchand, 1917). Adults are not known to feed. Adults have a significantly longer lifespan than other crane flies, living as long as two months.
Chionea are highly active in cold environments that are lethal to most insect species. Adults are often found in motion as they move across the surface of the snow, walking at speeds near their peak velocity. They have been observed walking at speeds at up to 0.8 metres (2.6 ft) per minute in sub-zero conditions, and males have been observed to leap when alarmed.
The diet of larvae likely consists of decomposing organic debris, such as decaying leaves, grass stems, and rodent feces found in burrows.


Nature Comic #66 Mar 4, 2023

I won't grow up. 

If growing up means it would be beneath my dignity

 to climb a tree 

 I'll never grow up, never grow up - not me!

Peter Pan - I Won't Grow Up


Stripe-legged Robberfly Dioctria hyalipennis

A pupa is the life stage of some insects undergoing transformation between immature and mature stages. Insects that go through a pupal stage are holometabolous: they go through four distinct stages in their life cycle, the stages thereof being egg, larva, pupa, and imago. - Wikipedia


Nature Comic #65 Feb 25, 2023
Keep an ear out for spring.
Make all the funny or stern faces you want -  
You still won't get a peep out of me until it's a darn bit warmer.

Due to their presence in northern regions, the spring peeper (Pseudacris crucifer) is able to endure below-freezing temperatures. They are so-called because of their chirping call that marks the beginning of spring. Crucifer is derived from the Latin root meaning "cross-bearing." This could be a reference to the cross-like pattern on the spring peeper's dorsal side. 

These chirping calls are significant for communication in mating as females choose their mates based on the frequency and volume associated with them. Satellite males who do not make any calls also strategically place themselves near those that make louder calls in an attempt to intercept females. 

Temperature plays a large role in when the spring peeper begins breeding as well as the duration of mating calls. Therefore, climate change has the ability to significantly impact this species in the near future. - Wikipedia


Nature Comic #64 Feb 18, 2023
Vanishing Bees
The Golden Northern Bumble Bee is a 'shrinking violet'. 
If she wasn't she would be asking:
Is there room for biodiversity 
in the charge of habitat inclusion?
Natural habitat loss and fragmentation, as a result of development projects,
 are major causes of biodiversity erosion.

"NORWICH, VT — A new study examining 100 years of bumble bee records reveals that almost half of Vermont’s species, which are vital pollinators, have either vanished or are in serious decline." 

Study Reveals Striking Decline of Vermont’s Bumble Bees - Vt Ctr for Eco studies


Nature Comic #63 Feb 11, 2023
Beloved
to
Endangered
Who needs that kind of love?

Mother Nature is a bit down.
Show her you care
Send Valentine's wishes to her - see details @
https://jerichovermont.blogspot.com/2023/01/nature-love-project-valentines-day-2023.html

Nature Comic #62 Feb 4, 2023
Disney had it all wrong.
 It truly is a big world after all. 
At least if you are a gnat!

Nature Comic #61 Jan 28, 2023
"I Feel Like A Shell Of My Former Self"
   Like many other assassin bugs, Zelus luridus preys on other insects. It will often wait on leaves to ambush passing insects, but occasionally it also actively hunts.[3] For this, it uses sticky traps, a common predation strategy to species within the genus Zelus. The sticky material is produced by a gland on the leg. This gland develops in the second instar. During the first instar, the nymphs use secretions deposited over the egg batch by the female as the source of their sticky material.       - Wikipedia


Nature Comic #60 Jan 21, 2023
E. americanus, exhibits continental-scale seasonal migration - 
Demands Frequent Flyer Miles  


   "... evidence that some Nearctic hover flies migrate thousands of kilometers south during autumn. Several E. americanus sampled during this study probably eclosed as adults during late summer in the midwestern United States or Canada and traveled to the southeastern United States.


   Recent radar data estimated up to 4 billion hover flies migrating above southern Britain, a number that dwarfs similar estimates for moths and butterflies (Wotton et al. 2019). Here, for the first time, we report evidence that some Nearctic hover flies migrate thousands of kilometers south during autumn. Several E. americanus sampled during this study probably eclosed as adults during late summer in the midwestern United States or Canada and traveled to the southeastern United States." 


