Category: insects (Page 34 of 88)

Bug of the Week: Summer Insect Eggs

The summer rains have finally started in the Sonoran Desert. With the rain comes new plant growth and with new plant growth comes insects.

gws-cicada-oviposition-147Studying the desert willow this morning, I noticed these small tears in the wood of some twigs. Any idea what caused it?

gws-insect-eggs-on-desert-willow-139Then I found these on a nearby desert willow leaf. Can you tell what they are?

close-insect-eggs-on-desert-willow-138Perhaps with a closer view?

Answers:

The splinters in the twig were caused by a cicada laying its eggs under the bark. The cicada nymphs will hatch out, fall to the ground, and feed underground on the roots until next summer.

The white eggs on the leaf are likely to be moth eggs. I will be watching the tree closely for the next few days to see if any caterpillars develop. We already have giant swallowtail caterpillars on the citrus, queen caterpillars on the rush milkweeds and tobacco hornworms on the datura.

Do you see more insects in rainy years than dry years where you live?

Bug of the Week: Tiny Parasitic Wasp

Our discovery this week is due to some photogenic wild sunflowers.

sunflower-1I was taking a few photographs, when…

sunflower-flying-wasp-18what is that tiny insect flying by?

sunflower-wasp-flying-0006There it is again. Can you spot it?

little-wasp-on-sunflower-13To give you scale, this is what it looks like on a sunflower petal (actually ray flower).

wasp-on-sunflower-petal-40Talk about tiny! It is a parasitic wasp (Pteromalidae).

Why are tiny wasps hovering around a sunflower? It is possible that they are parasites of insects that visit sunflowers. Many species are parasites of insect eggs. It is also possible the wasps are feeding on nectar, although I saw no evidence of feeding. They also could be males waiting for females to visit.

What do you think these tiny wasps are doing?

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