Saturday, August 31, 2024

Down in the Garden!

Steller's Jay in the Rain - Cyanocitta stelleri

Just a week ago it rained again! This time we got 3/4's of an inch of rain and everything got well soaked! Walking in the rain, listening to the sound of heavy rain on the roof, and smelling the wonderful damp-earth fragrance filled my day with joy! What a miracle! Especially at this time of year when everything is so dry, and forest fires are on everyone's mind.  Fingers crossed that more rain comes again in the near future! 

Down in our garden so much is happening! Lots of butterflies and tons of insects are still feeding on the flowers! Reptiles, especially lizards, are abundant right now, while the daytime temps are still warm. Some of the sunflowers are going to seed, and new birds have arrived to feast! Year-round residents, such as Steller's Jays, are also enjoying the abundance of seeds!

Steller's Jay - Cyanocitta stelleri

Steller's Jays are quite acrobatic while feeding on Sunflower seeds! They tip upside-down, leap up from the ground to peck at seeds, and sometimes perch on a stem with their heads twisted at odd angles to get seeds! It's quite amusing to watch them!

Lesser Goldfinch (juvenile) - Carduelis psaltria

There are lots of Lesser Goldfinches gleaning sunflower seeds down in our garden. More keep showing up every week! Males, females, and a few juveniles have been weekly visitors. It seems that family members stick together in loose groups, while they're feeding in our garden. I love to hear their constant, sweet "beeping"!  When the temps get cooler, they will migrate down to the foothills and valleys of California for the winter. 


Lesser Goldfinch (female) - Carduelis psaltria

Lesser Goldfinches usually have 2 broods a year, sometimes even three!  These beautiful little birds have their babies later in the year than most songbirds. They time the hatching, and subsequent fledging of their nestlings to match this time of year, when seeds are newly available.

Lesser Goldfinch (male) - Carduelis psaltria

Goldfinch diet is mainly seeds, but they will also eat berries, tree buds, and small insects. They always travel in small to largish flocks. The black cap easily distinguishes the male from the female Lesser Goldfinch.

Western Tiger Swallowtail - Papilio rutulus rutulus

The Western Swallowtail Butterflies have been in our garden for a few months now! Other butterfly species have come and gone, but the Swallowtails are still here! It turns out that our neighborhood has everything that the Swallowtails prefer!

-The favored habitat for adult Swallowtails is woodlands near rivers and streams, just what our neighborhood is! 
-Swallowtails feed on the nectar of many flowers, including the Zinnias in our garden! 
-Male Swallowtails patrol canyons and hilltops for females, and our garden is in a canyon! 
-After mating the females will lay eggs on the leaves of Cottonwoods, Aspen, willows, wild cherry, and Ash.  We have a few Cottonwood trees and LOTS of willows in our neighborhood! The caterpillars feed on the leaves of these plants, then overwinter in a chrysalis.

No wonder the Swallowtails have been sticking around!

Achemon Sphinx Moth - Eummorpha achemon

In my neighbor's grape arbor I was surprised to find a reddish, large caterpillar this week! inaturalist.org identified it as a Achemon Sphinx Moth caterpillar, that feeds on grape vines!  Once it is fully grown, the caterpillar will pupate in an underground burrow. It will emerge as an adult in the spring, that might feed on the nectar from the phlox flowers in our garden! I have never seen anything like it!  I've never even seen an adult Achemon Sphinx Moth! How cool!

Common Aerial Yellow Jacket nest - Dolichovespula arenaria

Down the road from our garden is a Common Aerial Yellow Jacket nest. Compared to ground yellowjackets, common aerial yellowjackets are less aggressive and do not have the same preference for meat. There are about 20 species of social wasps in North America. These wasps are in the family Vespidae and typically fall into three groups: yellowjackets, hornets and common paper wasps. The following information is from the website https://genent.cals.ncsu.edu.

"Eusocial behavior among wasps is found only in certain members of the family Vespidae. These insects are commonly called paper wasps, hornets, and yellowjackets. They build communal nests by mixing wood fibers with saliva to form a paper-like material that can be molded into brood cells and other nest components. The brood comb (cells where larvae are reared) is always constructed like an inverted umbrella with open ends of the hexagonal cells facing downward. Workers usually cling to the underside of the comb as they guard the nest, feed the larvae, and perform other housekeeping chores. All social wasps are carnivores; their prey consists mostly of caterpillars and flies. The wasps chew up their victims’ bodies into a paste that can be fed to their larvae and, in return, the larvae produce a nutritional syrup that is consumed by the adults. A small colony of 200 yellowjackets may kill and eat about 5000 caterpillars over the course of a summer."