Source: Insights into natal origins of migratory Nearctic hover flies (Diptera: Syrphidae): new evidence from stable isotope (Ξ΄2H) assignment analyses. C. Scott Clem, Keith A. Hobson, Alexandra N. Harmon-Threatt 



Nature Comic #59 Jan 14, 2023

About 40% of Land has been converted for human use

 and about 70% has been altered, 40% degraded; 

And they say THEY have a housing crisis? 

Land degradation is intimately linked to all of the other environmental and social crises facing humanity today. 

Biology. Nests in borings in wood, hollow twigs, and other suitable cavities like old Polistes cells, corrugated cardboard, etc. Uses mud or firmly agglutinated sand for cell partitions and closing plugs. Prey are caterpillars of Oecophoridae, Tortricidae, Gelechiidae, Pyralidae, Crambidae (Pyraustinae), and Thyrididae (Krombein 1967, 1979). - Canadian Journal of Arthropod ID
Nest Structure
Euodynerus foraminatus are solitary nesters, with each female building her own nest. They nest in borings in wood, hollow twigs, old Polistes wasp cells, and even corrugated cardboard, using mud or firmly agglutinated sand for walls and plugs. The plugs frequently have a smooth outer surface, in contrast to the bee Osmia lignaria which also uses mud, but tends to have chunkier, rougher-looking nest plugs. Euodynerus foraminatus stock their nests with paralyzed caterpillars. (Buck et al 2008)  - Univ. of Minn. Extension


Nature Comic #58 Jan 07, 2023

I am so tired of cleaning up after humans. 

It’s about time they clean up their own messes!

Autumn Meadowhawk

Diet

Naiads feed on a wide variety of aquatic insects, such as mosquito larvae, other aquatic fly larvae, mayfly larvae, and freshwater shrimp. They will also eat very small fish and tadpoles.

Adults. The dragonfly will eat almost any soft-bodied flying insect including mosquitoes, flies, small moths, mayflies, and flying ants or termites.


The Latin name for this genus, Sympetrum, means "with rock" and refers to their habit of basking on rocks to absorb heat early in the day.

-Wikipedia


Habitat

Autumn Meadowhawks select habitats that are permanent, but occasionally temporary, well-vegetated ponds, pools, lakes, marshes and bogs, as well as slow streams usually associated with forests (Dunkle 2000, Nikula et al. 2002, Paulson 2009).

Reproductive Characteristics

Male Autumn Meadowhawks are not territorial at the water as most pairings are made away from breeding sites, Tandem pairs oviposit in flight by dropping to the substrate where females alternate tapping of their abdomen between the water and the shoreline mud or mossy logs. Autumn Meadowhawk pairs perform false ovipositions prior to and likely to stimulate copulation (Dunkle 2000, Nikula et al. 2002, Paulson 2009). - Montana Field Guide


Read more at Animal Diversity Web and MN Seasons



Nature Comic #57 Dec 31, 2022
Our group photo keeps getting smaller every year :(  Fewer species, less of us :(

HAPPY NEW YEAR 2023 

From All of your invertebrates

and vertebrates 

neighbors in nature.

(9 vertebrates in the photo above. Can you find them?)



Nature Comic #56 Dec 24, 2022

We had just settled our antennae for a long winter's hibernation, when out on the wild brushy habitat there arose such a clatter, I peeked out from my bed to see what was the matter.

Subgenus Melandrena (a member of Mining Bees Genus Andrena)

This subgenus is widespread and relatively conspicuous from early spring through early summer. As a group, they are relatively distinctive though only a couple species are regularly identifiable from photographs. - VT Ctr for EcoStudies

Melandrena is a subgenus of the family mining bees. They visit flowers of plum, Amygdaloideae, Garlic Mustard, and chokecherry. - Encyclopedia of Life

A Visit from St. Insectolas

BY Bernie Paquette

A naturalized remake of Twas the Night Before Christmas by Clement Clarke Moore.


'Twas the night before Hibernation, when all through the yard

Not a creature was stirring, except for a mouse or two, or three, or… more - a standard feature in Jericho Center.


