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Showing posts with label insects. Show all posts
Showing posts with label insects. Show all posts

Monday, July 28, 2025

Aerial Assassins

Robber Flies are also called Assassin Flies, and for good reason!

What is that powerfully built, fly-like creature that waits in ambush to catch their prey in flight? It’s a robber fly, otherwise known as an assassin fly, which feeds almost exclusively on other insects, including other flies, beetles, butterflies, moths, bees, ants, dragonflies, damselflies, wasps, grasshoppers, and even some spiders.

Robber flies have stout, spiny legs, short antennae, three simple eyes on the top of their head between two large compound eyes, bristly bodies, and a short, stout proboscis that encloses a sharp, sucking mouthpart called a hypopharynx. They also have a dense moustache of bristles on the face called the mystax, which appears to offer some protection from their struggling prey. These flies attack their prey by stabbing it with the proboscis and injecting it with a saliva that contains both a neurotoxin and proteolytic enzymes.  This paralyzes the prey and liquifies the insides, allowing the robber fly to suck the material up through their proboscis.

In spring and summer in our area, some of the more common robber flies include the Bee-like Robber Fly (Laphria macquarti), Prairie Robber Fly (Diogmites angustipennis), and the Maroon-legged Robber Fly (Promachus hinei). 

The Bee-like Robber Fly is large (up to 1.25” long), hairy, mostly black with a yellow thorax, basal abdominal segments, and some yellow on the legs.  It mimics the American Bumblebee, and while it prefers to feed on small beetles, it will take a wide range of prey, often perching on tree stumps in the open.

Bee-like Robber Fly

The Prairie Robber Fly, also called the Slender-winged Hanging Thief, is about 1” long, with greenish-red eyes, tan to reddish-brown body, thorax with darker brown longitudinal stripes, and abdomen with darker lateral stripes.  It is common in both woodland and meadows, hunting bees and other insects, and typically hangs from vegetation by its forelegs while it consumes its prey.

Prairie Robber Fly

Another large robber fly is the Maroon-legged Robber Fly, up to 1.5” in length.  It has dark eyes, light-colored bristles around the face, a brown thorax, a cream-colored abdomen with thick black bands and a black tip, and hairy reddish-brown legs. It prefers hunting bees and wasps, and can be found flying around a variety of habitats, perching on the ground or in vegetation.

Mating Maroon-legged Robber Flies

Female robber flies deposit tiny, whitish eggs on low-lying plants and grasses, or in cervices in wood or bark, or in soil. After hatching, the larvae live in this detritus, feeding on other soft-bodied insects. Robber flies overwinter as larvae, pupate in the soil, and eventually emerge as adults.  This developmental cycle can take one to three years, depending on the species and environmental conditions. Robber flies generally occur in relatively open habitats with scattered vegetation, or in forested margins and woodland edges.  

Robber flies are generally considered beneficial insects due to their predatory nature, as they primarily feed on other insects, many of which are considered pests. These aerial assassins help to naturally regulate insect populations thereby contributing to a more balanced ecosystem!


Tuesday, April 22, 2025

Neither Hummingbird nor Bumblebee

 

Hummingbird or bumblebee?  Neither!

Take a closer look when you see what you think is a small hummingbird hovering about and nectaring on the tubular flowers in your garden.  It just might be a Snowberry Clearwing (Hemaris diffinis), one of our more common hummingbird moths.  

Moths in the genus Hemaris are often generically called hummingbird moths, due to their ability to fly and move just like hummingbirds. They are rather plump moths, and the tip of their abdomen opens a bit like a fan. Many are brown or black with some yellow, so they are also good bumblebee mimics. Several species have clear wings, as they lack as many wing scales as other lepidopterans, and they actually lose the ones they do have shortly after they emerge due to their highly active flight tendencies.  

This adult Snowberry Clearwing just emerged from a winter spent in leaf litter,
still with all the scales on its wings.

The Snowberry Clearwing is about 1.25 to 2 inches in length, with a yellowish thorax above, a black abdomen with a yellowish band near the tip often split in two, and the namesake clear wings. Like other hummingbird moths, they generally fly during the day, but may continue into the evening if they have found a particularly good nectar source. Their proboscis or sucking mouthpart is quite long, so they prefer to sip from tube-shaped flowers. 