Larva chambers and exterior "paper" from an aerial paper wasp nest

Here is more information than you need about yellow jacket wasps, but I find it fascinating!  It is from the website at https://georgiawildlife.com/its-yellow-jacket-time.

"Throughout most of the summer, yellow jackets spend much of their time hunting spiders, caterpillars, flies and other invertebrates. It has been estimated that yellow jackets are capable of capturing more than 2 pounds of insects from a 2,000-square-foot garden plot. This member of the wasp family also scavenges everything from dead worms and insects to road-killed animals and other carrion.

The yellow jacket is a social insect that lives in colonies consisting of a queen, infertile female workers and males. The queen is much larger than the other colony members, reaching about three-quarters of an inch in length. She is also the only member of the colony that is capable of overwintering.

Once the queen emerges from her winter sanctuary, her first task is to find a suitable place to establish a nest. Most often, she selects an abandoned rodent burrow or other hole in the ground. Occasionally, yellow jackets will also nest in buildings, abandoned vehicles and hollow trees. Often the potential nesting sites are in our gardens or around tree trunks and the like.

Underground yellow jacket nest that had been dug up by a bear

Once a site is selected, the queen chews up bits of wood to the consistency of wood pulp and uses it to build a small nest. When dry the nest looks as if its fashioned from thick paper. She then begins laying eggs, which hatch into infertile female workers in about three weeks. For the rest of her life, the queen remains in the nest laying eggs. The workers are responsible for expanding the nest, providing food for her and her young, and defending the colony.

By the end of the summer, a typical nest will be roughly the size and shape of a football and house up to 800 yellow jackets or more.

Most of us are well aware that yellow jackets will vigorously defend their nests and sting when provoked. During an attack, a yellowjacket can sting multiple times without losing its stinger. In addition, when it feels threatened, the insect releases something called an alarm pheromone. When other yellow jackets detect the chemical they immediately become aggressive and join the attack.

For the most part, yellow jackets will not attack unless they are antagonized or we venture too close to a colony. However, late in the summer folks seem to be stung more often than at any other time of the year. This may be because yellow jackets are more abundant. However, they also become less tolerant of one another and seem more prone to sting without provocation. Since this behavioral change coincides with a switch from a predominantly protein diet to one rich in carbohydrates and sugars, some suggest this may affect their aggressive fall behavior.

All while this is taking place, new queens and males are hatching in nests scattered across the countryside. Soon the young queens will begin storing the fat that will sustain them throughout the coming winter. Eventually they will reach the point where they abandon their nest and are pursued by the males. Once mating takes place, the males die and the fertile queens search for suitable winter quarters such as a hollow tree or beneath the bark of a tree.

Back at the nest, the number of workers slowly dwindles. With the onset of cold weather, the workers and the old queen die and the nest begins to deteriorate. The once vibrant hub of activity will probably never be used again.

In spite of its obnoxious behavior, yellow jackets do have some redeeming values. Remarkably, mammals such as bears and skunks dig up the nests and devour the juicy young."

Western Fence Lizard - Sceloporus occidentalis

I've been seeing lots of these little lizards in our garden. Most of them are only 2.5" long! I'm hesitant to try and catch them, because I don't want to stress them out! They are so camouflaged in the dry grasses and weeds! These little ones won't be full-sized till next Spring. Right now they are busy eating a variety of insects! Western Fence Lizards are the most commonly seen lizard in our garden. 

Northern Pacific Rattlesnake - Crotalus oreganus oreganus

One evening this week, as I was watering the garden, I was surprised to see a baby rattlesnake!  It was curled up, and the ground around it was very damp.  I think I might have accidentally "watered" it! The pattern of its scales was so bold and beautiful!  The rattle was a dull bluish color and didn't have any "buttons" yet. It was only about 8" long, and looked pretty skinny. In fact its skin looked "loose" on its body! Baby rattlesnakes eat small lizards, and young rodents. Lucky for this snake, there are LOTS of little lizards in our garden right now.

