The Moth and Me #12

The latest edition of The Moth and Me, #12, is up over at The Skeptical Moth. Chris has done a great job compiling the varied posts, in the process reflecting on his own “mothing journey”. You should, at the very least, head over to check out this month’s TMaM – but while you’re there, spend some time browsing some of Chris’s other excellent content, too!

TMaM heads to Today in NJ Birding History for edition #13 – and despite convention, I consider 13 to be a lucky number, so make sure you remember to participate in what will surely be an outstanding edition! Send your submission to Jennifer (ammodramus88 AT gmail.com) or to myself (canadianowlet AT gmail.com) by July 13.

We’re looking for hosts for August and beyond! It’s easy and fun, and only takes an hour or two (or several, if you’re the type to go crazy with it…). If you’re interested in hosting, send me an email indicating what month you’d like to sign up for.

Hatching a pupa

pupa

Two weeks ago, the same weekend Dan walked back with me to show me the jewelwings, he pointed out what he thought was a chrysalis that he’d spotted dangling from the branch of a shrub alongside the path. (This was the primary purpose of the expedition; the jewelwings were a nice addition.) When I stooped down for a closer look, it turned out not to be a chrysalis at all, but actually the pupa of a moth that had slipped out of its silken cocoon. (Butterflies, when they pupate, form hard-shelled cases without any additional protection, while moths usually form soft-shelled pupae that they encase in a cocoon spun with silk fibres, sometimes incorporating other material such as leaves.) The fibres of the cocoon were still affixed to the branch, but now the pupa dangled delicately from one end. From rain, perhaps, or other weather effects?

pupa in mason jar for rearing

I took a few photos of it in situ, and then (at Dan’s suggestion) carefully broke the branch off to bring it back to the house to try to rear it and see what was inside. I placed the twig into a large, clear mason jar, crumpling up a tissue and placing it underneath one end so that the pupa would be elevated from the floor of the jar, aware that the moth would need room to be able to stretch its wings out as they dried. I covered the top with cling wrap to keep the moth inside until I found it, poking half a dozen holes into it with the tip of a pen to allow air circulation. And then I put it on the kitchen counter and waited.

[prob] Olethreutes albiciliana

Four days later when I came home from work, Dan pointed out a moth inside the jar. But it wasn’t the moth I was expecting to be inside the jar. Not that I had any idea, really, what species was inside the cocoon, but I did know that as the pupa was about 15mm (3/4″), the moth inside it would also need to be at least that big. The moth fluttering about the jar now, scurrying over the cling wrap and around the glass walls, was just a little micro, less than a centimeter (1/2″) long. I jarred it and placed in the fridge to cool, with the intention of slowing it enough that I might be able to manage a decent photo to identify it. I eventually got one through the clear plastic of the container, but it was sufficient to pick out a probable ID: Olethreutes albiciliana, a member of the family Tortricidae for which there is several records but no detailed life history information on the web. The records I’ve found have been for Alberta, Ontario, Indiana, Massachusetts and Vermont, suggesting it’s primarily a northeastern species perhaps extending west through the Boreal. I don’t recognize the plant it was attached to, but the substrate the caterpillar pupates on isn’t necessarily the same one it was feeding on.

Pupal case of [prob] Olethreutes albiciliana

A closer look at the plant revealed this tiny pupal case affixed to the twig at the base of some leaves. It looks a bit like a mantis or some other bug, but the long hooked “arms” are just bits of the pupa that split along thinner creases in the shell when the moth forced its way out, probably where the pupa traced the antennae (if you look closely at the top photo you might see that the pupa clearly shows an abdomen, two sings wrapped around the front, and the antennae folded down against the body in front of the wings. It even sort of shows the eyes, though they’re harder to see). It’s funny that I hadn’t even noticed this one when I broke the twig off and brought it inside.

pupa with cap sawn off by Ichneumonid parasite

It was a longer wait for the original pupa to “hatch”. Finally, when I came home from work yesterday afternoon, two weeks after collecting it, the top of the shell had been neatly popped off and lay on the floor of the jar.

And running around the mouth of the jar, under the cling wrap trying to find a way out, was the adult that had emerged from it. But it wasn’t a moth at all. It was a wasp!

[prob] Ichneumon annulatorius

I chilled this guy, too, and then took a couple of photos which I posted to BugGuide. The long, narrow body and antennae identify the wasp as a member of the family Ichneumonidae, a group of wasps that parasitize the larvae of other insects, primarily lepidoptera (moths and butterflies) and beetles. The expert on BugGuide placed it in the subfamily Ichneumoninae, and I browsed through the BugGuide catalogue till I found a possible match: Ichneumon annulatorius, based on thorax and leg markings and lack of white on the antennae. This species also seems to be a northeastern species, based on the locations of specimens submitted to BugGuide for ID.

