Sep 182014
 

On my morning Piney Woods Church walk today, I wandered to the edge of a patch of weeds in search of a flower, and ended up discovering a roadside zoo.  I walked from one end of the road to the other, the intersection with Hutcheson Ferry Road.  Looking down the road, I saw a brilliant red trumpet-shaped flower vining up a sweetgum sampling in the road bank.  I waked down the road to examine it; then, turning to look back, I noticed the same flower scattered throughout the patch of weeds.  I strolled into the grass-lined gully beside Piney Woods Church Road, to get a couple of close-ups of the lovely blooms.  They turned out to belong to the Small Red Morning Glory (Ipomoea coccinea), a native of tropical America that has become naturalized to moist soil and waste places throughout the Southeast.

 

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I had just finished a series of photographs when I felt something on my leg.  I glanced down, and saw a black beetle, about an inch in length.  I am proud to say that I did not react right away to flick it away, but instead started taking pictures.  It seemed quite inquisitive and almost “cute”, in a beetle-ish sort of way.  After half a dozen pictures, I gently flicked the top of my sock to send him (or her) onto the grass.  There, I took another few photographs.  This quite charming beetle turned out to be none other than the Margined Blister Beetle (Epicauta funebris).  Evidently I was wise not to perturb it; as Bill Bixby used to remark on the 1980s TV show, “The Incredible Hulk”, “Don’t make me angry.  You wouldn’t like me when I’m angry.”  In this case, the blister beetle evidently secretes a caustic chemical that, not surprisingly, can cause skin irritation and blisters. The substance is even more toxic to horses.  A handful of crushed beetles, mixed in with a meal of alfalfa hay, can be fatal.  Still, I find this beetle quite endearing.

 

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Glancing through the weeds along the roadbank, I noticed a thin katydid perched on a stem.  It was most likely the Slender Meadow Katydid (Conocephalus fasciatus).  

 

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A nearby stem held an even more impressive specimen — a large Differential Grasshopper (Melanoplus differentialis).  How stunning!

 

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Nearby was yet another singing insect of late summer:  a Fork-Tailed Bush Katydid (Scudderia furcata).

 

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As I left this site of so many new discoveries, I glanced back and took a photograph.  This roadside zoo might not have a neon sign, gift shop, or parking lot, but it is well worth the visit!

 

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Jul 292014
 

Late last night, a male Reddish-Brown Stag Beetle (Lucanus capreolus) visited me on our back porch, doubtless attracted to the light.  This stunning beetle, easily two inches in length, sports quite impressive pincers.  Nonetheless, the beetle is a vegetarian, feeding on tree sap.  The pincers are for challenging rival males.  Interestingly enough, the female of the species also sports a set of pincers, though smaller than the male’s.

 

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May 202014
 

This afternoon, my wife and I went for a four and a half mile hike in the Eastern Palisades section of Chattahoochee National Recreation Area, just inside the Perimeter on the northwest side of Atlanta.  During our outing, I got the chance to get “up close and personal” with a variety of critters living there.  I am still reaping the result — two ticks found so far, and counting.  These photos renew my appreciation for the rich diversity of life on Earth, and particularly here in the Atlanta region — even just a short distance from I-285!

The first creature I encountered was a gorgone checkerspot butterfly (Chlosyne gorgone), considered by the Butterflies of Georgia Field Guide to be a “local and uncommon resident”, though abundant in the Midwest.  It frequents open woodlands and stream corridors; I found this one on a trail along the Chattahoochee River.

 

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A bit further down the trail, I noticed a southern golden tortoise beetle (Charidotella sexpunctata sexpunctata).  This is one of three species of tortoise beetles found in the United States.  I am proud to say that I did not disturb him (or her) while taking this photograph, because the beetle’s dome remains a bronze color.  When disturbed, the beetle will display black spots against the bronze.  Tortoise beetles feed on a variety of host plants, including sweet potato.

