Great Spangled Fritillary

Great Spanged Fritillary, Speyeria cybele

A week or two ago Dan caught this butterfly and brought it to me to show me, and in case I wanted pictures. I forgot to ask him how he caught it, but I’m going to assume it was with my sweep net that’s propped on the front porch (he has caught butterflies by hand before, though, early in the morning while they’re still cool. He’s got an amazing touch for holding these critters; I wouldn’t trust myself to do that).

This one is a Great Spangled Fritillary, Speyeria cybele. I tend not to think of fritillaries as very common because I don’t see them very often compared to other species, though they’re not exactly rare. The Great Spangled is among the most widespread and abundant, found across much of the continent. The name comes from the silvery white spots on the underside of the hindwing, visible when the butterfly folds its wings (see below). All members of the genus lay their eggs on various violet species (Viola spp.), which are certainly in abundance around here.

After I’d taken a couple of photos Dan let the butterfly go, but instead of flying away it turned and fluttered back to his body for a few moments. It’s possible it was attracted to the salts of the sweat on his skin, something that I’ve had happen on rare occasion.

Great Spanged Fritillary, Speyeria cybele

Skimmer, cicada

Slaty Skimmer and cicada

I’m at my parents’ house at the moment, horse-sitting while they’re away for a few days and providing my services as a house-painter. Before I left for here, though, Dan and I made a couple of MAPS visits to two of our sites. Quiet, quiet days, despite a fair bit of activity at Rock Ridge the last time we were there. It’s hard to know if dispersal is low due to poor breeding success this year or if we’ve just hit on a couple of poor days… we’re hoping the latter.

On our way out of the site at the end of our Rock Ridge visit I was waiting for Dan to finish wrestling with the canoe when a large insect buzzed in and landed on a twig not far from me. It turned out to be a cicada. I had my short lens on the camera and wasn’t able to get close enough for a shot suitable for making an ID with, unfortunately, but it’s an annual cicada of some species. Perhaps a dog-day cicada, like the one I discovered emerging from its larval exoskeleton a few years ago. Ordinarily these guys are pretty tough to spot as they hang on branches in the tree canopy and their loud buzz can be difficult to zero in on, so it was neat that this one was down at ground-level and easy to see, even if it flew off when I tried to step a bit closer. It feels, so far, like it’s been a good year for cicadas, as I’ve spotted quite a few of them. I wonder if their numbers actually are higher this year, and if so, whether that’s due to particular conditions of this year, or of the year that this year’s adults had been laid as eggs (they can spend two or three years in their larval stage before emerging from the soil to metamorphose into an adult).

As I was pulling my camera out, another insect came and perched on the same twig: a Slaty Skimmer, Libellula incesta. This individual or another nearby had actually scooped a deerfly from about my head and landed on my canoe paddle to eat it only moments earlier (which I find an interesting coincidence, as my only other photo of this species happens to be of an individual chowing down on a deerfly caught from around my head). Slaty Skimmers are one of my favourite dragonflies for that deep, velvet blue. I’d never noticed them where I grew up, and I haven’t spotted any at our current place, but they’re possibly the most common species at Rock Ridge right now.

Another mantisfly

mantisfly, Dicromantispa interrupta

Last summer I discovered a wasp-mimic mantisfly at Maplewood Bog, one of our MAPS stations. I’d never seen one of these strange-looking bugs in person before, but I recognized it from regular browsing of my insect field guide. A few nights ago I encountered another one, only the second I’ve ever seen – interestingly, the same night I got my second-ever Hologram Moth. This individual came to my moth sheet and was just resting there in front of the light.

This one’s a different species than last year’s, and in fact a different genus. Last year’s was a wasp mimic of the genus Climaciella. This individual is Dicromantispa interrupta. The second part of the name refers to the dark band that runs along the outer edge of the wing and is interrupted near its tip. As I noted last year, these insects are predatory and use their front legs just like praying mantises do. My Kaufman Guide to Insects makes the note that a sister species, D. sayi may come to lights and prey on other insects that are also attracted to them. This one showed little interest in the other bugs at the light, so far as I could tell. Perhaps it was simply content to sit and people-watch.

European Skippers

meadow and horses

I’ve recently been hired to survey a piece of land out near Carleton Place. I’m there to inventory their birds, but I find my attention regularly wandering to the many other interesting things I encounter while hiking the site. About half of the land area there is open field, which has been leased to a nearby farm and is lightly grazed by a herd of perhaps 20 horses. The gentle land use has helped maintain the site as a lush meadow full of wildflowers and rambling growth. Beautiful, diverse meadows like this aren’t very common; certainly the fields on our property lack this sort of verdant vegetation.

My surveys are intended particularly to discover whether Species at Risk are present. The meadow type doesn’t contain enough grass to be especially appealing to Bobolink, and there are only a couple pairs of Eastern Meadowlark, and it’s far too grassy to interest Common Nighthawk; there aren’t enough shrubs to draw in Golden-winged Warblers, and not enough of what shrubs there are are hawthorn to make it appropriate for Loggerhead Shrike. I suspect the list of Species at Risk will end up being a little on the thin side, which is too bad, because it’s the presence of those species that results in protection for all the rest of the species that use the site. And this is a beautiful site.

