Here's what I saw on that tree today:
Copper underwing caterpillar
Sawfly larva
Oak galls (which have insect larvae developing inside them)
This is what it looks like inside, by the way. Fluffier than you might expect.
Different species of sawfly larva
This leaf was rolled up into a hideaway by the caterpillar whose head you can just barely see peeking out toward the lower right
All over the branches were leaves with bits rolled up like this; my brief research tells me that it is probably created by an oak leafrolling weevil. It lays its eggs inside these rolls.
There were ants on the tree, too, and a couple of spiders that you'll see below. Yesterday there were more species of insects on the tree, including the Backyard Bug of the Day.
And speaking of Backyard Bugs of the Day...
Backyard Co-Bug of the Day #1:
Leaf beetle, species Chalepus walshii
Backyard Co-Bug of the Day #2:
Katydid nymph
Backyard Co-Bug of the Day #3:
Scorpion fly, male. It doesn't sting, it just looks like it has a scorpion tail.
Other Bugs:
Ants on raspberry blossoms
Crane fly
These pink speckles appear on the leaves of this tree most years. For a long time I assumed they were insect eggs of some kind, but I think they are actually some kind of fungus.
Some kind of longhorn flower beetle. It's not alone in that flower cluster...
There was another beetle in there, too.
Assassin bug with prey, which I think is a sawfly.
This is the first time this shrub has flowered, and I don't know what it is, but it was pretty popular with insects:
Ants and the aphids they are herding
Hopper nymph
Looper caterpillar
Arachnid Appreciation:
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These first two spiders were on the oak tree:
Harvestman with a lot of parasitic mites
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