An adult Snowberry Clearwing showing its yellow thorax, black abdomen with a
yellow stripe, and signature clear wings.

The adults start flying in March after emerging from the leaf litter beneath their host plant where they spend the winter as a pupa protected by loose silken cocoon.  Females attract males by broadcasting a pheromone from the glands at the tip of the abdomen, and after mating, they lay individual, tiny, round green eggs on the underside of the leaves of the host plant.  In the south, they typically produce more than one generation each summer, flying well into November.

The common name for the Snowberry Clearwing comes from the fact that it was first described in 1836 in the northeast, where it uses Common Snowberry (Symphoricarpos albus) as a host plant, a native plant in the Honeysuckle family that grows in the northern half of North America. In the southern US, the preferred native host plant for this moth is Coral Honeysuckle (Lonicera sempervirens), which can be purchased at most native plant nurseries.  It is a high-climbing, twining vine to 20 feet long, with smooth, paired semi-evergreen leaves and clusters of red, tubular flowers.  In the wild, they also use our native White Bush Honeysuckle (L. albiflora), which is more shrub-like with twining branches that have smooth, paired deciduous leaves and clusters of creamy white tubular flowers.

Coral Honeysuckle

White Bush Honeysuckle

The larva or caterpillars of the Snowberry Clearwing are commonly called hornworms, due to the horn-like projection on their posterior end.  They are up to 2 inches long, blue-green above and yellow-green along the sides, with black spots and a black horn.  Uncommonly, they can also take a brown form with the same black spots and horn.  They match the foliage of their host plants so well that they are often very difficult to find. 

Snowberry Clearwing larva, green form.

Snowberry Clearing larva, brown form.




Saturday, October 26, 2024

Fall Fliers

 

Fall-blooming Blue Mistflower and White Boneset attract late season butterflies.

Butterflies are frequently thought of as insects that fly primarily in the spring and summer seasons.  This is because the emergence of many butterfly species is unimodal, which means that their numbers increase as environmental resources increase.  These resources are defined as their host plants and nectar plants, which also become available during these warmer seasons.  

However, there are some species that have bimodal emergences, or increases in numbers in both the spring/summer and fall seasons.  It is thought that the division of offspring between two different emergence times may have evolved to avoid producing all offspring at one time.  This approach would reduce the risk of species mortality in case of potential fluctuations in habitat quality. 

Whether they be unimodal or bimodal, butterfly species typically exhibit a tightly synchronized adult emergence in order to help them locate mates. Further still, some species are present in low numbers during most of the year, but their numbers increase during the fall.  In central Texas these species include the Tailed Orange (Pyrisitia proterpia), Julia (Dryas iulia), Common Mestra (Mestra amymone), Queen (Danaus gilippus), and White-striped Longtail (Chioides albofasciatus).

In the fall, the Tailed Orange is in its winter form, yellow with brown lines and blotches below and a noticeably pointed hindwing edge.  Its summer form is unmarked yellow below and the hindwing edge is less pointed. It flies late summer through fall, and uses senna species as its host plant.

Tailed Orange, winter form

The fast-flying Julia is mostly orange above and orange to brown below, with the female being a duller orange than the male and having a dark forewing band.  Its longwing shape is quite distinctive and it prefers woodland edges and gardens where it uses passionvine species as its host plant.

Julia, male

A slower, flat-winged flyer, the Common Mestra is pearly white above with a pale orange border on its hindwing, and mostly pale orange below with a thin, white spotband.  It is most often seen from June to November, and it uses noseburn species as its host plant.

Common Mestra

The Queen butterfly is often confused with monarchs, as it also uses milkweed species as its host plant.  Rich dark brown to deep orange above with white spots in the black wing margins, it lacks the strong black veining on the wings like monarchs, and can be found in any open habitat usually visiting flowers.

Queen

Straying into our area from south Texas, the White-striped Longtail is a dark brown butterfly with very long tails, and a prominent white stripe on the underside of its hindwing.  It usually perches with its wings closed, and uses various legume species as host plants.

White-striped Longtail

One way to increase your chances of seeing these fall fliers in your yard is to provide native plant species that bloom in late summer and well into fall. These plants include Frostweed, Gregg’s Mistflower, Blue Mistflower, White Boneset, Lindheimer’s Senna, Plateau Goldeneye, and Texas Lantana.  And remember, fall is the perfect time to plant!


