Category: moths (Page 23 of 30)

Bug of the Week: Moth Worth a Second Look

Little brown moths tend to get overlooked.

moth-brown

For example, this one visiting a flower.

moth-shining

Take a little closer look. In the sun the scales on its wings were shining gold.

moth-iridescent

Check the left wing. When the light was just right, this little “brown” moth was wearing brilliant rainbows of color.

Maybe it was worth a second look after all.

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Interested in moths? National Moth Week (July 20 – July 28, 2013) is a great way to participate in citizen science and celebrate moths.

Go see if there is an event near you. The Kids’ Page has a free coloring book to download.

Bug of the Week: Manduca rustica Larva

One reason to keep a photo journal of insects like this is so you can record what you find the insects feeding on.

In the past we had found the caterpillars of the rustic sphinx moth, Manduca rustica, eating leaves high in our desert willow tree.

This week, however, we found a caterpillar munching on our cats-claw vine.

My son suggested that because both plants have tubular flowers, long seed pods and winged seeds, that perhaps the plants are related. I looked it up, and it turns out that both desert willow and cats-claw vine belong to the family Bignoniaceae. They are related!

From now on we’ll keep an eye out for rustic sphinx caterpillars on both plants.

Bug of the Week: Banded Woolly Bear

It is so fun to travel to new places and meet new insects. Take, for example, the banded woolly bear, Pyrrharctia isabella.

We don’t have this species of caterpillar in the low deserts of Arizona (although we do have another type people call woolly-worms). Banded woolly bears like this one are found further north, where the winters are cold and snowy.

Banded woolly bear caterpillars eat a variety of plants, including grasses, certain trees, and wildflowers such as asters and sunflowers.

In the fall when they are finished eating, banded woolly bears crawl here and there in search of a protected place to overwinter. That’s when most people see them.

If you try to pick one up, it will curl up into a ball and remain still. After a short time, it will uncurl and crawl away.

Do you know what the caterpillar turns into? In the spring, after spinning a cocoon and pupating, the banded woolly bear becomes a yellowish Isabella moth.  (See more photographs of the Isabella moth).

Scientists have been studying how the caterpillars and their relatives manage to survive under freezing conditions. In one extreme case, another woolly bear from the Arctic lives for many years by feeding briefly in the summers and then freezing up – for as many as fourteen or more years in a row – before becoming an adult.

Discovery Channel has shared an amazing video from Frozen Planet. Note:  The video shows a close-up shot of caterpillars freezing and thawing with dramatic music, which may be disturbing to certain sensitive children. Also, a second video comes up that takes about the filming.

Young readers might enjoy Oh No, Woolly Bear!, a Lift the Flap Book by Patricia McFadden and illustrated by Michéle Coxon.


Disclosures: The book was from our local library. Also, I am an affiliate for Amazon. If you click through the linked titles or ads and make a purchase, I will receive a small commission at no extra charge to you. Proceeds will be used to maintain this self-hosted blog.

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