Showing posts with label Bug Banter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bug Banter. Show all posts

Saturday, August 23, 2025

From Dirt Roads to Discoveries: A Giant Caterpillar in Jericho

What do you do when you come across a caterpillar the size of your finger? In Jericho, it means a moment of wonder—and a question for Bugeyed Bernie. Join this delightful exchange about an uncommon Canadian Imperial Moth sighting, the joys of dirt road wandering, and how paying attention to the small things leads to big discoveries.

From Dirt Roads to Discoveries: A Giant Caterpillar in Jericho.

Dear bugeyed Bernie, 
"Hey Bernie - saw this thick caterpillar on the road during my walk today. It was large, about the size of my ring finger! What is it?
                                                       Exploring dirt roads and anything crossing


Dear dirt road walker,  
First, I must applaud your interest in walking dirt roads in Jericho. My partner Maeve and I took up dirt road explorations a few years back, walking nearly every dirt road in Jericho over a few years' time. See our Town Walks series on my Jericho, Vermont blog posts (see Town Walks Listing). 

We found that walking the roads offers much more to see, both in nature as well as rural people's lives. The modest pace fed into our hearts, minds, and lungs as we passed, breathed in, and absorbed visually, the flower beds, cows, goats, sheep, pastures, woodlands, antiquities, old and new homes, butterflies and birds, and so much more that we had not noticed before. 

On to the observation you shared
 What is it? Canadian Imperial Moth (Eacles pini)
Uncommon

 Denise, thank you for sharing! Quite a lovely find. I have never found one. Nice looking, even majestic, caterpillar, as is the moth it becomes. It is a Canadian Imperial Moth, specifically Eacles imperialis pini, a subspecies of the Imperial Moth (Eacles imperialis) found in Canada and the northern United States. The large, colorful saturniid moth it becomes has bright yellow wings with brown or purple markings and inhabits coniferous and transitional forests. The moth's larvae feed on pine needles and other host plants, and both larvae and adults are valuable pollinators and a food source in their ecosystems.

The caterpillar is always recognizable by its long, silky setae and prominent white spiracles.  *Setae: hair-like bristles covering their bodies that serve as a defense mechanism against predators and for insulation. *Spiracles are small holes along the sides of their bodies that function as their respiratory openings, allowing them to breathe.

PS best not to handle the caterpillars as some people may experience an itchy rash from contact with the hairs.

They go through five instars. *A caterpillar instar is a stage in a caterpillar's life cycle between molts, where it sheds its skin to grow larger.

Its food plants: E. i. pini,  the Northern subspecies larvae feed on pines. 

As with all of Saturniidae, the adults do not feed. Their mouth parts have been reduced.

Eacles imperialis is one of a few saturniid species in a regional decline throughout the northeastern US, with some New England states lacking records for many decades

References: 
Postscript: "Thanks for the reply, Bernie! I did a little poking around after I emailed you and came up with the same answer using iNaturalist :)  Thanks for the nudge to enter the info there, which I have now done. I'm sure that as I get more familiar with using it, it will become second nature to enter what I see. 
I've never seen that caterpillar. So big! I helped the fella to the side of the road and will hope for the best. I definitely have been more cognizant of the bugs around me since you've been here. Mission accomplished!" - Denise
   
                                                                                                   Bugeyed Bernie

                                                         What's your *inverting question?
                                                  Write it in the comment section of VT Bug Eyed.
                                       View more photos of this lovely creature
View all of my latest LIFE observations on iNaturalist.

* Inverting is the observation of invertebrates.

Tuesday, April 16, 2024

Bug Banter by bugeyed Bernie


Ask the Inverter, 

Inverters counsel on insects' lives.

An open discussion about invertebrate life.


   Clothesline chat with a miner bee 
Dear bugeyed Bernie, 
"Am I anthropomorphizing? It looks downright intelligent."
                                                                    Sally Seeking Knowledge about Life

Dear Sally Seeking Knowledge about Life, 
There is, of course, a risk of anthropomorphizing as it is in our ancient history to want to relate to animals through our eyes of the world. Still, science informs us that bees and other insects have far more capabilities than scientists thought even twenty years ago. Even though we know some of their abilities, their senses are very different than ours, and their needs on how to perceive the world are different than ours. 

   Still, when I was taking photos of this alert animal, over twelve minutes, I could not help but think it was observing me and thinking - what -  about me? Since it stayed in place with me jostling about very close to it (within a foot) I must deduce it did not view me as an immediate threat. But aware it was. When I ducked under the clothesline to take a photo from the other end of its body, it turned to again face me. When I tried to get on one side of it, again it turned to face me. Though sometimes not immediately. 

   The more we can learn about what animals can sense, and how they sense inputs, I expect the more we will appreciate all life forms. I recently read how our bodies rely on not only bacteria but fungi as well. It seems even humans are not just a single entity but instead a boat of organisms or an ecological interdependent set of organisms.

   Some scientists believe that bees are sentient, and have feelings. As far as intelligence - I believe the bee is intelligent - if you measure intelligence by the ability to learn and adapt within one's perceived environment and within the senses that one's body entails. 

   Lars Chittka in "The Mind of a Bee" writes, "...in bees just as in humans, instincts interface seamlessly with memory and cognition. Instinctive predispositions promote learning ability, and intelligence behavior can emerge from evolved innate behavior."

   Perhaps wild bees are smarter than average! All humbling, and worthy of much more observation and discovery.  
                                                                                                   Bugeyed Bernie

                                                         What's your inverting question?
                                                  Write it on the comment section of VT Bug Eyed
                                       View more photos of this lovely creature on my iNaturalist post
View all of my latest LIFE observations on iNaturalist.