Monday, June 24, 2024

Songs of Stridulation

 

Immature katydids, called nymphs, are initially wingless. 

As the summer temperatures heat up, songs of singing insects fill the air with a variety of sounds.  Members of the order Orthoptera, including katydids, crickets, and grasshoppers, produce a variety of sounds through stridulation, or the rubbing of one body part against another.  

Differential Grasshopper, Melanoplus differentialis

While grasshoppers typically stridulate by rubbing their hind legs against their closed wings, katydids and crickets have modified bases of their wings in order to produce sound.  Specifically, they have a sharp edge or ‘scraper’ on the upper surface of the hindwing which they rub against a row of bumps or ‘file’ on the underside of the forewing. During sound production, katydids and crickets elevate their wings and move them rapidly back and forth, and the wings vibrate as a result of the scraper rubbing against the file.

Central Texas Leaf-Katydid, Paracyrtophyllus robustus

Unlike Orthoptera, male Cicadas in the order Hemiptera produce sounds through a pair of special ribbed organs or ‘tymbals’ located on sides of their abdomens, just behind their wings. When they contract their muscles, it causes the ribs to bend suddenly, producing a sound that resonates within a large air sac in their abdomen. The distinctive sound that is produced is one of the loudest made by any insect.

Resh Cicada, Megatibicen resh

The use of sound is crucial in courtship, with each species having its own distinct song.  Males attract mates through stridulation, producing a vibration frequency that is species-specific.  Songs are distinguished both by their dominant frequency and the details of their timing patterns. Crickets generally produce musical trills of continuous notes often too fast to count, or short bursts of chirps followed by silence.  

Field Cricket, a species in the Gryllinae family

Katydids and grasshoppers have high-pitched songs, composed of atonal shuffles, rattles, scrapes, buzzes, or ticks.  Some sing more or less continuously while other species have long silences in between periods of singing.  Cicada songs are the most penetrating, as rattling buzzes or harsh trills, often with a pulsating or grinding quality.

Fork-tailed Bush Katydid, Scudderia furcata

While most insect songs are the calling songs of males intended to attract females, these songs are thought to have other functions as well.  Some songs are for courtship once a mate is found, and some serve to attract males to a group chorus or to keep males optimally dispersed within a singing colony.  Aggressive songs can also be heard, when two males encounter each other, or even disturbance calls, when an insect is touched or handled.  Whatever the reason, now is the season to hear the songs of stridulation!




Friday, March 15, 2024

Requisite Night

 

Light pollution is nearly non-existent in Big Bend,
allowing for spectacular star-filled night skies.

Most environmentally-minded individuals recognize the more talked about threats to our native wildlife, such as habitat fragmentation/loss, invasive species, and climate change, but not as many are aware of the dangers posed by light pollution. Up until the mid-1800s, humans and animals lived under night skies solely lit by the moon. Electric outdoor lighting became common in the early 20th century, but its use spread quickly, and the global extent of modern light pollution became clear.  

By 2016, it was possible to measure nocturnal artificial light with the advent of a comprehensive global satellite measurement system. Researchers found that more than 80% of the world’s population lived under light-polluted night skies, or skies where the glow of artificial light is significant enough that the stars disappear from view.  In the US and Europe, it was found that 99% of residents live under light-polluted skies.

Light pollution exposes animals to many dangers, including predators, starvation, exhaustion, and disorientation. Artificial light, like roads and fences, can create barriers that fragment habitat.  Slow-flying bats avoid feeding in or passing through illuminated areas for fear of predators such as owls and other birds of prey. Artificial light near their roosts can also delay their emergence at dusk when their insect prey is most abundant.  If they never leave their roost since it always appears to be light, they can even starve to death.  

Artificial nocturnal light can also lure animals in and lead to their destruction.  Many species of migratory songbirds are attracted to brightly lit structures at night, circling them, sometimes colliding into them, or becoming disoriented enough to lead to a depletion their energy stores which ends in exhaustion and the inability to complete their journey.  In some bird species, artificial light at night interferes with their ability to use natural polarized light from the sky to calibrate their internal compass.

Artificial light at night attracts insects, like this Luna Moth, 
and can disrupt normal behavior patterns.

