Tracking Tigers
July 23rd, 2007 by Kelley
Tiger beetles, that is…
Found a whole bunch of tiger beetle love going on today. She is actually laying eggs in the sandy soil while the male guards her.
July 23rd, 2007 by Kelley
Tiger beetles, that is…
Found a whole bunch of tiger beetle love going on today. She is actually laying eggs in the sandy soil while the male guards her.
July 21st, 2007 by Kelley
I’m still out in NY, but luckily I have a husband who is nice enough to drive out and spend the weekend with me. I made the poor guy come work with me today but I at least gave him a toy (the new Nikon he bought me) to play with
Here are some pictures he took today while at the field site.
July 15th, 2007 by Kelley
Caught in the act, Ornate Snipe Flies (Chrysopilus ornatus).
Soldier Fly, Hedriodiscus spp.
A Treehopper (Ceresa spp.)
Tiger Swallowtail (Papilio spp.)
Couldn’t tell you which Mayfly this is, but I like those big white eyes.
July 11th, 2007 by Kelley
…lots of good finds.
We found a new resident in one of our insect traps today, a flying squirrel decided to make a home out of the top of the trap. This is the first time I have ever seen a flying squirrel…and it was pretty darn cute.
And speaking of pretty darn cute, I almost stepped on this little toad that was about the size of my thumbnail.
It was a bugger’s paradise yesterday…
This next insect is actually a fly (Copodidae) that mimics a wasp in order to avoid predation. The antennae, proboscis, and halteres give it away as a fly.
This last one is one of my favorite groups of insects, a horse fly. Not sure on the species though, probably Hybomitra spp.
July 7th, 2007 by Kelley
Someone contacted me this week through the website in order to get greenhead horse fly photos to publish in a magazine in Delaware. The ones I have on the website are not high enough resolution so I set out to the salt marsh last night and today in search of some new photos for this contact.
I forgot how alive the salt marsh makes me feel. Here are some photos from my time out there.
Some weevil love
A flower cerambycid (Strangalia spp.)
As far as the birds go, can’t go to the salt marsh without seeing the osprey. The babies are getting big though, don’t you think?
I’m not sure which bird this is, any ideas?
Now I am off to NY for several weeks for work…with camera in tow.
July 6th, 2007 by Kelley
June 30th, 2007 by Kelley
First of all, let me just say that I, hands down, heard the most annoying cell phone ring tone EVER while in Mexico. One of our drivers had a baby screaming, or crying, or maybe it was laughing (??) as his ring tone for his phone. Lets just say that man gets a lot of phone calls in a short period of time. One would hope that it is at least a recording of one of his own kids…
The ruins in Coba are set back in the jungle. The ruins date 600-900 AD and it is estimated to have had one of the largest populations of ancient Mayan cities (around 50,000 people). The grand pyramid (Nohoch Mul) at Coba is the only ruin that people are allowed to climb in the Yucatan and once at the top you get an amazing view over the jungle canopy. There are actually only a few ruins that have been excavated and uncovered at Coba, the rest (an estimated 6,000) are still buried under centuries of jungle overgrowth.
The tour guide mentioned Mel Gibson’s new movie, Acocalypto at one point. He claimed that the movie was actually fairly accurate to the Mayan Kingdom. He said that the only thing that was blatantly wrong was that at one point in the movie when the priest sacrifices one of the victims, the movie shows the priest being clean when in reality he would have been very bloody from the decapitation. Decapitation sacrifices were so central to the Mayan culture that there are skull carvings and sacrifice ritual carvings throughout the ruins.
I was actually surprised by the smell of the jungle. It wreaks. It smells like rotting…fruit, I guess. The amount of birds singing was overwhelming and equally frustrating because I could rarely spot them. I never realized how hard it would be to try to bird through thick jungle canopies. I probably only saw 10% of the different birds that I could hear singing in the canopy.
The picture below is of a weaver on his nest.
Equally disappointing was the lack of insect abundance that I could see. The only thing flying around was butterflies, which made the ruins seem somewhat magical. But other than that, I definitely missed the presence of flies (which are definitely abundant in North American forests during the day), beetles, parasitoids, and the like. I have a sneaking suspicion though that if I had returned to the jungle at night, it would be a completely different insect story being told. Most insects probably retreat during the day under the debris on the jungle floor avoiding the heat or are high up hiding in the canopy.
The lepidopteran below is mimicking a dead leaf as part of its natural defense against predation.
I’m not sure what species of caterpillars these are, but I have solicited the help of a friend who may know and will fill y’all in soon.
This last picture is of a termite nest up in the canopy.
June 27th, 2007 by Kelley
Josh and I went horseback riding today…and the guides said it would be ‘though the jungles, mangroves, and out to the beach’. I don’t recall going through anything that jumped out as being a “jungle”, which made me come back to the hotel and look up the definition of a jungle. In my mind I picture thick vegetation and more rain forest-y type habitats. But according to Wikipedia, a jungle is “a dense forest in a hot climate”. Its also explained as such:
The word jungle originates from a Sanskrit word jangala, meaning “desert”. In many languages of the Indian subcontinent, including Indian English, it is generally used to refer to any wild, untended or uncultivated land, including forest, scrub, or desert landscapes.
A ‘desert’ is something I definitely felt on the ride. So that being the case, I definitely went through a hot climatic zone through some scrub forest. Once at the beach some people actually went swimming with their horses…not me though, gotta protect the camera.
Here are some selected photos from the day.
A tropical mockingbird
Some unidentified species of Ibis, the picture kind of sucks but give a girl some credit, I was trying to wrangle my horse with one hand while taking the photo with the other hand.
A close-up of a butterfly’s head.
I didn’t purposely put up a blurry photo of Japanese decor, there is a dragonfly in the right hand side of the photo.
Here is the same species of buprestid that I took a picture of the first day…this time in natural light.
A longhorn beetle
And finally, a leaf beetle (Chrysomelidae)…and as an added perk, it is demonstrating ‘reflex bleeding’ in its leg joints. The leaf beetle family uses this behavior as a defense mechanism.
Oh, and apparently the hotel staff do not have enough to do in a day because look at what they made us out of towels when they came to clean the room yesterday. Not gonna lie, it was kind of creepy.