Saturday, December 13, 2014

A new season, off to a good start!

Gall Wasp #1
Winter bugs are back! After an abysmal winter in 2013-14, this season has already proved itself to be more productive. The winter season last year started off with an ice storm, making winter hiking treacherous for weeks. It was then followed by ridiculously cold weather… too cold for me, and too cold for bugs. In contrast, this year started with a dumping of snow, followed by nice mild temperatures that hovered just above freezing during the day. I like this a lot, and hope it bodes well for the rest of the season to come!

Today’s hike took me to a beautiful forested park in Colchester. The limestone bedrock and cliffs make this place a great place for botanists, with carpets of ephemeral wildflowers in spring and a nice mix of deciduous trees including lots of oak and hickory. Most of my winter insect searches have been in central Vermont, where oak is sparse or absent, so it is not surprising that today’s adventure turned up some new winter insects to me.

Gall Wasp #2
These two gall wasps were my first winter Hymenoptera. I’m still reading up on their life history and trying to figure out why they’re active this time of year, but that will have to wait for another day. Tomorrow is the Burlington Christmas Bird Count, and I need to be awake and alert for nocturnal birding at 1 a.m. followed by diurnal birding at 7 a.m. So… more to come on gall wasps later!


The other highlight of today’s walk was a long-jawed orbweaver (Tetragnatha viridis). I’ve found many Long-jawed Orbweavers on snow before, but this is the first I’ve been able to narrow down to species, as its green color is unique (and beautiful!).

Tetragnatha viridis

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

First of the Season

There has been snow on the ground in Montpelier for a few weeks now.  Longer at higher elevations.  But only now have I gotten out to look for bugs.  On a short walk to collect firewood today, I ran across a few insects on the surface of the meager 2-inch thick snow. 



My first of the season was a beetle, likely the Ocellate Rove Beetle Carcinocephalus flavidus.  I found it perched on a log near the trailhead with its wings popping out.  Only the males are long-winged in this species. 



Because there had already been a good deal of melting since the last snowfall, the forest floor was littered with bits of bark, leaves, and twigs.  Spotting insects on the ground would not have been easy.  The only other insects I saw were in the air.  Two winter craneflies (Trichoceridae) were spotted on the wing.  One landed on my pant leg just long enough to snap a picture before it was gently floating on its way.

With a 40 degree, overcast day, it seemed inevitable that I'd see some insects.  Hopefully this will be the start of a productive winter for active insects!

Friday, March 15, 2013

Snow Flies Revealed

A female snow fly (Chionea sp.) near NBNC on 1/4/13

I just found an awesome article on snow flies.  It is such a good feeling to have an interest in an obscure insect and all the sudden discover that it is even more complex and beautiful than you ever imagined.  Here's all you ever wanted to know (and more) about snow flies.

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Winter-pillars

Wow, winter is almost over!  A few short weeks without a post, and my field season has withered away.  Well despite the blog silence, I have continued to actively seek out winter insects with much success.  I'll have a number of back-order blog posts to make, but here are a few sightings that are fairly recent.

Lepidoptera seem to require fairer weather than some other winter-active insects, so it hasn't come as a surprise to find lep numbers on the rise as temps become more mild.  Here are two recent snow caterpillar sightings:



While doing some birding last Friday, this "cutworm" was crawling across the snow in a parking lot in Burlington, near a soldier beetle larva.  Thanks to the help of Sam Jaffe, this fellow was ID'd as Noctua pronuba.

Another caterpillar, encountered the next day on the snow in Colchester in a wetland:

While very small, this caterpillar has the distinctive markings of a Haploa sp.  As adults, they come in stunning patterns of black-and-white, with orange in their bodies. 
 

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Spidery Day

Finally, some fresh snowfall polished the landscape and allowed for insects to stand out against the brilliant white background.  The most abundant critters crawling around in the balmy mid-30's weather were spiders.  All told, at least four species were represented (with one individual found dead on the snow).  Without finding any other insects most of the morning, I wondered what they might be eating.  Maybe each other?

I only found one that looked like the one on the right.  I was hoping its unique pattern would be distinctive, and it was!  It was recognized on bugguide as being in the genus Phrurotimpus

Another spider that I bumped into looks like a ground crab spider.  Like the Phrurotimpus, this is this was the only individual of its species that I found on the walk.  If I'm right about the ID on this crab spider, they are commonly found on the ground and will eat both insects and other spiders.

And yet another spider was the Long-jawed Orbweaver.  I'm not sure if I'm seeing one species of these or many, but they are definitely the most abundant on the snow, with around 10 seen today.




Saturday, February 16, 2013

Perched on a Pedestal

On a walk on the Irish Hill trail yesterday, winter insects were plentiful.  For the second time this season, I bumped into some winter midges.  The two males I encountered first were walking around on the snow as usual, but the third I found was a female and she was staying put.  I took note of her chosen perch, which was atop a large boulder (she was in the red square in the image below).


The tiny midge that I found sitting atop the rock wouldn't budge.  I was short on time, so I just snapped a very quick picture:


So, the question that was going though my head was why?  Did she choose this rock because she had recently emerged from the subnivean (beneath the snow) zone through the opening under the rock?  Did she think this would be a good place to disperse her pheromones to attract a mate? (disclaimer: I'm not even sure that is how midges attract mates)  Whatever the reason, she looked very mighty up on her rock!

Here's a picture of a male I found earlier in the walk, with his feathery antennae:



Friday, February 15, 2013

Urban Stonefly

The weather the past three days (mid to upper 30's) has been perfect for winter insects, and they have been everywhere.  Literally.  This evening, at around 6pm, I was heading into the Unitarian Church to get ready for the Naturalist Journeys lecture and I noticed a black speck on the door as I reached for the handle (see the red square in the picture below).  I bent down to get a closer look, and it turned out to be a winter stonefly!



Presumably this bug was attracted to the light above the door.  The North Branch of the Winooski River runs just a few hundred feet from here.  But the river is canalized in this stretch in the downtown and not the sort of place I would picture a stonefly larva growing up.  None-the-less, there it was, just sitting on the door waiting to be discovered.