Northern Pacific Rattlesnake - Crotalus oreganus oreganus

 I watched this little snake for a few minutes until it uncoiled and scooted away underneath a piece of wood.  It moved amazingly fast! I am definitely watching my step out in the garden now! The following information is from the website at Mount Diablo Interpretive Association, https://www.mdia.org/articles/northern-pacific-rattlesnake.

"There are many, many myths and exaggerations concerning snakes in general, but there are even more concerning rattlesnakes. The Northern Pacific Rattlesnake rarely grows more than 36 inches in length - one over 48 inches is a real granddaddy, yet I commonly have people tell me stories of the 6- to 7-foot rattlesnakes they have encountered in the Bay Area (fear and imagination go together). The actual striking distance for a snake from a coiled position is approximately a third the distance of its body length, but let’s give the snake the benefit of half the distance, just to be safe. That means a three-foot snake can only strike out approximately 1-1.5 feet. You would have to be right in that snake's face to get him to strike. They do not strike without reason. Leave the snake alone and he will leave you alone.

In late summer to early fall, we enter the birthing season for snakes. Rattlesnakes are one of the few live-bearing snakes (opposed to egg-lying). Mother rattlesnakes can give birth to 7-15 young who actually stay with her for the first couple of weeks. The young are distinctly patterned replicas of the adult except they initially have a single button on their tail. They will not get a second rattle until they shed their skin for the first time, generally within a few weeks. Rattlesnakes get a new rattle every time they shed and may shed three to four times in the same year. Therefore, the number of rattles does not tell the age of the snake. Secondly, as the snakes age, rattles will commonly break off.

Young rattlesnakes possess venom when they are born - it is the same venom as the adults, just less of it. The bite of a small rattlesnake is NOT more venomous than an adult, but adult rattlesnakes have been known to give a dry bite (no venom), 30 to 40 percent of the time. The young snakes are still learning to control envenomation and therefore do inject venom with each bite. Nevertheless, any bite from a rattlesnake needs immediate medical attention. Although death from a bite is very rare (in the United States, 10-12 deaths from venomous snakebites occur annually per 10,000 bites), hospitalization with severe pain and suffering is the norm."

European Mantis - Mantis religiosa

Just this week I spotted three non-native, invasive, European Mantis in our garden. There is a Praying Mantis that is native to California that looks quite similar, except that it doesn't have markings that look like an "eye" on its inner arm. In all mantises the prominent front legs are bent and held together at an angle that suggest the position of prayer, hence their name. I think a more appropriate name would be "aliens". Their head and eyes look especially like a typical alien, with their tiny pinpoint pupils!

They use camouflage to ambush their prey. The one above was in a bunch of dry grasses, and was pretty difficult to distinguish! Their arms are their main weapons, and can move with lightning speed. They use the spikes on their arms to skewer and hold prey. They eat only live prey, including crickets, grasshoppers, small lizards, and other mantises! Females often attack and kill approaching males. If males are lucky enough to sneak up behind a female undetected, they will immediately grab the female and mate with her. However, females are known to eat the head of the male they are mating with! Apparently they need the extra protein to create their egg mass!

I've never seen mantises mating and that's fine with me!  Sheesh!

Urban Anthophora - Anthophora urbana 

The bee pictured above is an Urban Anthophora, a type of "Digger Bee". Right now there are LOTS of these bees in our garden. Their names comes from their habit of digging underground tunnels, in which to lay their eggs! Like Bumblebees, they will make a brood pot out of wax at the end of a tunnel, and fill it with nectar and pollen. They then lay an egg on the top of this brood pot and seal up the tunnel. When the larva hatches it feeds on this stored food. Once the honey and pollen are consumed, the larva become dormant and remain underground for many months. In spring they will pupate and emerge as adults. In some species the male larvae hatch before the female larvae. They spend the first days of their lives hovering above the nesting area, waiting for the females to emerge! As soon as a female emerges, a male mates with her! Sometimes, the males even dig the females out! Sheesh!

