Saturday, August 17, 2019

Ramble Report August 15 2019


Today's Ramble was led by Dale Hoyt.
Here's the link to Don's Facebook album for today's Ramble. (All the photos in this post are compliments of Don, unless otherwise credited.)
Today's post was written by Dale Hoyt.
Today’s Focus: Learning to identify some kinds of pollinators (for participation in the Great Georgia Pollinator Census, Aug. 23, 24.)
35 Ramblers met today.
Announcement: Lauren told us that August 23 and 24 are the dates for the Great Georgia Pollinator Census.  UGA and the Bot Garden will be participating.  The Nature Ramblers will be contributing to this citizen science effort.  The August 22 Nature Ramble will be a dry run/learning experience to get the Ramblers ready for their participation.  Details of the census are available at this link. The guide can be downloaded and the census sheet printed. Participation is voluntary and can be done in your own garden or a public place like the State Botanical Garden. Registration is not necessary.

Today's reading: Catherine read a passage from The Naturalist's Notebook: Tracking Changes in the Natural World Around You by Nathaniel T. Wheelwright and Bernd Heinrich

What is a naturalist?

By naturalist, we simply mean someone who is attuned to and enthusiastic about the natural world. A naturalist can be a newcomer to nature or an expert in the science of ecology.  What makes natural history a bit different from ecology (a field of biology sometimes defined as "scientific natural history") is that naturalists unabashedly blend firsthand knowledge of nature with a personal affection for it that goes beyond science. In the words of writer Richard Mabey, natural history is "a meeting place for wild life and human feeling."
If you enjoy collecting seashells, pressing flowers, or keeping a list of the birds that you have identified, you are already a naturalist.  If you experiment each spring with where and when to plant your vegetable crops, if you are curious about the different insects feeding in your garden, if you can recognize the songs of frogs calling in a nearby pond, you are already a naturalist.

A Cicada (L) and Luna Moth (R)
(click to enlarge)
Show and Tell: Avis brought us a deceased cicada and male luna moth. All of us have heard cicadas but surprisingly few have actually seen an adult. One species produces that deafening chorus you hear for a short period of time after sunset, while other kinds chorus during the day.

Today's route: We headed straight to the Herb and Physic Garden and then to the Freedom Plaza.  The usual social hour followed at the CafĂ© Botanica.

Today’s Ramble was a little different from our usual. We hoped to find examples of each of the eight categories of insect pollinators being counted in the Great Georgia Pollinator Census:
Bumble Bees, Honey Bees, Small Bees, Carpenter Bees, Wasps, Flies, Butterflies/Moths and other insects. 

Note: Don and I do our best to identify the animals we find on our rambles, but often we can't get all the way down to the species level. I think it's better to not pretend that we know more than we do and be honest when we just recognize something at the level of order or family. If you think we have mis-identified anything please let us know.

Identification tips
Bumble Bees
smaller than Carpenter Bees.
Very fuzzy.
Black and yellow in color.
Amount of yellow is variable.
Top of the abdomen is fuzzy, with short bristles (not smooth and shiny like a Carpenter Bee) .
Usually spend a lot of time at a flower before moving on.

Bumble Bee; notice how fuzzy both the thorax (yellow part) and the abdomen (black with yellow spot) are.
(click to enlarge)
Honey Bees
Smaller than Bumble Bees and not as fuzzy.
Not black and yellow.
Abdomen with yellow, orange or tan cross bands that alternate with black cross bands.
Pollen baskets on hind legs, noticeable when carrying a lot of pollen.
A Honey Bee looting nectar. A Carpenter Bee cut a slit in the base of the blue flower to get access to the nectar. The Honey Bee is taking advantage of the easy entry to the nectar source.
(click to enlarge)
Small Bees
Any other kind of bee smaller than a honey bee.
Variable in size and color.
Some have body parts that are metallic green.