Light pollution is also one of the many factors contributing to the rapid decline of insect populations.  Moths and other nocturnal insects orient themselves by moonlight, and this instinctual tendency is interrupted by artificial night light, luring them in to fly incessantly around a bright light, causing exhaustion, exposure to predators, and the potential to miss courtship cues from mates.  This is especially true for fireflies, as artificial night light can cause them to alter or cease their mating flashes.  Studies have also shown that light pollution can harm diurnal insects like monarchs, who flit and flutter all night when exposed to excessive light when they should be resting, and causing them to be disoriented from their migration route.

Light pollution facts and some easy solutions.

Unlike other environmental threats to wildlife, simple solutions to artificial nocturnal light exist.  The best solution is to have no nocturnal lighting other than natural conditions. If a light at night is truly needed, the amount that spills into wildlife habitat can be reduced through dimming, downward shielding, or switching to motion-activated lights. Studies are also showing that lights in the warmer color tones are less disruptive than bright white lights.

Travis Audubon promotes the Lights Out Initiative for Austin.

Austin is one of several cities across the US that participates in the migratory bird friendly Lights Out Initiative, which asks residents to turn out all non-essential lights from 11pm to 6am every night during spring migration (March 1 – June 15) and fall migration (August 15 – November 30).  This is one of many ways we can prevent light pollution from overpowering our native wildlife. Turn out your lights when they are not needed, and welcome the requisite night!

Saturday, July 15, 2023

Black and White All Over

 

The white patches on the black body of this Cottonwood Borer
are actually areas of pubescence or short, dense hairs.

Colorful things typically catch our eye, but the patterns formed by black and white can often be the most striking.  In nature, these patterns can be achieved through contrasting chemical pigments or structural elements such as scales or pubescence (or hairs).  While somewhat rare but not uncommon, these distinct black and white combinations are particularly striking in three native beetles, the Cottonwood Borer (Plectrodera scalator), the Texas Click Beetle (Alaus lusciosus), and the Texas Ironclad Beetle (Zopherus nodulosus haldemani).

The Cottonwood Borer is an unmistakeable, robust, elongate beetle with a shiny black body up to 1.6 inches long, and irregular, contrasting markings of white pubescence.  It has long, black antennae and prominent spines on the side of the pronotum, or the plate-like structure that covers all or part of the thorax. As an adult it is most active in summer, feeding on leaf petioles (stalks) of cottonwoods, willows, and sycamores, and is often found near the base of these trees.  Its' larvae bore into the base of the tree, living under the bark, and require 2 to 3 years to reach maturity.

Cottonwood Borer, from above

Present in Central, South, and East Texas, the Texas Click Beetle, up to 2 inches long, has distinctive, large, round black eyespots its pronotum, usually encircled in white.  White markings made of scales on its black body are clumped and patchy rather than evenly dispersed, and can sometimes look faintly yellowish.  Its common name comes from the fact that they possess an unusual clicking mechanism, whereby a spine on the prosternum (the underside of the thorax) can be snapped into a corresponding notch that produces a violent click that bounces the beetle into the air.  It is mainly used to avoid predation but can be useful when it needs to right itself.  Its species name means ‘dim-sighted’, and it can be found under loose tree bark.

Texas Click Beetle

The Texas Ironclad Beetle, a nocturnal beetle up to 1.5 inches long, has a distinctively round pronotum and raised black bumps or knobs on a white body.  It has a phenomenally strong exoskeleton, very thick and hard, in part due to its interlocking elytra or wing covers.  As such, it cannot fly but will play dead for long periods of time if touched or disturbed.  Also called Haldeman’s or Southwestern Ironclad Beetle, the Texas Ironclad Beetle is endemic to East and Central Texas, and it is active as early as March and into late October.  It has been associated with dead or dying pecan, oak, and elm trees, and has been found feeding on lichen.  Each part of its scientific name has relevance; zopher comes from Greek and means ‘dark' or 'dusky’, nodulus comes from Latin and means ‘little knot' or 'knob’, and haldemani refers to Horace Haldeman (1820-1883), one of the first to concentrate on collecting insects in Texas.

Texas Ironclad Beetle

The next time you see a beetle that is black and white all over, take a closer look at these fascinating creatures.  You just might find them to be as interesting as their more colorful cousins!



