On a morning hike in Montpelier, winter insects can be plentiful. Conditions seemed perfect this morning: overcast, ~36 F, intermittent light snow. I went for a nice long walk through the North Branch Nature Center (NBNC) and into North Branch River Park (NBRP).
This is a hike that I take often. Through NBNC, I follow a narrow strip of riparian forest at the edge of a large field. After passing over a footbridge, I enter NBRP. I pass a complex of beaver ponds on my left, and eventually follow the spring-fed streams that fill the beaver ponds up a steep hill. The diversity of habitats might help explain the diversity of insect life here, even in winter.
At NBNC, and in the less forested parts of NBRP, I found the most abundant invertebrate of the morning: Long-jawed Orbweavers:
A less-frequent encounter today was with a planthopper that was in the middle of the trail. I think I've narrowed it down to the genus
Stenocranus. A white line bisects the planthopper laterally, making it look sliced in half... literally.
My walk proved to be extremely productive, with 20+ individuals observed. My overall breakdown was:
- 2 Snow Flies
- 10+ Long-jawed Orbweavers
- 2 other spiders (2 species)
- 5 Winter Stoneflies
- 1 Planthopper
- 1 Moth
- 1 Winter Cranefly (found dead)
- numerous springtails