European Skippers on milkweed

On previous visits I’ve been there on overcast mornings, but this weekend was clear and warm. I started with the forested bits first, and by the time I made it out to the meadows, about three hours after sunrise, the vegetation was all drying off and the insects were perched at the top of the plants, absorbing the sunshine and preparing for an active day. As I walked through the thigh-high growth my passage stirred up clouds of small orange skippers – dozens of them at a time, floating lightly just above the flowers. I felt like I was walking through a fairy tale.

In many spots they clustered on the flowers – especially the milkweed, but also the Viper’s Bugloss. They seemed to be actively sipping on the nectar of the milkweed, though others simply rested on the stems of grass they perched on.

European Skippers on Timothy grasses

Every single one of them, or at least every single one that I looked at, was a European Skipper, Thymelicus lineola. These little butterflies are, as the name says, not native. They were introduced to North America around 1910, in a shipment of contaminated Timothy grass seed. Adults lay their eggs on the leaf-sheath or the seed heads of Timothy and a few other grass species. The butterflies spend the winter as eggs, the only North American skipper species to do so. As you might expect, eggs built to overwinter are particularly hardy, and European Skipper eggs will even survive modern seed-cleaning methods.

The species has spread on its own, but it’s been helped along by the distribution of contaminated Timothy seed. This site relates that during the building of the James Bay Highway in the 70s roadsides were stablized using imported grass seed, including contaminated Timothy, thus bringing the skipper to northern Ontario. From its initial introduction a century ago in London, Ontario, the species now ranges over nearly all of northeastern North America.

European Skippers on Viper's Bugloss

In our area there are only two species of skipper whose wings are unmarked orange, bordered in brown: the European and the Least Skipper. The latter has much broader borders and a slightly different body shape (if you’re the sort to look that closely). I’ve seen a number of sources that describe the European as often ridiculously abundant in good habitat, sometimes outnumbering all the other skippers at the site combined. It’s also pretty widespread, since Timothy grass is found so commonly in both agriculture and other contexts.

European Skippers on milkweed

Interestingly, it’s apparently possible to sex male and female European Skippers by the forewing pattern. Males are supposed to have a narrow black stigma, which is a marking roughly in the center of the wing. In looper moths it’s a spot, often hooked in shape. In European Skippers, it’s more like a thin, short dash that runs from just beyond the shoulder to the middle of the wing. I searched through all the individuals I took photos of and only found one that was clearly a male:

European Skipper male

The Frontenac Biothon: Part 1

campsite 6 at Little Salmon Lake

So as I said in my last post, this weekend I was in Frontenac Provincial Park participating in the Frontenac Biothon. Dan started the biothon last year with the intention of it being an annual fundraiser for his bird research and monitoring project, Frontenac Bird Studies. Dan is the only employee of FBS; I’m it’s only regular volunteer (he’s had a couple other people come to help out on a few occasions, but he doesn’t have a full established core of volunteers). It’s a small project with a correspondingly small budget, which makes fundraisers like this useful and valuable. The amount that we’ll raise through the biothon may not be much for a larger organization, but it goes a long way here.

Forest at campsite 6

Frontenac Provincial Park covers a huge area, more than 5200 hectares (nearly 13,000 acres), and there is only one official road going into it, at the south. There is camping in the park, but it’s all backcountry, and some of the sites are a pretty good hike in (a few are accessible by boat, if you have one, but even some of those require a fair amount of paddling to reach). This provides for some fabulously beautiful scenery at the camp site and a whole lot of privacy – no camp site contains more than four reservable units. The Park has been extremely generous and supportive of FBS and Dan’s research efforts, including the biothon, and we were able to reserve an entire camp site for the weekend of our biothon. We selected camp site 6, which is set at the north end of Little Salmon Lake. Aside from the park ranger who dropped by shortly after I arrived to service the outhouse, and a few people back at the parking lot as we were leaving on Sunday, I didn’t see a single other person all weekend, only our group of biothoners. Just another reason Frontenac is such a glorious park.

There was Dan and I, of course, but we also had two friends of ours up from the Toronto area to help out. They’d joined us last year, too, and now that Dan and I live some distance away this is the only time of year we usually get to see them, so it was great to have them out. We were missing one additional teammate this year who stayed at home with a newborn. Unfortunately, she was our designated Plant Expert, but the rest of us were determined to do our best in her absence.

Raven paddling in the shallows

Dan and the two guys all headed out to another part of the park early Saturday morning while I hiked in to the campsite to get started there. I arrived at the site mid-morning after an hour and a half hike from the parking lot. The park ranger who stopped by said I was welcome to let the dogs off leash while at the campsite to swim, since there was no one else they might bother, as long as they didn’t run off and leave the campsite. Raven was delighted by this. She spent a good chunk of the day paddling in the shallows, chasing minnows, or maybe just the shadows of ripples, I couldn’t really tell. As long as there’s water to paddle in, you can take Raven anywhere and she’ll be happy.