 

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Nearby, I noticed a large black ant on a leaf, and it noticed me, too.  It opened its jaws wide, holding its ground against my camera lens pointed in its direction.

 

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The riverside trail eventually climbed steeply upward toward a ridge perhaps 100 feet above the water’s edge.  There, I encountered rhododendrons in bloom.  For a change of pace, I photographed the blossoms; only later did I realize that the blooms contained tiny eight-legged pollen mites.

 

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We took a spur trail downhill toward the Chattahoochee River again.  On our way down off the ridge, I noticed this juvenile common snapping turtle (Chelydra serpentina), its shell perhaps an inch and a half across, standing on the trail.  He (or she) was a bit annoyed at my ministrations with the camera, as you can see by his (or her) expressions in these photographs.

 

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Finally, toward the end of our walk, shortly before we headed down off the final ridge to the river’s floodplain again, I stumbled upon a patent leather beetle (Odontotaenius disjunctus) on the path.  After seeing a close-up of this beetle’s mouthparts, I am comforted by the fact that it feeds on rotting wood.  This beetle was perhaps one and a half inches long — nearly the same size as the young snapping turtle!

 

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May 142014
 

My wife found this swamp milkweed leaf beetle (Labidomera clivicollis) while weeding in the garden (which, at the moment, is basically just weeds).  True to form, it was perched on a milkweed leaf.  We planted the milkweeds a couple of years ago to attract monarchs.  No monarchs yet, but we have found all sorts of other creatures on them.  Milkweed plants, we have found, also have a penchant for spreading willy-nilly in a garden.

 

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Jan 122014
 

Dung BeetleDung Beetle 2

 

One year ago, scientists announced their discovery of the first animal ever observed using the light of the Milky Way galaxy as an aid to navigation.  This same organism also uses the Sun and Moon to guide it on its journey.  The animal in question is not a mammal or a bird, but a lowly dung beetle, an insect which (as its name suggests) feeds on excrement, and spends much of its life preparing balls of excrement to feed its young after they have hatched.  While scientists do not believe that their eyes can detect individual stars, the beetles can perceive the gradient of light that our home galaxy traces across the night sky.  As it rolls its ball of dung away from the source, the dung beetle will stop and climb to the top of the ball, in order to determine which way to go.  This insures that the dung beetle will continue to move away from the original excrement source, rather than risk running into other dung beetles all clamoring for their share of the prize.

This is an article in praise of dung beetles.  Often overlooked, maligned, and even ridiculed, these beetles have, for millions of years, quietly roamed the Earth (and burrowed into it), feeding on animal waste and using it to rear their young.  In doing so, they help to clean up the environment and reduce the risk of disease.  Not only is dung beetle behavior fascinating (many males will use horns on their head to spar with each other over females, for instance), but many dung beetles are quite beautiful, as well.

One of the most common, and intriguing, of the New World dung beetles is the rainbow scarab beetle, Phanaeus vindex, shown in the accompanying photos.  About the size of a dime, this beetle is common across much of the country, from Arizona to Florida and north to Michigan and Vermont.  Few people here in the US raise them for a hobby (which is true of beetles in general), although this author is thinking about doing so.  Obviously, there are obstacles, but not enough to prevent the serious beetle enthusiast from having a go at it.  As the foremost expert on beetle husbandry, Orin McMonigle, remarks in his magnum opus, The Ultimate Guide to Breeding Beetles, “The idea of handling dung does not appeal to everyone.”  But “when a person moves past the dung aversion, these beetles prove very interesting.”  In fact, they can be “curious, active, and comical captives.”

Dung beetles are perhaps the most historic of all insects.  Revered more than four thousand years ago by the ancient Egyptians as a symbol of eternal life, scarabs (as dung beetles are also called) are commonly depicted in their paintings, statues, and jewelry.   Dung beetles have a four-part life cycle, passing from egg to larva to pupa to adult.  During the pupa stage, the beetles appear mummy-like; emerging from the pupa, the adults rise up out of the ground to begin the search for dung.  It is likely that dung beetle pupae inspired the Egyptians to mummify their dead, while the adult beetles’ emergence into daylight evokes the mythological emergence of the dead into the afterlife.