The expired flower petals and stalks were standing in the garden thanks to a kind gardener who aspired to bring joy 


In hopes that St. Insectolas soon would be there; the underground lone bees nestled in separate underground burrows all snug in their cocoons;

While visions of metamorphosing into pupae danced in their heads;


And I all wrapped in my leaf litter, and papa long-gone and pushing up daisies,

Had just settled our antennae for a long winter's hibernation,


When out on the wild brushy habitat there arose such a clatter,

I peeked out from my bed to see what was the matter.


Away to the edge, I crawled like a centipede in cold thick molasses,

Tore opened the last leaf shutter and nearly froze my lady bee mustache.


The moon on the breast of the new-fallen snow,

Gave a luster of warmth yet the temperature was still surely twenty below,


When what to my frosty eyes did appear,

But a miniature sleigh and eight very large crickets,

With a little ole driver who, since he had no backbone, was nearly windswept,

I knew in a moment he must be St. Insect.


More rapid than Dragonflies his coursers they came,

And he buzzed, and rubbed his body parts against another in stridulation, and called them by name:

"Now, Jiminy! now, Mole Cricket! now Pygmy Sand Cricket on Tree Cricket, on Robust Ground Crickets!”

To the top of the leaf pile! To the top of the brush pile!

Now use your large hind legs to jump (50x your body lengths) and all of your legs to run, away one and away all!”


As leaves that before the leaf blower - fly,

when they meet with a lawnmower, mount to the sky; So over to the flower stalks the coursers they flew

With the sleigh full of pollen, nectar, and St. Insectolas too—


And then, in a flashing of bright firefly light, I heard above the plant stalk

The prancing and pawing of an overhead accipiter hawk as big as a Christmas hen.


As I drew in my head just to be safe and was turning around,

Down the chimney stalk, St. Insectolas came, down to the ground.


She was dressed in a Chasing Fireflies dress, from her head to her foot,

And her clothes were all tarnished with flower seeds  underfoot;

A bundle of sweets and proteins she had flung on her hind tibula,

And she looked like a Southern Monarch Butterfly, (Danaus erippus), preparing to migrate to Bolivia.


Her eyes—how they twinkled! her dimples, how merry!

Her cheeks were like roses, her nose like a red raspberry blossom about to berry!


She was slim, not the least bit plump, a right jolly young elf,


And I, Proud Mary mamma laughed when I saw her, despite myself;


A wink of her eye and a twist of her head


Soon gave me to know I had nothing to dread;


She spoke not a word, but went straight to her work,


And filled all the burrows; then turned with a jerk,

And laying her finger aside of her antennae,

And giving a nod, up the flower stalk she climbed aplenty;


She sprang to her sleigh, to her team gave a whiffle,

And away they all flew like the down of a thistle.


But I heard her exclaim, ere she drove out of sight—


“Happy Winter Hibernation to all, and to all a good night!”


Comments:
Thank you for your "night before hibernation..."
It was both clever & ridiculous and made me smile on a rather grim day.
Sincerely,
D.S., Underhill

             Nature Comic #55 Dec 17, 2022

This week's nature-inspired comics introduce the term "Inverting" which means invertebrate (especially insects) watching as birding is to bird watching. I am an 'inverter' & bird watcher!           

The Christmas bird count leaves me dreaming of Inverting.        

         Bernie breaks through his introversion by Inverting 

I have no Egrets, going from birding to inverting,
was feeling under the feather,
now I am riding high over an exoskeleton thus asserting;

from keratin to chitin,
from vertebrates to invertebrates,
from stiff warbler neck to
 bumblebee buzz pollination
 there is a whole lot of shaking going on.

I am converting - in part.

Thought birds were smart 
until I observed a spelling bee 
as a bird lister, I needed a pencil & paper chart
as an invertebrate lister, I need a calculator 
so many more species, you see.

My Big (inverting) Year
covered miles and miles of walking
all in my 1.3-acre backyard - quite near.

I don't know all the invertebrate's names
but that's ok
cause no one has made that claim
millions of them haven't been discovered yet
never mind given names
so bring your net and  
swish and swing away.