Sunflower Bee
(click to enlarge)

A small halictid bee (Family Halictidae)
(click to enlarge)

Another unidentified small bee.
(click to enlarge)

Unidentified small bee with lots of pollen.
(click to enlarge)

Unidentified small bee showing the mass of pollen collected on its belly.
(click to enlarge)
Carpenter Bees
Very large, our largest Bee.
Look like a large Bumble Bee.
Top of abdomen not fuzzy; smooth, shining black.
A Carpenter Bee on Spotted Beebalm.
(click to enlarge)

Carpenter Bee - the abdomen is dark and shiny.
(click to enlarge)

Carpenter Bee nectaring on Mountain Mint. Notice the dark, shining abdomen.
(click to enlarge)
Wasps
Various sizes.
Many have narrow, thread-like waist.
Others lack the long waist.
Not fuzzy; move rapidly from flower to flower.
A scoliid wasp; these parasitize scarabid beetle larvae.
(click to enlarge)

Large Red Wasp
(click to enlarge)

A Mason Wasp; builds a clay jug and provisions it with paralyzed spiders.
(click to enlarge)

Great Black Wasp hunts katydids and crickets, stings them and carries them to its nest, a burrow dug by the wasp herself. She lays an egg on the paralyzed prey and seals the burrow. The larva eats the prey.
(click to enlarge)

Unidentified wasp
(click to enlarge)
Flies
Example: House Fly.
Many flies hold their wings horizontally and pointed backward, with the wing tips further apart that their point of attachment, like a swept-wing fighter jet plane.
Some kinds of flies that visit flowers can hover in midair like a hummingbird.
These “hover flies” look like bees or wasps – they have black and yellow crossbands.
They are bee-mimics but have no stinger
They visit flowers to eat pollen
A Bee Fly, family Bombyliidae. Bee Flies are usually fuzzy while Hover Flies are usually not fuzzy.
(click to enlarge)

A tachinid fly, family Tachinidae. Tachinids are very bristly. Their larvae are parasitic on other insects.
(click to enlarge)
Butterflies/Moths
You all know what butterflies look like. This category includes Skippers.
A Tiger Swallowtail nectaring on Joe Pye weed.
(click to enlarge)

A Skipper, a type of usually small butterfly.
(click to enlarge)

Another Skipper in a typical basking pose (hind wings held horizontally, forewings held at a small angle above the back).
(click to enlarge)
Other insects
You may find other kinds of insects on or near flowers. These may be true bugs, beetles or other insects that are not known to normally pollinate flowers. For example, Dragonflies may perch on flowers but they are not there for the pollen or the nectar.

Bonus insect: Don noticed that the leaves of an Elm tree were being eaten and found the culprit: an Elm Sawfly larva. Sawfly larvae look a lot like caterpillars, but are related to the wasps, bees and ants of the insect order Hymenoptera. The caterpillars are feeding on the softer tissue between the veins in the Elm leaves.
Feeding by the Elm Sawfly larva is confined to the leaf tissue between the veins.
(click to enlarge)

Here is the culprit, the Elm Sawfly caterpillar.
(click to enlarge)
SUMMARY OF OBSERVED SPECIES
Robber Fly
Family Asilidae
Basil
Ocimum sp.
Mint
Mentha sp.
Bee Fly
Hemipenthes sp.
Bumblebee
Bombus sp.
Rosemary
Rosmarinus sp.
Syrphid Fly
Family Syrphidae
Eastern Tiger Swallowtail
Papilo glaucus
Joe Pye Weed
Eutrochium fistulosum
Small Black Bee
Hymenoptera: Apidae
Great Black Wasp
Sphex pensylvanicus
Eared Coneflower
Rudbeckia auriculata
Sunflower bee
Svastra obliqua
Double-banded Scoliid Wasp
Scolia bicincta
Spotted Beebalm
Monarda punctata
Eastern Carpenter Bee
Xylocopa virginica
Large Red Wasp
Sphex habenus
Asian Multicolored Lady Beetle
Harmonia axyridis
Tachinid Fly
Diptera: Tachinidae
Halictid Bees, various
Hymenoptera: Halictidae
Large black wasp with red legs,
Hymenoptera: Vespidae
Elm Sawfly (caterpillar)
Cimbex americana
Elm
Ulmus sp.