Phanaeus vindex has, too, carries traces of ancient history.  The genus Phanaeus, meaning “bringing light”, was named after the sun god of the ancient Greeks.  The species name, vindex, is Latin, and means “protector”, perhaps because the rainbow scarab performs the necessary function of cleaning up dung, or maybe because of the male beetle’s prominent curved horn.  Males come in two types – a characteristic called allometry.  Some have long horns, and others have much shorter ones.  When the beetle larvae have access to plenty of nutrients, they develop long horns; when nutrients are scarcer, they develop shorter ones.   The longer-horned ones wind up battling each other for mates.  The shorter-horned ones don’t always lose out, though.  They tend to develop faster and emerge earlier from the ground, so they sometimes get to the females first.  If that fails, they rely on stealth – trying to sneak past two males with locked horns to reach the waiting female.

The life of a Phanaeus vindex centers on the quest for excrement.  The beetles are equipped with highly sensitive antennae that enable them to locate the freshest, most nutrient-rich dung possible.  Some will even perch on a plant branch, antennae at the alert, waiting to detect the scent of newly-deposited dung wafting in the breeze.  After locating a promising source, rainbow scarabs will begin constructing tunnels in which to deposit their find, and where the females will subsequently lay their eggs.  (After the eggs hatch, the larvae will remain underground, feeding on the dung, until they pupate, turn into adults, and emerge to start the excrement search again.)  In the wild, male and female dung beetles have been observed working together to construct nesting tunnels.  Strangely enough, once placed together in captivity, a male and female pair of beetles will ignore each other, and the female will do all of the nest-building work.

Yet another unusual quality of Phanaeus vindex is that the beetles are vibrotaxic.  This means that that they can detect, and respond to, vibrations in their environment.  A rhythmic tapping on the side of a beetle enclosure will cause its occupants to move in unison with the beat.  Stop tapping, and the beetles stop moving, like children playing “Red Light / Green Light.”  Scientists theorize that this behavior helps the beetles avoid predators, such as lizards, mice, and birds.

Dung beetles have fascinating behaviors and sport eye-catching metallic colors.  Ultimately, however, dung beetles are worthy of merit simply because all living things are.  All organisms on Earth participate in a complex web of ecological relationships of which we, too, are a part.  As Arthur Evans and Charles Bellamy explain at the close of their book, An Inordinate Fondness for Beetles, “…beetles play a significant part of a seasonal exchange between earth and sky, a pulse in the cycle of life.  Each beetle is but part of a population and embodies the sum total of its evolutionary history and potential.  Each population interacts with the others, including our own, and with the soil and atmosphere in a multiplicity of interrelationships that melt seamlessly into one another.  We can take solace in beetlephilia.”

This article was originally published on February 18, 2013.  Both photographs are copyright Valerie Hayes. 

Jan 012014
 

A grim, overcast day greeted me for the start of a new year and my new project documenting the Piney Woods Church Road landscape.  So much for plans to begin with a sunrise.  Instead, I leisurely made my way to the road late in the afternoon, an hour or so of what passed for sundown.  Glancing into a grove of trees between Piney Woods Church Road and Rico Road, my eye was caught by a loblolly pine (Pinus taeda) that has most likely been killed by the southern pine beetle (Dendroctonus frontalis), an insect measuring only 2 to 4 millimeters as an adult.  Closer at hand, a young pin cherry (Prunus pennsylvanica) growing beside the road has been disfigured by crown gall, a woody tumor caused by the bacterium, Agrobacterium tumefaciens.  All around me, tiny organisms were slowly devouring the forest.

Devouring Forest