This PDF had some useful information about the group, including the species I. annulatorius. The wasps emerge and mate during the summer and fall. The females then spend the winter hidden under loose bark or sometimes moss on trees or logs. In the spring, they begin searching for a suitable lepidopteran host, either caterpillars or newly-formed pupae, and lay their eggs, fertilized using the sperm they’d stored over the winter. The wasp larva develops in the pupa and emerges a few weeks later to start the cycle again.

This individual is a male, as it lacks a long, thin ovipositor at the tip of its abdomen. After I’d got my couple of photos I let him go so he could find himself a female. Interestingly, though, the paper notes, “Specimens may also be held for months at room temperature by supplying ample water and nutrients in the form of a 50/50 honey/water mixture.” If you think of the amount of time between when a female would have emerged from her host pupa in the summer, to when she lays her eggs the following spring, they actually have a reasonably long lifespan, for an insect. Although I don’t think the males sting, lacking the ovipositor (which is the organ that stingers are modified from), it’s hard to think they’d make very good pets.

The Moth and Me #11

The Moth and Me #11 is now up over at Beetles in the Bush. Ted only hosted his first carnival a few months ago, but he’s an old pro at it now. His moth carnival is an excellent installment, taxonomically organized with great additional information about each of the groups highlighted. This month’s edition contains 15 entries from 9 contributors, and is definitely worth a read – you’ll learn something new just from reading through Ted’s post, even before following the links to all the others. Check it out!

TMaM is headed to The Skeptical Moth for the June edition. Send Chris or myself (canadianowlet [at] gmail [dot] com) your submissions by June 13.

Georgian Prominent

Georgian Prominent, Hyperaeschra georgica

I discovered this moth tucked into the loops of the mistnet at the banding station a couple of days ago. It was tucked underneath on one of the lower loops and I almost missed it as we walked by on our round to check the nets. There are a few species of moth which are regularly encountered during daylight hours, and I had actually been seeing a few of these about, fluttering from spot to spot in a slow, un-butterfly-like manner. This one doesn’t fall into that category, though, and I was surprised, and delighted, to spot it there.

The species is Georgian Prominent, Hyperaeschra georgica. The prominents (family Notodontidae) are all mostly thick-bodied, often fuzzy moths that usually rest with their wings curled around their abdomen or tented over their back such that their shape is raised from the surface they’re resting on (compared to other moths that keep their wings spread and so are flat against the surface). For whatever reason, the prominents are among my favourite groups of moths.

Georgian Prominent, Hyperaeschra georgica

The Georgian is a fairly widespread species, found through most of the continent except the Pacific Northwest. The caterpillars feed on various species of oak, and there’s hardly a corner of the continent that’s without some sort of Quercus species. Around here these moths will be on the wing from around now through mid-summer, though they’ll have a longer flight season in the south of their range.

I gently plucked it from the loop in order to get a better photo, but the contact woke it up and it fluttered from my hand to the ground. After a few more shots, I picked it up and placed it in some shrubs where it would have some protection from birds until night fell.

The Moth and Me #10 – Down to the letter

A is for April, and new moths each day;
B is for busy, that keeps us away;
C is for common, but colourful, too;
D is for dozens, old friends and new;
E is for empty, hatched out last night;
F is for flashy, in black, orange and white;
G is for green-eyed, a harlequin show;
H is for headless, face curled below;
I is for interest, look closer at these;
J is for joyful, it’s now E.S.T.;
K is for knowledge for folks in UK;
L is for locals, don’t wait long, do they?
M is for moth club, each week in the park;
N is for new moths that fly in the dark;
O is for outfit with gear that you need;
P is for publish, great words we can read;
Q is for quakers, and others besides;
R is for rain moths, of startling size;
S is for surveys (go out and have fun!);
T is for toxic, enjoying the sun;
U is for under the stars with hot toddies;
V is for velvety fur-thickened bodies;
W is for welcome, a chance to say hi;
X is for xenos, for strangers dropped by;
Y is for yawning – that’s all for tonight;
Z is for zillion more moths yet to sight.

The next The Moth and Me will be hosted by Ted at Beetles in the Bushsend him your posts by May 13th for inclusion in the next edition!

And don’t forget to join in on May 15th for National Moth Night. If you’re in the UK, submit your results to the official National Moth Night database. And though the rest of us can’t submit our results, we can still go out and see what we get! Perhaps invite a few friends over, or spend time with the kids – marvel over the incredible diversity (May is a great time for moths) but most of all, have fun!