My birder friends 
are getting used to my makeover
 looking into flowers
instead of trees

Perhaps I am really 
an insect watcher
and not a true inverter
yet
after all, I have observed
only
five or six hundred species
in our
backyard.

The benefit
If my neck gets sore 
from looking up at birds
 (Warbler neck)
I can always 
look down
while six legs
and (one or) two pairs of wings
scramble and fly about.

From birder to an inverter
I have found the cure for Warbler neck

am
a
nature 
inverter and birder.

                                       - Bernie Paquette

“Birds [and Insects] will give you a window if you allow them. They will show you secrets from another world– a fresh vision that, though it is avian, can accompany you home and alter your life. They will do this for you even if you don't know their names– though such knowledge is a thoughtful gesture. They will do this for you if you watch them.” 
― Lyanda Lynn Haupt, Rare Encounters with Ordinary Birds

Dreaming of Spring Inverting

Birders are lucky, they have the Christmas Bird Count, the nation's longest-running community science bird project. From December 14 through January 5 each year tens of thousands of volunteers throughout America brave snow, wind, or rain, and take part in the effort.


Meanwhile, we Inverters or insect-watchers, citizen scientists, and other observers of nature must mostly wait it out. We dream of when we will again be inverting from around Memorial Day through fall. Technically speaking, our invertebrate census can occur all year, however, most of the action is during spring through fall. 


Like birders, we will brave any kind of weather to find our six-legged friends. Moreover, we will lift rocks, move aside fallen leaves, peer into pencil lead-sized holes in trees and fallen logs, search the cracks of stone walls, and go knee-deep into the water, mud, and muck. All that before spring blooms - then, hands-down, flowers draw in like magnets, our pollinating, beneficial, and incredibly diverse insect species for easy inspection.


Similar to birding if not more so, one can fill your invertebrate quota and more by observing in your own backyard. Your backyard is an ecosystem, what better place to do a scavenger hunt. 


"While the first Bird Census or bird count began in 1900, insect collection if not observation began much earlier. ”Cuneiform texts found in Mesopotamia dating to earlier than 669–626 b.c. contain systematically arranged names of insects. Aristotle (384–322 b.c.) studied insects and taught entomology. In a.d. 77 Pliny produced an encyclopedia that included entries on insects.”


"As the number of curiosity cabinets continued to grow in the 16th and 17th centuries, a means to organize their contents became necessary. John Ray (1628–1705) attempted a classification of insects in 1705, which was published posthumously in 1710. Carolus Linnaeus (Carl von LinnΓ©) (1707–1778) published the first edition of his Systema Naturae in 1735, and the 10th edition, published in 1758, became the basis for modern insect classification.” Gordon M. Nishida, in Encyclopedia of Insects (Second Edition), 2009.


Being an inverter has its advantages. While birders are somewhat limited to about 260 bird species in VT, around 800 in the U.S., and about 11,000 in the world, Invertebrates surely rule the numbers game. According to the VT F&W website, “While precisely how many kinds of invertebrates are in Vermont is unknown, it has been estimated at approximately 21,400 species.” An estimate for the number of insect species in the US: is 91,000, and in the world 900,000 with between 2 and 30 million more yet to be discovered and named.  


As in birding, it is inevitable that there will be inverters that are listers (looking for specific insects and keeping a list of every insect they have ever seen) and those that consider themselves insect watchers (and listeners) - looking at whatever insects are at the viewing location. 


Both listers and watchers may record their observations to such data collection sites as iNaturalist, Seek, GBIF, eButterfly, and many more. These databases bring insect enthusiasts and scientists together in a sense. They help you identify the insects around you. “What’s more, by recording and sharing your observations, you’ll create research quality data for scientists working to better understand and protect nature.” -iNaturalist


What’s more natural than being a naturalist? CompetitionWhat is more challenging than bird watching but just as rewarding? Insect-watching or Inverting! Competitive? Just check out the VT city and town Nature Challenge leaderboard at https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/vermont-biodiversity-by-city-or-town to see where your Vermont city or town ranks for a number of species, observations, and observers. As of this writing, Jericho is in 4th place for observations, 11th in species (2,008), and 9th in observers. Montpelier had 3.665 and Calais had 3,102 species. 


