Year: 2012 (Page 26 of 60)

Bug of the Week: Sunflower Moth Caterpillar

Before revealing the mystery insect from last week, let’s take a look at the clues again.

The patch of silk implies either Lepidoptera or Hymenoptera, the two orders of insect that produce silk (I have already ruled out spiders, which also make silk). The presence of bits of waste products, called “frass” in insects, indicates a caterpillar, because bees, wasps and ants don’t produce frass in the larval form.

With that in mind, I opened one of the flowers.

Yes, there is a small, stripy caterpillar. I believe it is the larva of the sunflower moth, Homoeosoma electellum.

You can see the moth and a better view of the caterpillar in this report of the sunflower moth in safflowers.

So, did you guess caterpillar?

Next week I have photographs of some very cool insects we see only in July here in Arizona.

Mystery Seed of the Week 124

The mystery seeds for this week are from a common flowering plant grown as an annual.

The seeds are super tiny, no more than dust flecks (smaller than the “o” on the penny).

Don’t they look like tiny snail shells close up?

Do you have any idea what plant these seeds might be from? If so, be sure to leave us a comment.

Edit:  the answer is now posted.

Seed of the Week: Ironwood Tree

Our mystery seeds from last week came from the ironwood tree, Olneya tesota.

This unique tree gets its common name from the extreme hardness of its wood. Because there are a number of other trees with the same common name, it is sometimes called desert ironwood.

Desert ironwood is a small, shrubby tree found throughout the Sonoran Desert. The lower branches droop, giving a lovely form in its natural state.

The bark of the younger trunks and branches are pale gray to green at the tips.

It is a legume, having compound leaves of narrow, elliptical leaflets.

As with many desert plants, it is well armed, with many pairs of curved spines.

Desert ironwoods produce many lovely purplish-pink flowers in the spring. See Firefly Forest for a photograph of ironwood flowers.

The seed pods mature on the plant and then fall off.

The clue I mentioned that you might have noticed in the the mystery seed photograph last week was a drying leaf toward the bottom of the shot.

You can grow new trees from these seeds, but people often chose to purchase larger trees because desert ironwoods are very slow growing.

If you travel through the low desert you will often see dead ironwood trees. That is because the wood contains strong chemicals that prevent decay after the tree has died and the wood remains in place, sometimes for hundreds of years.

For more detail, see Natural History of the Desert Ironwood Tree (Olneya tesota) from the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum.

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