Jack, watching

Jack, meanwhile, is not yet so enamoured with water. He went down and checked it out, decided it wasn’t all that interesting, and retired to a patch of poison ivy to watch. The camp site opened up into a weedy, open bank that sloped down to the water’s edge. Unsurprisingly, almost half of it was covered in poison ivy, a plant that likes sunny, exposed forest edges. It’s a good thing that neither Dan nor I react to poison ivy. I sure hope the same is true for our friends; they weren’t complaining of extensive rashes on Sunday morning, at least.

caddisflies mating

All four of us have the most expertise in birds, but I have a fair bit of experience with insects and plants and was nominated as the biothoner in charge of those groups. While the park checklist does include plants, it doesn’t have insects, so I kept track of everything I saw in a notebook that I carried around with me all weekend. I marked taxonomic headers at the top of each page – “Birds”, “Butterflies”, “Dragonflies”, “Other Insects”, “Mammals”, “Plants”, etc – and then slowly started walking along the path from the campsite, writing down the names of each species I encountered in the appropriate spot. That first hour is a bit overwhelming, where you have to pause every step or two to write down six new names. But once you get all the common stuff listed, it gets easier, and you can start watching for new species. Your eye slides over all the poison ivy and raspberry cane and past the bumblebees and corporals to pick out the less common things. I carried my camera with me and took photos of stuff I didn’t know and needed to look up in my field guides later in the evening, or of things I found interesting.

Such as these mating caddisflies, one of the first photos I took Saturday morning. I don’t really know much about caddisfly ID other than to say that there are a lot more species of them than you’d think there were. At my moth sheets in the evening I’m always surprised at the variety. Some are quite tiny, while others are rather large. This pair fall into that latter group. Each was more than an inch long in body (obviously nearly double that when you include the antennae). I always find observing behaviours interesting, so this mating pair caught my eye more than a single individual might have.

shield beetle

A common viney plant that I think was Hedge Bindweed was riddled with holes. The holes were all in the middles of the leaves, rather than cut from the edges, which usually points to adult leaf beetles rather than caterpillars, in my experience. Sure enough, after turning over half a dozen leaves I discovered this guy. I believe it’s a Mottled Tortoise Beetle, Deloyala guttata, which is a relatively common and widespread tortoise beetle. Tortoise beetles typically feed on members of the morning glory family, of which Hedge Bindweed is a part.

11-1014 - Antaeotricha leucillana - Pale Gray Bird-dropping Moth

In the shaded area around the camping pads I found this guy, the first moth of the biothon for me (if you don’t include all the pale flutterers disturbed from the ground but not positively ID’d while I hiked in). Perched in plain site on the upper side of a leaf, it was doing its best to mimic a bird dropping. It is, in fact, named the Pale Gray Bird-dropping Moth (Antaeotricha leucillana), which is appropriate. I’ve got these from time to time at my sheets, but it’s always interesting to encounter moths in their natural habitat. They seem different somehow, as if out of context, although really it’s the blacklight and sheet that are out of the moth’s natural context.

Calico Pennant

In the grasses along the sloping banks of the lake there were many dragonflies. Most of them were Chalk-fronted Corporals or Common Whitetails, but I paused to check each one I saw just in case. In doing so I turned up this individual, which I believe is an immature male Calico Pennant. I tend to forget about the pennants, I don’t know why. Every time I find one I’m excited all over again. A pennant! Wow! As it turned out, when I visited some meadow habitat on Sunday I found lots of pennants cruising over the grass there, but this first one got me excited.

Swamp Loosestrife

Also down along the shore were a number of these plants. They were growing in patches, at the base of the rocks that I imagine would be near the high-water mark. The water was well below that now, but I figured they were water species of some sort. The flowers seemed pretty distinctive and I thought it would be easy to find a match in my wildflower guide, but no luck. Polling my knowledgable Facebook friends later, upon our return, this turns out to be Tufted Loosestrife, Lysimachia thyrsiflora. I did think the leaves had a loosestrifey look to them, but the flowers were completely throwing me off.

clubtail attacking whiteface

Continuing along the shore a bit farther, I was stopped by a sudden rattling of insect wings. A pair of dragonflies fell from the air to the ground just in front of me. At first I thought it was two trying to mate, but peering closer it seemed to be two different species: what I took to be a clubtail and a whiteface. They wrestled on the ground for a few moments and once I decided that they weren’t a male and female of the same species I thought that it must be the larger one was trying to kill and eat the smaller one. I don’t know if he found the smaller one too much to handle, or if I was misinterpreting what was going on, but after some struggle the smaller one managed to get away and fly off. The only dragonfly that I know will attack other dragonflies nearly its own size is the Dragonhunter, but I don’t think that’s what this one is. I need to invest in a better odonate guide.

All that before lunchtime! I have quite a few photos that I’d really like to share, so I think I’ll wrap up there for today. This will probably need to be at least four installments to fit them all in – more tomorrow!

If you’re interested in supporting FBS through our biothon, we’d be extremely grateful for your donation! All donations over $10 are tax-creditable and will receive a receipt for this purpose. More info at the Frontenac Biothon page, or donate through Paypal below. Thank you!

Frontenac Biothon

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