“In the equally global City Nature Challenge, meanwhile, cities compete for how many sightings residents can log. The idea is to see which city can make the most observations of nature (of any sort, not just insects), find the most species, and engage the most people.” - AP


Sharpen your pencil for Christmas Bird Count. Then store up lots of pencils and a good sharpener (and perhaps a calculator) for spring inverting!



🐝Bee an inverter observer!


Need some help in the dreaming department? Check out more of my inverting photos below. Read more at Animal life in your backyard.

Comments: Ha! That’s fun, Bernie! My lean towards the literal would posit that perhaps we could also call you an ‘insecter! L.G.

 

Cute! Should it be "inverter or invertebrater"?"Hmm... Or, more limiting (removing mollusks, annelids, coelenterates, etc) "insecter"? Oh so confusing! P.M.



Nature Comic #54 Dec 10, 2022 
SUPERPOWER ABILITIES
There is no rigid definition of a "superpower." In popular culture, it is often associated with unusual abilities such as flight, enhanced strength, invulnerability, or enhanced speed. However, it can also describe natural abilities beyond a mere mortal's reach.


Beatlemania's frenzy followed the Beatle's music. 

Why not mine? 


My superpower is ….


The Red Milkweed Beetle is recognized for being able to make a high-pitched, shrill sound during many different situations.  The shrill was observed when the beetles were being held by researchers, while exploring their surroundings such as the cage that they were being held in, while trapped inside a milkweed plant, fighting with another beetle, or when placed upside down. 


The milkweed beetle was also recognized to make a shrill or purring noise in two different situations when being held in a closed hand, and when two beetles touch each other's antennas. 


This could be proof of survival or mating adaptation due to the fact that both males and females are able to make this noise.  An adaptation such as this is clear proof that organisms adapt to their environment in order to better their own survival. 


If they are able to make a loud shrill noise, it is likely that either a predator may be warned to release the beetle, in turn, using this as a defense mechanism, or the shrill could warn other beetles near to stay away due to the presence of predators. From: http://bioweb.uwlax.edu/bio203/s2014/christop_mega/adaptation.htm


Hear the sound at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MeoTIFiRUzk

When evildoers attack this Superhero cover your ears!



Sound Production: The noise made in this situation is a rather noticeable, shrill squeaking, produced by rubbing together stridulatory [friction-producing] structures on the back of the pronutum and the front of the mesonotum [the upper surfaces of the first and second segments of the thorax]. From: https://uwm.edu/field-station/red-milkweed-beetle/


*Beatlemania was the name given to the popular frenzy surrounding the Beatles after the band’s first appearances on British television in 1963. When the Beatles appeared on American television in 1964, Beatlemania also erupted in the United States. Mass media created the conditions for the collective frenzy that was Beatlemania. - Britannica


Superhero nicknameRock Star with bad taste!
Common name: Red Milkweed Beetle
Scientific name: Tetraopes tetrophthalmus

Origin of the name: The Family Cerambycidae, or long-horned beetles, get their common name from their antennae. A characteristic of this family is that the antennae are inserted close to the eyes so that most have an indentation of the eye. Tetraopes carry this to the extreme so that the antennae base actually splits each eye in two, hence its Latin name: Tetraopes tetraophthalmus = four-eyed four-eye. From: https://www.cirrusimage.com/beetle-red-milkweed/

Trademark FeaturesAntennae are all black (without white rings), the legs are all black (not partially reddish), and it has relatively large black spots. The middle black spot on each elytrum (shell-like wing cover) is elongated. This species specializes in eating common milkweed (A. syriaca) and sometimes other milkweeds or dogbanes. From:  https://mdc.mo.gov/discover-nature/field-guide/milkweed-longhorns 

SuperpowersShrill sound production and accumulated toxins. Red milkweed beetles seek protection from predators by accumulating in their flesh the alkaloid toxins, called cardiac glycosides (cardenolides), which are concentrated in the milkweed's sap. Species that feed on milkweeds are usually aposematically colored. Aposematic species are those that “advertise” their distastefulness by being brightly colored (see Guilford 1990). From: https://bygl.osu.edu/node/387

If this superhero offers you some of its food, do not put it in your mouth!

