Posts in Category: insect

Texas Wasp Moth: Happy Sunday!

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I first saw this creature at the National Butterfly Center among the butterflies that also frequent the Mist Bush. This shot is from the butterfly gardens at the Bentsen Rio Grande State Park World Birding Center Visitor Center. I thought it was a wasp. It looks like a wasp, but like no wasp I have seen. A wasp in fancy dress? Art deco wasp? Clown wasp? Like maybe a wasp from somewhere far south of the border where they are not afraid to flash bright colors? A tropicana wasp? Take another look.

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And then, while researching the White-tipped Black Moth that I also photographed at the NBC, using some photo keys to moths of the Rio Grande Valley, I found that there are moths that do not look my idea of a moth at all. When it came to identifying this bug, I thought of those odd moths I had seen, and typed “wasp like moth Rio Grande” into a Google search. Texas Wasp Moth came right up on top.

What an outrageous creature! I mean, look at those disco booties and the way too colorful feet…and what what is with the matching orange and black stripes? Then consider the totally unnecessary white accents, and the frivolous bright yellow tips on the antennas? Who designed this thing? 🙂

Canon SX50HS in Program with -1/3rd EV exposure compensation and iContrast. 1800mm equivalent field of view. Processed in Snapseed on the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 2014.

And for the Sunday Thought: Well we are already started on it. Who designed this thing? Who has sufficient whimsy? Who has that kind of sense of humor…because I know this bug makes me laugh. And the fact that it is not even a wasp at all, but a harmless moth in an over-the-top costume, well that just caps it. I might have trouble getting by the stinging wasp thing, but as a moth, this is just a wonderful, amazing, delightful creature. Or that is what I think.

And of course I know, rationally, that it was not designed for my amusement or delight. But that whole beleaving, faith-based, seeing-wonders, wonderfilled side of me has to suspect that it was designed for someone’s amusement and delight. It is such a good joke! Too good a joke to have happened without intent. A lovely joke! A joke created and delivered with love. A living joke, that can only have come from the heart and the mind…from the loving intent of the creator of life. Or that is what I think. And thinking that makes me happy. I enjoy being able to share the joke…the delight…the wonder…the whimsy of the Texas Wasp Moth…with its author…and with you.

Now come on…doesn’t this non-wasp bug just make you simile! That is a good thing. Or that is what I think. 🙂

Happy Sunday!

Yellow-rumped Warbler with grub

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Evidently the junipers behind the Hawk Watch at Cape May Lighthouse State Park in October are full of grubs. They are certainly full of Yellow-rumped Warblers who feed on grubs. Still, catching a warbler with its grub is largely a matter of persistance. If you take enough pictures of warblers, you will very likely get a grub in one of them. This handsome bird was savoring the anticipation of its meal, or would have been if it were human, and if humans enjoyed grubs…okay…maybe it was just sitting there for reasons beyond our comprehension, holding the grub in its beak.

Canon SX50HS in Program with -1/3rd EV exposure compensation and iContrast. 1200mm equivalent field of view. Processed in Snapseed on the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 2014.

American Ladies in the Daisies

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The American Lady butterfly suffers an interrupted migration. They head north in millions to repopulate North America, well up into Canada, each spring, and in fall they turn around and head south. The fact is none of them make it back to Mexico. Once upon a time they probably did. It is a classic migration pattern still followed by the Monarch. But American Ladies repopulate North American with a new generation each year.

This past weekend in Cape May, the American Ladies were everywhere, and that is not an exaggeration: Anywhere there was a flower still in bloom…from the humble Goldenrod to the giant dasies in front of the hotel where I stayed. Many were well worn…missing trailing wing edges…but still eagerly feeding, not yet ready to give up the fight. Clearly they have no idea that they won’t see Mexico again.

And, among the dasies, they certainly make a brave show, and some interesting images.

Canon SX50HS in Program with – 1/3rd EV exposure compensation and iContrast. 1200mm equivalent field of view. f7.1 @ 1/1000th @ ISO 100. Processed in Snapseed on the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 2014.

Fritillary!

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I like Fritiallaries. Big and showy, and with their metallic silver patterns on the under hind-wing, they are a treat to see anytime. In Coastal Alabama yesterday, where I am working a birding festival, they were everywhere we went. They are migrating right now and were apparently bunched up along the coast. Okay by me.

I had several good photo ops. I especially like this shot with the contrast of the pink flower and the lovely green bokeh. 

Canon SX50HS. Program with iContrast and -1/3EV exposure compensation. 1200mm equivalent field of view. f6.5 @ 1/1000th @ISO 500. Processed in Snapseed on the Nexus 7.

Milkweed Beatle and John Acorn. Happy Sunday!

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The Friday night keynote at the Midwest Bidding Symposium was given by John Acorn, the Canadian naturalist who for 7 years was “The Nature Nut” on the Canadian Discovery Channel and Animal Planet in the US. This was, as John says, in the days before animal wrestling shows displaced real programing on Animal Planet. John also used to a regular at the Rio Grande Birding Festival and we have had several brief conversations over the years. He has been off the lecture circuit for several years, raising a family and working a real job, teaching natural history at the college level, but Bill Thompson invited him to this year’s MBS, where he told us about the challenges of teaching kids to appreciate nature in the digital age.