Bee Wolf - Philanthus multimaculatus

The Bee Wolf is a wasp not a bee! As its name implies, it is a predator of bees! The Bee Wolf digs tunnels underground, with a brood chamber at the end of each tunnel. It will then paralyze bees by stinging them, and put 1-6 of them in each brood chamber! It will then lay one egg on top of a paralyzed bee and seal up the brood chamber. When the larva hatches it will feed on the paralyzed bees, pupate, and emerge out months later as an adult!

Mountain Ash berries - Sorbus californica

What's happening in the Lakes Basin? 

What's happening on the River?

Check back in two weeks for the answers to these questions and more!

After 8 years of posting my blog, I've decided that I'm only going to post my blog twice monthly from now on. My next post will be on the weekend of September 14th. See you then!

Your questions and comments are always appreciated. Please email me at northyubanaturalist@gmail.com. Thanks!

Saturday, August 17, 2024

Rain & the River


We've been having an unusually HOT and DRY summer this year, but two weeks ago we woke up to the sound of falling rain! What a surprise!  We immediately got up and went out on our back porch, where we watched the rain fall, and breathed in the heavenly damp-earth fragrance!  It was so magical! It showered off and on that day, but the total rainfall was less than a tenth of an inch. Nevertheless, the ground was nicely dampened, the vegetation sparkled with raindrops, and the fragrance was wonderful!


I went out on the local bridge that crosses the North Yuba and watched the raindrops create thousands of ripples on the surface of the water. What beauty! Fingers crossed that more rain comes again soon!

Rain, rain, come on down.
Come and quench this thirsty ground.
Come and let wet smells abound.
Fill the air with a joyful sound!
                                          ©k.oharakelly

 Columbian Black-tailed Deer - Odocoileus hemionus columbianus

North Yuba River Update

From the bridge, I also was lucky enough to watch a Columbian Black-tailed Deer cross the river in the rain! It was a mature buck with a biggish set of antlers!

Columbian Black-tailed Deer - Odocoileus hemionus columbianus

He slowly picked his way across the river, then immediately started eating the willows when he reached the shoreline! After a short while he disappeared into the willow thicket. What a treat it was to see him in the river!

Osprey - Pandion haliaetus

Later that week I spotted an Osprey in a dead tree on the river shore. There are many classifications (or subgroups) of raptors, such as accipiters, buteos, falcons, eagles, harriers, kites, ospreys, and owls. Ospreys are the only bird in their classification! They are unique among raptors in their hunting method of diving feet-first into water to capture fish. They are usually successful in 1 out of every 4 dives. No other raptors use this method of hunting. They also have small barbs on the pads of their feet to help grab slippery fish. After they have caught a fish and are back in the air, they maneuver the fish to face forward, using the fish’s streamlining to reduce aerodynamic drag. They then carry the captured fish to an elevated and prominent perch to be eaten. 99% of their diet is fish. They are large birds with a wingspan of 63", a length of 23", and a weight of 3.5lbs!!!

Common Merganser female with five ducklings - Mergus merganser

The waterfowl ducklings are getting almost full sized!  Just this week I saw a group of five, juvenile, Common Mergansers sleeping with their mother!

Mallards - Common Mergansers
Anas platyrhynchos - Mergus merganser

I also so three Mallards, possibly juveniles, on the river!  I haven't seen any Mallards for months. These three were a surprise to see.  I also saw a different Merganser mom with just two sleeping juveniles!

Belted Kingfisher (female) - Megaceryle al

To my delight there was a female Belted Kingfisher on the river this week. Although there are usually one or two kingfishers in our area, I haven't seen one in quite a while! Unlike most birds, the female Kingfisher is more colorful than the male. The male does not have the rust-colored band across its chest, nor patches underneath its wings. Kingfishers catch small fish, crayfish, and tadpoles by plunge-diving from perches, into shallow or surface water. Most of their dives are less than 24" deep into the water. After they catch their prey, they bring it back to a perch and pound it against a branch to stun it! Whatever they cannot digest, such as fish bones is regurgitated in pellets!

Belted Kingfishers are solitary except during the breeding season. They are monogamous and usually only have 1 brood of 5-7 chicks. The nests are made in bare earthen banks by both the male and female. The male does most of the work. It will take the pair up to 3 weeks to excavate the 3'-6' long, horizontal, subterranean tunnel, that ends in an unlined nesting chamber! The opening to the tunnel ranges from 3"-5". 5-7 eggs are incubated for 22 days, by both parents. The nestlings fledge in about 16 days, but are cared for by the parents for the following 27-29 days.