Saturday, May 13, 2023

A Lady by Many Names

 

Lady Beetle Aggregation

Lady beetles, also known as ladybugs or ladybirds, are familiar insects that are part of the Coccinellidae family, which comes from the Latin coccineus meaning ‘scarlet’ and refers to their bright color.  The origin of their common names traces back to a European legend when farmers were said to pray to the Virgin Mary to prevent their crops from being destroyed by agricultural pests.  Commonly red or orange with black spots on their elytra or wing covers, their coloring serves as a warning to predators that they are not good to eat.

Lady beetles have a lifecycle that begins as an egg and hatches into a larva after 4 to 10 days.  The larvae are quite small, generally dark and alligator-like with three pairs of prominent legs.  They typically spend 20 to 30 days eating and growing until they pupate and then emerge as adults. Most lady beetles are active spring and fall, but can be encountered at any time of year.  During the winter, they gather in large groups called aggregations, to mate and protect each other from the cold during their hibernation period, as some can live as adults for more than a year. 

Lady Beetle Larva

There are more than 5,000 species of lady beetles worldwide, with many species imported from other countries.  This practice started in the late 1800s when an Australian species was imported to California for a pest control experiment which helped to triple the orange crop, so efforts were soon put in place to breed them.  Lady beetles typically eat several types of small, soft-bodied insects that are usually described as garden pests, such as aphids, whiteflies, scale insects, mealybugs, and spider mites. In Central Texas, the lady beetle species most commonly encountered are the Seven-spotted (Coccinella septempunctata), Spotless (Cycloneda sanguinea), Convergent (Hippodamia convergens), Ashy Gray (Olla v-nigrum), and Asian (Harmonia axyridis) Lady Beetles. 

Seven-spotted Lady Beetle

With a total of seven black spots on the red elytra and a black head with two white spots, the Seven-spotted is native to Asia and Europe, and was introduced specifically to control aphids.  Having no spots on bright red to orange elytra, and also called the Blood-Red Ladybird Beetle, the Spotless can often be found on milkweed species searching for aphids.  The Convergent has up to six small black spots on its red to orange-red elytra, white lines that converge behind the head, and are often found in aggregations.  The Ashy Gray comes in two color forms; the light form with ashy yellowish-gray elytra and few to numerous black spots, and the dark form with black elytra and two large red to yellow spots.  It feeds on aphids and jumping plant lice.  

Convergent Lady Beetle

Spotless Lady Beetle

The Asian Lady Beetle is highly variable in color and pattern, but typically has a marking that looks like a W or an M behind its head.  This lady beetle is sometimes called the Halloween Beetle, as it often invades homes to overwinter when the weather starts to cool in October.  Native to Asia, it is the most common and widespread lady beetle in North America, and is universally sold in the nursery trade for aphid control.

Asian Lady Beetle

Saturday, June 25, 2022

Summertime Skimmers

The female Comanche Skimmer looks very different from the male (pictured below).

The heat of the summer is often a good time to search for dragonflies, specifically the skimmers, which comprise the largest family of dragonflies.  They are generally the most obvious, too, as they are frequently seen around ponds lakes, and streams, and perch conspicuously on twigs, bushes, and branches. 

Skimmers are often large and colorful with distinctive wing patterns, and many species of skimmers are sexually dimorphic, meaning the males and females of the same species are different in appearance.  Males frequently develop pruinescence or exhibit a frosty or dusty-looking coating when mature, while most females have little to no pruinescence at maturity.  In our area, some of the less common species include the Gray-waisted Skimmer (Cannaphila insularis), Checkered Setwing (Dythemis fugax), Needham’s Skimmer (Libellula needhami), and Comanche Skimmer (Libellula comanche).

The male Gray-waisted Skimmer has greenish-blue eyes, a face that is white in front and metallic blue on top, and a dark thorax divided by several pale stripes.  The wings are clear except for dark extreme tips, and the abdomen is black on the back half and pruinose gray or white on the front half, which gives rise to its common name.  Females and juveniles have reddish-brown over blue-gray eyes, and the abdomen is yellow or orange with brown or black in between segments.  These skimmers prefer shady, marshy ponds, lakes, and streams, particularly those with cattails or tall reeds, and are on the wing from June to September.