We bumped into each other several times after his lecture, the final time (so far) in front of the Lakeside Hotel where he was poking around in the milkweed pods. I asked him what he was doing and he told me there was an Earwig in there somewhere and, since they don’t have earwigs in Alberta, he wanted a picture. So of course I joined him in his poking. We found the earwig and both took our pictures but while looking I spotted this Milkweed Beatle, a far more colorful creature than an earwig ever thought of being, and of course we both had to photograph that.

We discussed cameras and I showed him my Samsung Smart Camera with its macro mode and WiFi connection, and I told him about processing the images on my Nexus tablet.

Somewhere after the Milkweed Beatle and before we found the earwig a lady walked by on the sidewalk, probably on her way onto the hotel. “What are you doing?” she asked (or words to that effect).

John said again, “There’s an Earwig in here somewhere.” but strangely enough she just kept on walking…as did several others who did not even bother to ask. Clearly John’s celebrity has taken a hit since he got a real job, but that was not what struck me at the time. I turned to John and said…”You see, that’s what normal people do. You tell them there is an Earwig in here and they just walk on by…”

“Yes,” he said, “odd isn’t it.”

And of course, to both he and I, and to you probably as you are reading this, it is indeed odd. How can anyone not stop and look at the Earwig in the milkweed? If that is normal then I don’t want to be it. I mean you run the risk of not seeing the Milkweed Beatle either…and who knows what else.

There is no pleasure greater, I my humble opinion, than going through life with your eyes open to the wonder of creation. John Acorn has always had it right. Go ahead and call me a nature nut. Proud and happy to be one.

And that, in a nutshell, so to speak, is the Sunday Thought. And let the unexpected Milkweed Beatles be your just reward!

Cabbage White on Aster

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They have really huge Asters in Ohio! Especially compared to our New England asters. And I managed to catch a well worn Cabbage White in a rare moment of rest. 

This is at the Midwest Birding Symposium near Lakeside OH. Samsung Smart Camera WB800F in macro mode. Processed in Snapseed on the Nexus 7.

Spot-winged Glider

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The Wandering Glider, a close relative of this Spot-winged Glider, is the dragonfly with the widest distribution worldwide of any odonata species. Still the two gliders I have been able to photograph in Maine have both been Spot-wings. 🙂

This appears to be a very fresh specimen. The pattern on the abdomen will quickly fade. As it is it is certainly a striking bug.

Samsung Smart Camera WB800F. Program and Macro focus. With Intelligent Zoom to reach about 700mm equivalent at 10mp. Processed in Snapseed on the Nexus 7.

Arrow-shaped Micrathena. Happy Sunday!

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Here’s odd. I saw my first picture of a spiny Micrathene spider some time last week, most likely in a #spidersunday post on Google+. Strange creature! That is what I thought, along with “never seen the like.”

So I go out Thursday this week, between thunder storms, to photograph rain droplets on the leaves in the yard, and what should I find building a web in the Rhododendron, but this strange and wonderful creature. At least I had been prepared 🙂

Come back inside to process the pics, and find that someone has just posted a series of spider images on Facebook, among them two different spined Micrathene. There’s odd. That’s what I thought.

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This particular Micrathene is the Arrow-shaped. Micrethenes are orb weavers, but this is not the Arrow-headed Orb Weaver. That is a different spider, though I have seen this one listed as Arrow-headed Micrathene as well. Odder.

The only speculation I have found as to what the spikes are for is that they might make the spiders harder to swallow for any interested predators. 🙂

Samsung Smart Camera WB250F in macro mode. Processed in Snapseed on the new Nexus 7.

And for the Sunday Thought. It is exactly this kind of odd in nature which reinforces my belief in an intelligence and personality in the universe. In God. It is, as I see it, much easier to believe that this creature, with its elaborate miniaturized structure and its exotic coloration, was designed…than it is to believe it just happened by any sequence of random events, no matter how long you give chance to work. Of course if Spinny Micrathene spiders were the only evidence I had, I might be able to avoid believing in God…but it is all part of an all encompassing  reality that is being proved moment to moment in my life. An Arrow-shaped Micrathene in the Rhododendron on a rainy day, after spiny spiders on Google+ and just before spiny spiders on Facebook is just part of the ongoing proof…exactly what I have to come to expect of the slightly whimsical (from my point of view) love of the creator God.

Bumble Bee in the Goldenrod

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This is a busy time of year for the busy Bumble Bees. They are harvesting the pollen of the fall blooming flowers as fast as they can. They go deep onto the large blossom of a Turtlehead and come out laden. It has to take a lot of Goldenrod to even begin to equal such a haul, and yet you see them all over the Goldenrod where ever it is in bloom.

And the Goldenrod itself, now that I know it is not the source of my watering fall eyes, is a beautiful flower. In mass they make a brave show of bright yellow in a green world, and if you look closely each tiny aster-like flower is thing of beauty.

Samsung Smart Camera WB250F in macro mode. Processed in Snapseed on the new Nexus 7.

Admiral of the Oostvaarderplassen

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Along with many Small Tortoiseshells and an abundance of Large Whites, there were numbers of Admiral butterflies, both in Germany and in Holland. I have shots from Germany with the wings fully spread…classic field guide shots…but this less posed shot from the Oostvaarderplassen in Holland is my favorite from this trip. I like the contrast with the…well in the US it would be Iron Weed…the flower at any rate, and I like the glimpse of the underside of the wing. There is also a dynamic tension to the shot that I find interesting.

Canon SX50HS in Program with iContrast and -1/3EV exposure compensation. 1800mm equivalent field of view. Processed in PicSay Pro on the Google Nexus 7 2013.