Okay, no, I don't hate butterflies. I think they're marvelous. I plant things in my backyard just so please them, and not because I think it will get me good photos (HA!), but because I like them and want them to thrive. I have allowed the milkweed to take over a part of the small area of my backyard that was designated to be a lawn, just so the butterflies in general will have food, and the monarchs will have their host plant to lay their eggs. I get no gratitude from the butterflies for this, feckless pack of ingrates. But... sigh... I love butterflies.
Backyard Mammal of the Day:
Raccoons are not, as often reported, strictly nocturnal.
Backyard Bug of the Day:
Fish fly. I went for a long bug walk today, lingering outside with my camera for a couple of hours, and the Backyard Bug of the Day is a bug that was on the porch when we got home after going out in the evening.
Other Bugs:
Tent caterpillar. I can't remember if this is an eastern or a forest tent caterpillar. I'll look it up later if I have the time.
Leaf hoppers
I have been on the lookout for this. I usually start seeing them around the time the clematis blooms, and the clematis is blooming. This is a katydid nymph. It did not want to have its picture taken. One great thing about insect nymphs is that they don't have wings, so they can't fly away when you try to take their picture. But some of them, katydids in particular, can hop.
Another species of katydid nymph. I have seen three, I think, in the last two days, possibly four, because I saw another one today, but I wasn't able to see it close enough to know for sure.
A better picture of the one above.
Flower longhorn beetle
Bumblebee
Looper caterpillar
I found these eggs:
I don't know what they are, but they look like snowberry clearwing moth eggs, which is interesting because I have not seen any snowberry clearwing moths this year. But I am not outside all of the time, I probably miss a million bugs every day. They are gorgeous eggs, like tiny pearls.
I spotted this:
Discarded exoskeleton from an insect molt...
... possibly from this assassin bug on the leaf below?
There are a lot of sawfly larvae in the backyard at the moment–I saw 5 species today:
I saw two tortoise beetles today. This year I have seen more of them than I ever have before.
Looper caterpillar pretending to be a twig
Cranefly
The only Lepidopteran that cooperated with me on my bug walk
Stilt-legged bug
Closer look
And on the subject of meddling with other species' eggs, there's an ant in the leftovers of the egg mass from the white marked tussock moths.
Other Bugs From the Porches Tonight:
Caddisfly
A small selection of moths
I have never seen this moth before, so I have decided that it is now Backyard Co-Bug of the Day, #2:
Arachnid Appreciation:
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Usually if I happen to get a picture of a brown lacewing I make it Backyard bug of the Day. However, since this jumping spider found it first...
I found this interesting scene:
At first I thought this was two spiders, or a spider and its prey, but when I came close with the camera...
... the spider scurried up on top of the leaf, and I saw that what was left behind was an exoskeleton, most likely belonging to the spider.
Then when I took this shot I thought at first that it was missing a back leg on the left, but then I realized it is there, but small and pale, and it occurred to me that maybe the spider just molted, and that leg hasn't quite filled out yet.
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