Gray-waisted Skimmer, male

From mid-April to mid-December, you can find Checkered Setwings, as they are widely distributed and sometimes locally abundant.  The male has bright red eyes and face, a reddish-brown thorax with obscured dark stripes, and clear wings except for a large patch of brown coloring near the base.  The abdomen is black with two pairs of pale streaks at the base of each segment, giving it a checkered black-and-white appearance. Females and juveniles are similar, but often have a paler face and a pale thorax with narrow dark stripes.  These setwings favor slow-flowing streams and rivers, ponds, and generally open areas with tall vegetation but little canopy.

Checkered Setwing, female

Male Needham’s Skimmers have reddish-orange eyes and face, thorax orange in front and paler on sides, and wings that have orange veins along the leading edge and clear along the trailing edge, giving them a somewhat bicolored appearance.  The abdomen is reddish-orange with a dark dorsal stripe down its length.  Females and juveniles have brown eyes and a pale face, yellowish thorax, and abdomen yellow throughout with the same dark dorsal stripe as the male.  On the wing from late April to early October, this skimmer prefers marshy ponds and lakes, and is often found perching low on vegetation surrounding or overhanging the water.

Needham's Skimmer, male

Comanche Skimmers can be found on the wing from May to mid-October, around springs, seeps, and sluggish areas of clear-running streams.  The male has aqua-blue eyes, a white face, and both thorax and abdomen with a uniformly blue pruinescence.  The wings are clear but for a bi-colored black and white pterostigma, a group of specialized cells in the leading edge of the wing towards the wing tip.  Females and juveniles have reddish-brown to pale blue eyes and a pale face, a cream-colored thorax with broad dark shoulder stripes, and a mostly yellow abdomen with a broad dark dorsal stripe running down the length.

Comanche Skimmer, male

Brave the heat during these hot months of the year and take a walk around a pond, stroll along a stream, or be on the lookout when on the lake, because you just might see one of these interesting summertime skimmers!


Saturday, August 28, 2021

Hoppin' Orthoptera

Grasshopper nymphs are often mini versions of the adults

Take a walk through a meadow on a late summer or early fall day, and you’ll no doubt encounter members of the insect order Orthoptera: grasshoppers, crickets, and katydids.  While their Greek name translates to ‘straight wings’, these insects are better known for their jumping ability and powerful hind legs that can propel them to 20 times their body length. 

Abundant, large, colorful, and often noisy, orthopterans are unlike other insects in that they undergo an incomplete or gradual metamorphosis.  Their simple lifecycle consists of an egg, nymph, and adult, where the nymphs look similar to adults, but lack completely developed wings.  Eggs typically hatch in the spring, nymphs develop through the summer, adults mate and reproduce in late summer and fall, with winter passing in the egg stage.  They have three basic body parts: the head, which contains sensory parts such as antennae, eyes, and mouthparts; the thorax, which contains the legs and wings required for movement; and the abdomen, which bears the digestive and reproductive organs.

The use of sound is crucial in courtship, with each species having its own distinct song.  Males attract mates through stridulation, or producing sounds by rubbing the upper and lower wings or the hind leg and wing together creating a vibration that is species-specific.  The auditory organs for orthopterans are not located on their heads, however, but on the abdomen for grasshoppers and the front legs of crickets and katydids.

Differential Grasshopper

Common throughout Texas is the Differential Grasshopper (Melanoplus differentialis), which is brown to olive-green and yellow and up to 1.8 inches long, with black herringbone markings on its legs.  It feeds on both grasses and broadleaf plants, although it prefers the latter, and is often found in areas of lush vegetation. Both nymphs and adults tend to aggregate together, and the adults are found from July to October.

Obscure Bird Grasshopper

Also found thoughout Texas is the Obscure Bird Grasshopper (Schistocerca obscura).  This large grasshopper, to 2.5 inches long, has olive-green forewings and typically a pale yellow-green dorsal stripe from the front of the head to the wing tips. While females can lack this stripe, both sexes have blackish-purple tibia with yellow, black-tipped spines.  This species prefers fields and open woodlands, and can sometimes feed on flowers and shrubs.

Green-striped Grasshopper

The Green-striped Grasshopper (Chortophaga viridifasciata) is found everywhere in Texas except for the southernmost portion of the Trans-Pecos.  Up to 1.5 inches long, it has both a green form (usually females) and a brown form (usually males). Between forms, the main difference is the coloring of the head, thorax, and outer face of the hind femora, with the abdomen always being reddish-brown. This grasshopper prefers wet areas with short grasses on which to feed.    