Round Lake

Lakes Basin Update

The reason why I haven't been going up to the Lakes Basin as often as I usually do, is that my husband is ill and needs my care. I still manage to get one day a week up in the Lakes Basin, for which I am so grateful. These past two weeks I went on two glorious hikes with my friend Nancy! Yay! Every year we hike cross-country above Round Lake to a beautiful, wildflower-filled ledge-garden below a steep rock face. This year we took a wrong turn and ended up too high in a different garden that we'd never been to before!  It was a great adventure!

Mallards - Anas platyrhynchos

Along the way we saw 9 Mallards, mostly juveniles, in Veronica Lake! Mallards are dabbling ducks. The following information about dabbling ducks is from thespruce.com.

"A dabbling duck is a type of shallow water duck that feeds primarily along the surface of the water or by tipping headfirst into the water to graze on aquatic plants, vegetation, larvae, and insects. These ducks are infrequent divers and are usually found in small ponds, rivers, and other shallow waterways, or else they may stay near the shallow, slower edges of larger waterways and swamps.'

View of Long Lake, Round Lake, and Big Bear Lake

At first, when we got to a rock-ledge garden, we thought we were in the same one we always go to. But the view was indeed different. Our old brains finally worked, and we realized we were south of the usual garden and several hundred feet higher!  
 
Crimson Columbine - Sierra Primrose
Aquilegia formosa - Primula suffrutescens

Unfortunately, we didn't have the time to drop down to the usual garden. However, we weren't disappointed, as the "new" garden had our beloved Sierra Primroses, along with hundreds of Crimson Columbines, buckwheats and asters!  

Round Lake from the rocky ridge

 The overcast sky had kept the heat away all day, but it was still warm enough to go for a swim. So we hiked cross-country down to Round Lake and had a swim on the way home. It was a perfect end to a perfect day!  We are SO lucky to be able to explore the Lakes Basin so frequently! SUCH beauty!

Lower Tamarack Lake  

The following week, Nancy and I hiked up to the Tamarack Lakes, and Saxonia Lake. When we arrived at the trailhead the sky was quite smoky, but luckily the wind blew the smoke south and the sky cleared within the first hour.  We had the trail to ourselves that day!

Upper Tamarack Lake

The meadow at Upper Tamarack Lake was still blooming profusely with Applegate's Paintbrush, Cinquefoil, and Yarrow. So beautiful!

Fireweed - Chamerion angustifolium

Just past the paintbrush meadow there was a lovely patch of Fireweed!
There were lots and lots of wild pollinators visiting the flowers!


Mallards - Anas platyrhynchos

The lake itself had LOTS of Mallards, adults and juveniles! We counted about 12 of them all together!

Buffleheads - Bucephala albeola

In contrast, Lower Tamarack Lake had one family of Buffleheads!  Every year I see a female Bufflehead with 5 to 9 young on this lake. I was thrilled to see them here once again!  These little ducks are diving ducks. The following information on diving ducks is from the website ducks.org/conservation/waterfowl-research-science/diving-ducks-into-the-deep. I find it fascinating!

"The body of a diving duck is much more compact and fusiform (wider in the middle and tapering toward the end) than that of a dabbler. Divers' wings are also more compact, which allows them to be compressed tightly against the body for greater diving efficiency. In addition, divers' legs are set much farther back on their body, and their feet are much larger and have a lobed hind toe. These adaptations help propel the birds while they are underwater.

In general, most birds are lighter than water. But diving ducks typically have higher body densities than other waterfowl. Just before they dive, the birds compress their feathers against their body, squeezing out air, which further reduces buoyancy. Next, with a single thrust of their powerful legs and feet, diving ducks arch their bodies upward and dive headlong, quickly disappearing beneath the water's surface."

Saxonia Lake

We decided to not swim at the Tamarack Lakes, and headed to Saxonia Lake to cool off. Luckily it was empty of people and the water was perfect!  We lingered only for a short while, as we had to head home. 

Cassin's Finch - Hairy Woodpecker
Haemorhous cassinii - Dryobates villosus
  
On the way home we happened to spot a beautiful Cassin's Finch and a Hairy Woodpecker!  In the direct sunlight the head of the Cassin's Finch is a bright red.