Archenemy: (its own food) Adult RMBs eat milkweed leaves, buds, and flowers. Like some other milkweed leaf feeders, they sever leaf veins “upstream” of their feeding site in order to minimize their exposure to the milkweed’s sticky latex; vein severing is shown to decrease latex consumption by up to 92%. When an RMB gets latex on its mouthparts, it cleans them immediately by rubbing its face against the leaf; if it delays, it risks having the latex harden, gluing its mouth shut. From: https://uwm.edu/field-station/red-milkweed-beetle/

Their "do good in the world"Studies have shown that the T. tetraophthalmus larvae are able to attack the milkweed plant below ground while an above-ground caterpillar attacks simultaneously.  With the two attacking at the same time, they are able to alter the allocation of carbon and nitrogen within the plant's stems, in turn making the reward of nutrients greater for both parties (Tao et al., 2013)From:http://bioweb.uwlax.edu/bio203/s2014/christop_mega/adaptation.htm

Which superhero alter ego would you choose to be? You create a new persona representing your ideal self and the traits you wish you had but don’t possess.



Nature Comic #53 Dec 3, 2022
  
ABC Learning For Kids - Nature's Way

 Primary School News: Cats go on strike; crickets cross the picket line.               "C" is for... 

School outdoors has a special appeal. Letters of the alphabet come ALIVE. Some letters require you to crawl about looking under rocks, sticks, and grass, while other letters require you to watch and wait for flying critters to land. 

ABC INSECTS because school is out for the whole year! Observing insects and other critters to help learn the alphabet. 


                           A                               B                                C

                  ANT                               BUMBLEBEE           CRICKET


D                               E                                F
DRAGONFLY                  EARWIG                  FLY



G                               H                                I
      GRASSHOPPER           HONEYBEE            INCHWORM                        


             J                               K                        L

JAPANESE BEETLE           KATYDID      LEAFHOPPER



   M                               N                        O
 MONARCH     NARCISSUS BULB FLY         OWL


P                               Q                        R
PLANTHOPPER                   QUAIL              ROBBERFLY



S                               T                        U
   STINKBUG            TIGER BEETLE       UNDERWING MOTH



V                               W                        X
          VICEROY                    WASP                     X (CRITTER XING)



                   Y                                   Z                
        YELLOWJACKET                     ZEBRA JUMPING SPIDER


SCHOOL IS OUTDOORS TODAY!
OBSERVE AS YOU TURN THE PAGES OF NATURE!

But what you ask, shall we do if, like the cat, the cricket also goes on strike? Then look for a C for Cuckoo Bee or C for Cicadas, both are Cute.  

And of the A for ant, though I highly suspect ants never go on strike as they are such an industrious bunch; if they do, say because their queen has died, then look for Aphids. Aphids though small are generally found in great masses and can be quite attractive to watch huddled together sucking plant juices out of the leaves, stems, or roots of plants. Aphids produce a sugary substance that ants eat for food, and in return, ants take care of and protect aphids from predators. Now you have A for Ants and A for Aphids!

If the B for bumblebee should be off on another flower, don't despair there are many types of bees that can step in. B for bees come in many sizes and colors, bees like the green sweat bees, wool carder bees, wood-digger bees, carpenter bees, scissor bees, and many more all equally Beautiful. Of course, if the flying bees are not staying still long enough, you might lift a rock or stick to find a beetle scurrying about. B for Beetle is Bodacious. 

How many creatures can you find in the backyard for your favorite letters? 

Stay tuned for news this spring about a JFiN (Jericho Families in Nature) program where we might stroll Mobbs or other areas to observe, ask questions, and talk about the creatures for A through Z. 

The wonderous abundance of nature is quickly diminishing, shall we not at the very least learn about if not love the diversity of life we have left. From A to Z, our world, as close as our backyards, is teeming with the energy of life, often in forms small enough that they usually go unnoticed. With a keen eye, patient observation, and a bit of an inquiring mind we can feather out the species with which we share the earth, and in fact, depend. 


Nature Comic #52 Dec 3, 2022 
Cute as a teddy bear
stings like a bee
who do you see?



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