Narrow-winged Tree Cricket

More often heard than seen, Tree crickets (Oecanthus sp.) are whitish to light green, with long antennae and slender bodies.  In late summer from dusk into the evening hours, the males begin to chirp, with the rate of the chirp correlating to the outside temperature.  If you count how many chirps you hear in 15 seconds and add that to 40, you’ll come surprisingly close to the actual air temperature in degrees Fahrenheit.  

Field Cricket

Field crickets (Gryllus sp.) are dark brown to black, about 1 inch long, live in cool, dark areas, and normally emit high-pitched, continuous calls.  Those that live in caves are dark brown, have well-developed hind legs, and exhibit a hunchbacked appearance.

Fork-tailed Bush Katydid

The antennae of katydids are hair-like and at least as long as the body, superbly represented by the Fork-tailed Bush Katydid (Scudderia furcata).  This all-green katydid is often found in weedy fields, thickets, forest edges, and along roadsides. Up to 2.2 inches long, the first generation matures in late spring and the second in early fall.  Interestingly, the overall size of the adults varies and is directly related to how fast they must mature in order to fully use the growing season to produce the maximum number of generations.

Often, what you can’t identify by sight during the day becomes clear when it sings, calls, buzzes, or chirps at night.  Immerse yourself in the nighttime soundscape, and hear your way to discovery!



Saturday, July 24, 2021

Beautiful Hindwings

Can you find the underwing moth?

Commonly known as underwings, the genus Catocala is a large group of moths where most species are somberly clad with brown or gray-shaded forewings, often in variable, cryptic patterns of wavy lines closely resembling tree bark.  It is their hindwings, kept hidden at rest, that are typically a vivid orange, red, or yellow, and marked with black bands or stripes. 

The genus Catocala comes from the Greek kato meaning ‘rear or lower one’ and kalos meaning ‘beautiful’, together translating to ‘beautiful hindwings.’ Of the more than 100 underwing species found in the United States, 15 or so are known in Travis County, including the Ilia Underwing (Catocala ilia), Little Nymph Underwing (Catocala micronympha), and Ultronia Underwing (Catocala ultronia).

Ilia Underwing

The Ilia Underwing, also known as the Beloved Underwing or Wife Underwing, is one of our most common large underwings.  It has a total length to 1.8 inches, and gray to brownish forewings with a bold black line above a white or white-outlined spot. The reddish-orange hindwings have two black bands, and a pale orange, checkered fringe.  It utilizes oaks for its host plants, especially red oaks such as Shumard’s Oak and Southern Red Oak.  Its common and scientific name Ilia likely refers to the mythical mother of the twins Romulus and Remus, who were the mythological founders of the city of Rome.

Little Nymph Underwing

One of our smaller underwings with a total length of up to 1 inch, the Little Nymph Underwing has brown to grayish forewings typically marked with a dark, curving, shadow-like crescent.  The golden orange hindwings have two black bands, sometimes broken, and a pale, checked fringe.  It prefers white oaks as host plants, specifically Post Oak, Bur Oak, and Coastal Live Oak.  Its species name comes from the Greek and means ‘little bride or mistress.’

Ultronia Underwing

The Ultronia Underwing is medium-sized underwing to 1.3 inches in length, and is identified by its grayish-brown forewings marked with a darker brown shading on the inner edge.  The reddish hindwings have two black bands and a mostly gray fringe. Escarpment Black Cherry and Coastal Live Oak are its preferred host plants, and its common and scientific names are said to have come from the name of a Greek island.

It is believed that the bright colors of these moths’ hindwings, which usually form roughly concentric patterns, resemble the eyes of a predatory animal when suddenly flashed toward danger. Underwings are also said to possess fairly well-developed hearing organs, allowing them to evade nocturnal predators such as bats.  Their cryptic forewings keep them hidden during the day as they roost on tree bark and in crevices, and even in their larval form their coloring and patterns often mimic gray bark or green lichen.  While most active shortly after nightfall, several species have a second activity period for a few hours around noon, when these beautiful hindwings can sometimes be found on the wing in broad daylight!