Sunday, July 1, 2012

Down by the parsnip

There is only one patch of wild parsnip in any of the naturalization areas. Three, 6ft tall plants are in the 2010 planting area by the raspberries. In one respect it is a bit like the Mara river on the Serengeti: it is a very convenient spot to photograph the wildlife.

Typocerus velitinus (Banded longhorn)


Orthops scutellatus (Carrot Plant Bug)


Brachiacantha ursina (Orange-spotted Lady Beetle)


Depressaria pastinacella (Parsnip Webworm Moth)


Podisus nymph (Spined Soldier Bug)


Polistes fuscatus (Northern Paper Wasp)


Cosmopepla lintneriana (Twice-Stabbed Stink Bug)


Eupithecia miserulata (An Inchworm)


Misumena vatia (Goldenrod Crab Spider)


A mystery caterpillar


This last caterpillar is a bit of a mystery. It is all over the wild parsnips and behaves much like a parsnip webworm. Even though it has quite distinctive markings I wasn't able to find it in the bug guide or elsewhere on the web. It is probably the caterpillar for some small, nondescript moth.

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