During the breeding season Cassin's Finches live in wooded areas from 3,000'-10,000'. I usually see them up at Yuba Pass, eating minerals along the roadside! Their preferred food is tree buds, but will also eat green manzanita buds, seeds, and fruit. In the winter they will migrate down out of the snowy areas to southern California, Baja, or mainland Mexico. I love their lovely rosy crests, breasts and backs!

I've written about Hairy Woodpeckers in many previous blogs. Just search my blog for more information about these  handsome black & white woodpeckers!

Dugan's Pond

We passed Dugan's Pond on the way back to our car. It was so green, lush, and peaceful! How lucky we are to enjoy so much beauty!

What's happening in our garden?

What's happening in the Lakes Basin?

Check back in two weeks for the answers to these questions and more!

After 8 years of posting my blog, I've decided that I'm only going to post my blog twice monthly from now on. My next post will be on the weekend of August 31st. See you then!

Your questions and comments are always appreciated. Please email me at northyubanaturalist@gmail.com. Thanks!

Saturday, August 3, 2024

Unusual Sightings!

Mountain Lion - Puma concolor - Photo ©by Clinton Hayes

 This Mountain Lion is not in a cage, it's behind a fence in my neighbor's garden!!! One evening about two weeks ago, my neighbor, Clinton Hayes, took these photos from his living room window! The Mountain Lion was only about 15' or 20' feet away from his house! At first glance he thought it was a fox, but then quickly realized it was a Mountain Lion!  Yikkes!!!  We all watched from behind his window for a few minutes, and it definitely watched us!!! What a beautiful animal! It was so amazing to see!!! I left to get my camera, but it sat up when it heard me open the downstairs door and immediately took off! Rats! How lucky that Clinton got these photos!

This is the second time I've seen a Mountain Lion up close. My first encounter happened on July 26th, 2020, right in the same neighborhood! Check out my blog from that date to read about the encounter!

Mountain Lion - Puma concolor - Photos ©by Clinton Hayes

The main food of our local Mountain Lions is Mule Deer. They will also eat mice, rabbits, hares, raccoons, and domestic animals. They are most active from dusk to dawn, and can travel long distances looking for prey, up to 15 miles in one night! They have a poor sense of smell, but have excellent vision and hearing. They rely on surprise to catch their prey, and can leap 40 to 45 feet in one jump! They usually kill one deer every 9-12 days. They will eat up to 20 lbs. at one time. They will cover the remaining carcass with leaves, dirt, and/or pine needles, and feed from it over a period of several days.

Mountain Lions weigh from 140-180 lbs., and are 7'-8' in length.
The foot print of a Mountain Lion is 101 mm, about the size of a baseball. They keep their claws retracted, and are not usually visible in their tracks.

We have not seen the Mountain Lion again since that evening, but stench of a dead deer filled the neighborhood a few days later!

 Warbling Vireo on a nest - Vireo gilvus

Uncommon Bird Sightings!

To my delight a friend of mine spotted a Warbling Vireo on a nest last week!
I had seen empty Warbling Vireo nests before, but never saw the birds!  How lucky we were to see this occupied nest! The nests are quite distinctive. They are always on the fork of a leafy tree branch, and are "woven" around the branches! It takes the female about 7 days to build the nest. Riparian areas are where they choose to nest. These little birds fly all the way up from western Mexico to breed and nest across the U.S. and western Canada. The following information about Warbling Vireos is from the Cornell website https://birdsoftheworld.org/.  

"In early stages of nest construction, material woven over and under, back and forth across forked twigs to which nest attached, thus beginning rim of nest. Next, rim is rounded and bound, often by spider silk, into shape that will support completed nest. Nest is then built in a “downwards and outwards” fashion. Female flies to nest site, perches on rim of nest and dips her head down into nest to place and weave material, giving impression that nest is at lining stage. On most occasions, after material has been incorporated into nest and nest is about 50% complete, female enters nest to sit and mold it. Time spent building nest includes 8.0% weaving nesting material and 7.8% spent sitting on or molding nest."

The female will lay 3-4 eggs in the nest, and the male and the female will share the incubation of the eggs for approximately the next 12 days. Both parents will feed the nestlings. Nestlings fledge in approximately 14 days. Parents will continue to feed the fledglings for approximately 14 more days.

