Category Archives: Insects

Isabella tiger moth (Pyrrharctia isabella)

Isabella tiger moth

Photo by Bill Reynolds

In its larval (caterpillar) stage, Isabella tiger moth (Pyrrharctia Isabella) may be the most widely recognized moth in North America. Most of us have seen a woolly bear crossing a sidewalk, driveway, road, or parking lot. It has a densely bristly body that is black on both ends and orange in the middle. The adult is less conspicuous but equally distinctive. They are nocturnal and therefore rarely seen.

Folklore says that the size of the orange band predicts the severity of the coming winter, with wider bands forecasting a milder winter. This means of forecasting is probably as accurate as the Farmer’s Almanac, though not as accurate as the National Weather Service.

http://www.minnesotaseasons.com/Insects/Isabella_tiger_moth.html

Goldenrod soldier beetle (Chauliognathus pennsylvanicus)

goldenrod soldier beetle

Goldenrod soldier beetle (Chauliognathus pennsylvanicus) is the most common soldier beetle in the Midwest. Adults can be seen from June to early October but their numbers peak in August to mid-September. They are found on goldenrods and other flowers in prairies, meadows, abandoned fields, gardens, parks, and roadsides. The long, yellowish-brown wings with black marks give this species a distinctive appearance.

http://www.minnesotaseasons.com/Insects/goldenrod_soldier_beetle.html

red milkweed beetle (Tetraopes tetrophthalmus)

red milkweed beetle

Photo by Bill Reynolds

The red milkweed beetle (Tetraopes tetrophthalmus) is a common flat-faced, longhorn beetle. It feeds only on the leaves of milkweeds, possibly only common milkweed. It stores poisonous glycosides from the milkweed in its body, making it unpalatable to potential predators. The bright, black and red coloration is thought to signal predators of its unpalatability.

There are three longhorn milkweed beetles in eastern and central North America. This species is identified by the large, black spot near the center of each wing; the all black legs; the all black antennae; and the host species, in this case common milkweed.

http://www.minnesotaseasons.com/Insects/red_milkweed_beetle.html

Hunchback bee fly (Lepidophora lutea)

hunchback bee fly

Photo by Bill Reynolds

The hunchback bee fly (Lepidophora lutea) is a medium-sized bee fly with a distinctly hunch-backed appearance. It is fairly common and widespread in eastern North America. It’s unusual shape mimics the robber fly. The larvae are kleptoparasitic, eating the collected food in the nests of solitary wasps, and possibly also parasitic, eating the larvae in the host’s nest.

http://www.minnesotaseasons.com/Insects/hunchback_bee_fly.html

White admiral (Limenitis arthemis arthemis)

white admiral

Photo by Bill Reynolds

White admiral (Limenitis arthemis arthemis) is a common, large, brush-footed butterfly. In is found in forest edges and openings, on trails, and on roadsides. It is often seen sunning itself on gravel roads. Caterpillars are found mostly on birch, willow, quaking aspen, and chokecherry but sometimes also on other trees. Adults feed mostly on sap flows, rotting fruit, aphid honeydew, carrion, and dung, rarely on flower nectar. The appearance of this butterfly is distinctive and there are no similar butterflies in Minnesota. However, the range overlaps that of the red-spotted purple in the lower third of the state. Where the ranges overlap the subspecies interbreed and produce offspring with intergrading characteristics.

http://www.minnesotaseasons.com/Insects/white_admiral.html

Milbert’s tortoiseshell (Aglais milberti)

Milbert's tortoiseshell

Photo by Bill Reynolds

Milbert’s tortoiseshell (Aglais milberti) is a fairly common, medium-sized, brushfooted butterfly. It is found in woodland openings, open areas near woodlands streamsides, trails, and roadside ditches. In Minnesota, stinging nettle is the only host plant for the caterpillars. There are two broods each year. Adults of the second brood hibernate, sometimes in groups, in bark crevices or on human structures. When they emerge from hibernation in the spring they are pale and appear tattered.

http://www.minnesotaseasons.com/Insects/Milberts_tortoiseshell.html

Monarch Population Crash Continues in 2014

monarch

Photo by Tom Baker

This year, 2014, is going to be another bad year for the monarch (Danaus plexippus).

The population of monarchs has declined precipitously in the last two years. It began in 2012 with an unusually warm March, followed by a normally cool April, then an extremely hot and dry summer. That winter saw only 60 million monarchs visiting their overwintering sites in the forests of Mexico. That was down from 350 million the previous winter.

monarch

Photo by Bill Reynolds

Other factors contributing to the population decline include deforestation of the oyamel fir forests in Mexico, loss of habitat in the United States, and the effects of the unusually cold spring on the milkweeds in Texas.

In December 2013, the WWF-Telcel Alliance and Mexico’s National Commission for Protected Areas conducted a survey of Mexico’s Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve. Hibernating butterflies occupied only 1.65 acres of the reserve. That was a 44% drop from 2012, when 2.76 acres were covered.

My own observation is that for most of the last decade the monarch has been ubiquitous throughout the state. There was hardly a site I visited where I did not see at least one. Seeing a monarch was as common an occurrence as seeing a common dandelion or hearing a Black-capped Chickadee – they were everywhere. In 2013 monarch sightings were, if not uncommon, at least much less frequent than in recent years. 2014 promises even fewer sightings.

Another migratory butterfly, the red admiral, was uncommon in 2013 after being very common in 2012.

Polyphemus Moth

Photo by Bill Reynolds

Photo by Bill Reynolds

Polyphemus moth (Antheraea polyphemus) is a common, extra large, giant silkworm moth. With a wingspan of 4″ to 6″ it is one of the two largest moths native to North America. The caterpillar either descends to the ground and spins a cocoon in leaf litter or spins a cocoon in a rolled leaf of the host plant which falls to the ground at the end of the season. The adult is short-lived, lasting only 4 days.

Polyphemus moth (Antheraea polyphemus)

Whitespotted Sawyer

Photo by Bill Reynolds

Photo by Bill Reynolds

The whitespotted sawyer (Monochamus scutellatus scutellatus) is a common, widespread, long-horned beetle often found in fire-damaged coniferous and mixed forests. It is most easily identified by a small white spot between the bases of its wings. The larva of this beetle spends two years boring through pine, spruce, fir, or tamarack before emerging as an adult. While the damage it causes is not sufficient to kill the tree, the bore hole it makes allows various fungi, which can be fatal, to enter the tree.

Whitespotted Sawyer Profile

Leafcutting bee

The leafcutting bee (Megachile latimanus) is a common and widespread solitary bee found between May and October in dry areas of savannas, grasslands, and agricultural fields. It has a stout, entirely black body densely covered with mostly pale yellow and black hairs. Unlike most bees the pollen-collecting hairs on leafcutting bees are on the underside of the abdomen, not on the legs.

Photo by Bill Reynolds

Photo by Bill Reynolds

This bee gets its common name from the nest-building female. She uses her enlarged, scissor-like mandibles to cut disks from leaves and uses the disks to create individual nests for her eggs.