Category: butterflies (Page 26 of 43)

Bug of the Week Celebrates Pollinators

It’s pollinator week, so let’s celebrate by investigating some insects that visit flowers and carry pollen.

honey-bee-yellow-flower

Of course, most of us recognize that honey bees are important pollinators.

pollinator-bee

Other types of bees, some large and some small, also gather and move pollen. What other kinds of insects are pollinators?

pollinator-wasp

What about wasps?

pollinator-beetle-pollinator

Do you think beetles can carry pollen?

Damselfly-nice-close

This damselfly is on a flower. Is it a pollinator?

flower-fly

Although it looks like a bee, do you think this fly might be a pollinator?

skipper-on-vetch-close

What about butterflies? Can they be important pollinators?

moth-iridescent

You rarely see moths during the day. Can moths be pollinators?

If you answered yes to all the insects above except the damselfly, then you know your pollinators. The dragonflies and damselflies may rest on flowers, but they catch insects for food and don’t carry enough pollen from flower to flower to be considered pollinators.

From Arizona? You might want to check out the National Pollinator Week celebration at Tohono Chul in Tucson. It is going to be from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday June 22, 2013. The first 50 families attending the event will get to make their own native bee habitat to take home. There will be special showings of Wings of Life, a new film from Disneynature narrated by Academy Award winner Meryl Streep, and a talk by bee specialist Dr. Stephen Buchmann of Pollinator Partnership. Sounds like a great way to spend the day!

If you don’t live in Arizona, you can find your state on the clickable map at www.pollinator.org to locate events near you.

We’d love to hear what you do to celebrate pollinator week!

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Wings of Life is also available on DVD/Bluray.

Bug of the Week: California Patch Butterfly

Although it is commonly called the California patch butterfly, Chlosyne californica occurs in Arizona as well.

california-patch-101

The larvae feed on on Parish’s goldeneye or desert sunflower, Viguiera deltoidea var. parishii.

california-patch-side-view

It closely resembles some of the color variations of the bordered patch butterfly, so the two may be somewhat difficult to tell apart. Some books suggest the orange-brown marginal spots are the best way to tell.

I have to admit I’m still learning the West Coast butterflies. The best way to do it is one sighting at a time, like this one.

Do you have any butterflies in your yard this week?

Bug of the Week: Checkered White Butterfly

It is time for the spring butterflies, like this checkered white.

checkered-white

Although common some years in the Southwest, checkered white butterflies are found throughout the United States, and are thought to move north through the summer.

checkered-white-2

Here in the desert, the adults visit the seasonal wildflowers for nectar.

Checkered_White_larva

(Photograph by Megan McCarty at Wikimedia)

The larvae (caterpillars) have black and yellow spots and speckles. They feed on plants in the mustard family, which are only abundant after sufficient winter rains.

Have you seen any checkered white butterflies yet this year?

 

 

 

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