Red-breasted Sapsucker (juvenile) - Sphyrapicus ruber

To our delight we also saw a few juvenile Red-breasted Sapsuckers! I haven't seen a juvenile in years!  Although not as brilliantly colored as the adults, the juveniles are still strikingly feathered!  As their name implies, these birds mainly eat sap. They drill horizontal rows of small "wells" into the bark of firs and fruit trees, and eat the sap that accumulates as well as any insects that get stuck. Since we have snow and cold temperatures here in the winter, Red-breasted Sapsuckers do not live here year-round. They only come up to our neighborhood to breed. In the winter they usually live in the central valley or coastal areas of California, or east of the Sierra Nevada into Nevada. Other populations live year-round on coast of northern California, Oregon, Washington, and Canada.

Dark-eyed Junco (juvenile) - Junco hyemalis

We also spotted a juvenile Dark-eyed Junco!  I first saw one of these years ago, and had to get an expert to identify it. None of the field guides have images of juvenile Juncos!  The pale lemon-yellow breast, belly, and undertail were NOT like the adults at all, but the thickish, pinkish bill was. These birds are short-distance migrants.  They spend the breeding season in the higher elevations, and the winter at lower elevations in California.

Rufous Hummingbird (female) - Selasphorus rufus

There's a higher elevation meadow near Yuba Pass that I usually visit in August to see the Rufous Hummingbirds feeding on Anderson Thistles.  Since it's been a hot and dry summer so far, I thought maybe they might already be there, so my husband and I decided to drive up and check it out. To our delight there were indeed lots of female Rufous Hummingbirds feeding on the blooming thistles!  Such beauty!  I was thrilled to see them again!

I turns out that these hummers breed from southern Oregon to southern Alaska, and then return to southern Mexico for the winter. They don't breed in our area. Right now the females and juveniles are migrating through, on their way to Mexico! The males probably passed through sometime in late June or early July.

We stayed, watched and listened to the Rufous Hummingbirds chattering away as they flew, hovered, and fed in the thistle patch. It is truly one of the most beautiful sights I have ever seen! How lucky to be surrounded by such joyful beauty!

Monarch Butterfly - Danaus plexippus

Uncommon Insects

On the Round Lake Trail, we were lucky to see a Monarch Butterfly!  The first one this year!  It's strikingly colored and patterned wings look like stained glass to me!   The following information about Monarchs if from the website https://www.fs.usda.gov/wildflowers/pollinators/Monarch_Butterfly/migration.

"Monarchs have up to four generations each summer, each one traveling a little further north than the last. The last generation of the year migrates south. Monarchs living west of the Rocky Mountain range in North America overwinter in California along the Pacific coast near Santa Cruz and San Diego. Here microclimatic conditions are very similar to that in central Mexico. Monarchs roost in eucalyptus, Monterey pines, and Monterey cypresses in California.

The life cycle of a Monarch Butterfly only takes 6-8 weeks. It begins in the Spring, when female Monarch Butterflies lay 100's of eggs on the underside of Milkweed leaves. Four days later the caterpillars hatch out of their eggs! These newly hatched caterpillars will eat only Milkweed leaves for the next 2 weeks. Then each caterpillar will form a chrysalis and pupate. After 10 days a new adult butterfly will emerge from each chrysalis, and start the whole process again. This process will happen four more times in the Summer. As adults, they feed on nectar from a variety of wildflowers."  (The one pictured above is sipping nectar from Angelica flowers.)

"All mating stops in September. The last generation of Butterflies born in the Summer, is the one that migrates south for winter (all the other generations die after they mate, and lay eggs). This last generation of the year does not become reproductive and is said to be in “reproductive diapause”. These butterflies become reproductive in February and March as they move north, laying eggs on milkweeds as they progress northward into the United States. Some of these butterflies can live as long as 9 months!

Unfortunately, due to the use of systemic pesticides in agriculture, the majority of native milkweeds have been killed in many areas. This lack of milkweed plants has caused a huge decline in the population of Monarch Butterflies."

