Sep 122014
 

Awaiting rain on another hot and dry late afternoon (rain that avoided us completely, falling heavily on Atlanta’s downtown instead), I wandered down Piney Woods Church Road in search of new discoveries.  Today, I encountered an unfamiliar yellow and black spider, about a centimeter across, with two spiny projections on the end of her abdomen.  I intently watched her spinning a web for several minutes.  Later, consulting my Spiders of the Carolinas text, I discovered that she was an Arrowshaped Micrathena (Micrathena sagittata), a striking orbweaver that is relatively uncommon in North and South Carolina (though I am not certain about Georgia).

 

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Sep 102014
 

Back on June 29th (Day 210), I photographed the nymphal form of the Leaf-footed Bug (Acanthocephala terminalis).  Today, I am delighted to announce, I encountered the same insect, only this time in its adult form, perched motionless on a leaf of American Dogwood (Cornus florida).  Despite its imposing size and form, the Leaf-footed bug is a placid herbivore, content to sip vegetable juices.

 

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Sep 092014
 

On this afternoon’s walk, I encountered quite an array of invertebrates — insects and spiders — as I wandered from plant to plant along the edge of Piney Woods Church Road.  Rather than highlight just one, I am offering this post as an exploration of the rich diversity of a modest country lane in the Georgia Piedmont.  I saw, and photographed, even more than these on my wandering, in fact.  Most of the critters below are new to my blog, except for the Rough Stink Bug, who easily makes up in charisma what it lacks in novelty.

The first critter, hiding on the underside of a leaf while dining on an aphid (I think) was a tiny jumping spider, only about a quarter-inch across.  I am fairly confident it was a female Bronze Jumper (Eris militaris).  I love this image with all of those eyes gazing out furtively from her hiding spot.

 

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Across the road, on the unopened blossom of American Burnweed (Erechtites hieraciifolia), was a half-inch crab spider, most likely a female Goldenrod Crab Spider (Misumena vatia), frozen with front legs outstretched, waiting for a would-be pollinator or nectar thief to wander by.

 

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Down the road a short way, I saw a Rough Stink Bug (Brochymena quadripustulata) repeatedly tapping its proboscis against an oak leaf.  A red orb near its eye is probably a mite of some kind.

 

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I continued until I arrived at the Mountain Mint, which amazingly enough still bore a few blossoms.  Lurking nearby was a Carolina Mantid (Stagmomantis carolina), hanging upside-down and waiting for prey to amble near.  With all these spiders and mantids out there, it must be rough to be an herbivorous insect….

 

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Close by, on the Mountain Mint blossoms, an inch-long wasp was feeding enthusiastically on nectar. She (most likely a female) had an abdomen with distinctive yellow and red markings.  I am fairly certain she was a Digger Wasp (Scolia dubia), a solitary wasp that paralyzes June beetle grubs and lays eggs on them.  The larvae feed on the grub, but adults dine on nectar instead.  Unless disturbed, Digger Wasps will not sting humans.

 

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Sep 082014
 

I noticed this pair of caterpillars taking on what looked like a ritual stance on a roadside weed during my walk today.  I was reminded of Tai Chi, or perhaps Yoga.  The two remained perfectly motionless while I took this photograph and several other ones.  I am not sure why this particular pose is favored; perhaps it helps the caterpillars look more like twigs and less like dinner.

 

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Sep 072014
 

Today I encountered one of the most gaudy, clown-like of all the unusual insects I have seen along Piney Woods Church Road.  When first I saw it among the branches of a roadside weed, it had its proboscis down, and looked like it was feeding on the juices of the plant.  I assumed it was a harmless, brightly-colored herbivore of some kind.  When I zoomed in on the digital image, though, I discovered that it was actually feeding on some sort of insect larva, possibly a tiny caterpillar.  After inadvertently interrupting its breakfast, the insect began wandering the plant, and I embarked on a micro-safari, photographing it as it did so. After a few minutes of this, I continued on my way.  Returning to the same weed twenty minutes later, I found it again an a different branch, and photographed it yet again.

I suspected that a bug so non-conventionally attired would be easy to find in an online search.  Indeed, all it took was “bug black and white striped legs” to retrieve dozens of other images of it.  The insect is almost certainly an Orange Assassin Bug nymph, Pselliopus barberi.   In keeping with the account of this bug in the National Wildlife Federation’s Guide to Insects and Spiders of North America, it was occupying an open habitat near a woodland edge.  “They are active from late spring through fall, when they hunt for insects during the day on shrubs and herbaceous undergrowth.”  In the middle photo, the Orange Assassin Bug appears to be stalking a small aphid near the bottom of the image, having had its breakfast (top photo) so rudely interrupted by a nosy photographer.

 

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Sep 072014
 

Today marks at once both the 250th day of the Piney Woods Church Project and, by sheer happenstance, the 500th post on the Commonplace Nature blog.  I confess that I felt a great burden as I set off on a morning ramble down the road today; what could I possibly find that would justify the status of 250th day and 500th post?  What new image could even attempt to capture the journey I have taken this year, the wonders I have encountered on a seemingly nondescript bit of gravel track?  I did see (and photograph) an insect I had not previously encountered, which will become post 501.  But it was only when I returned to the intersection with Rico Rd. that I at last saw my muse:  a pair of broken eyeglasses, attached to a stop sign post.  I noticed them for the first time; ironically, in talking later with my wife, I learned that they had been hanging there for a couple of months.  Walking the dogs one day, she had found them in the dirt, scuffed up and one lens missing, and had put them there for the owner, perhaps, to find.  She hadn’t noticed them since, and neither had I.  Until now.

The road has become my eyeglasses.  I put them on when I reach the intersection with Rico Road, wear them gladly as I make my way to Hutcheson Ferry Road, and take them off again as I turn back at last onto Rico Road for the short stroll home.  In-between, I encounter seemingly endless visions and wonders through their gravel frames.  It is not all bouncing bunnies and frolicking calves — though I have seen those, too.  There is also predation and death.  There are moments of stillness, contained within drops of water or suspended from spiders’ threads.  There are encounters with the unknown — insects unlike anything I have seen before, blossoms of flowers I have hurried home to identify in my field guides.  The Sun illuminates leaves, which blaze in brilliant shades of yellow-green and orange-red.  There is still a sense of wonder about what might await me around the next bend.

One-hundred-fifteen days to go.  I begin to plan my next journey, one that will embrace all of Chattahoochee Hills.  And, meanwhile, I continue my apprenticeship as a Dirt Road Pilgrim.

 

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Sep 062014
 

On Day 249, for Blog Post #499, here is this evening’s photograph of a white calf in a pasture along Piney Woods Church Road.  He watched me for a minute or so as I beckoned him to approach. His caution eventually overrode his curiosity, and he hurried off to join the rest of his herd grading placidly beside the road.

 

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