Snowberry Clearwing Moth - Hemaris diffinis

A large, unusual, and uncommon moth showed up in our garden this week,  a Snowberry Clearwing Moth (also unofficially called a Hummingbird Moth)! I see them once in a while in our garden. Their clear wings beat so fast, it's almost impossible to see them! The following information about this moth is from the website https://www.fs.fed.us/wildflowers/pollinators

"Perhaps one of the most delightful insect visitors to your garden is the hummingbird moth. Several species of the genus Hemaris deserve this name and for very good reason. They fly and move just like hummingbirds. Like them, they can remain suspended in the air in front of a flower while they unfurl their long tongues and insert them in flowers to sip their nectar. They even emit an audible hum like hummingbirds.

Like the majority of moths and butterflies, the adult hummingbird moths feed on nectar from a variety of flowers, but their larvae need more specific food plants, such as several species of honeysuckle, dogbane, or some members of the rose family such as hawthorn, cherries, and plums.

The females entice the males with an aroma or pheromone that they produce from glands at the tip of the abdomen. After mating, they lay their tiny, round, green eggs on their larval food plants, usually on the underside of the leaves. The caterpillars have a horn at the rear end and are commonly green, well camouflaged among the leaves. When they are fully-grown they drop to the ground, spin a loose cocoon and pupate, partially protected by leaf litter. That leaf litter so hated by some gardeners provides a shelter to this beautiful pollinator. In the north, where the season is short there is only one generation per year; the pupa spends the whole winter well hidden and the adult does not emerge until the next spring."

 Woolly Aphids - Eriosomatinae 

I've seen these wooly insects before, usually on alders near creeks, but never studied them.  It turns out that they are Woolly Aphids in the Eriosomatinae family. They're pretty unusual looking insects!!!

The following information about them is from https://en.wikipedia.org 

"Woolly aphids are sap-sucking insects that produce a filamentous waxy white covering which resembles cotton or wool. The adults are winged and move to new locations where they lay egg masses. The nymphs often form large cottony masses on twigs, for protection from predators.

Woolly aphids occur throughout the Northern Hemisphere. Many of the numerous species of woolly aphids have only one host plant species, or alternating generations on two specific hosts. They have been known to cause botanical damage and are often considered a pest. While most damage is minor, they can spread plant diseases and fungi. Some species can produce galls as well.

Woolly aphids feed by inserting their needle-like mouthparts into plant tissue to withdraw sap. They are able to feed on leaves, buds, bark, and even the roots of the plant. As a result of feeding on the sap, woolly aphids produce a sticky substance known as honeydew, which can lead to sooty mold on the plant."


I failed to get a close-up photo of one of the Woolly Aphids, 
but I did make a movie of them moving!

Four-spotted Skimmer - Libellula quadrimaculata

We saw two new species of dragonflies up in the Lakes Basin this week!  The one pictured above is a Four-spotted Skimmer.  The following information about them is from the website https://uwm.edu/field-station/bug-of-the-week/four-spotted-skimmer/.

"These are dragonflies of marshy lakes, fens, acid bogs, plant-filled ponds, and very slow streams. Adults are found over fields and along woody edges and they may form swarms over open water; juveniles are often seen far from water. They like to perch on emergent vegetation but are also found near or on the ground.

After mating (very) briefly in mid-air, the female lays eggs immediately. He does not retain a hold on her, but he does generally “hover guard” to protect her from both rival males and females. She dips her abdomen into the water as she flies above its surface, releasing as many as 3,000 white, gel-covered eggs that sink down and then stick to plants. The eggs soon turn brown; the  estimates of hatching times that range from five days to four weeks."

Chalk-fronted Corporal Dragonfly - Ladonia julia

The following information about the Chalk-fronted Corporal Dragonfly is from https://uwm.edu/field-station/bug-of-the-week/chalk-fronted-corporal-dragonfly/.

"The thawing of water in spring is a powerful and irrevocable signal, summoning the amphibians to breed and stirring young dragonflies (naiads) to complete their metamorphosis. Water changes temperature slowly, but the appearance of Chalk-fronted Corporals gives notice that the water has warmed. Chalk-fronted Corporals (Ladonia julia) are dragonflies whose range includes the northern half of the U.S. and southern Canada.

The name “Chalk-fronted Corporal” undoubtedly refers to the pale bars—“corporal’s stripes”—on the top of the first segment of an adult’s thorax. The adults’ thorax and the base of its abdomen are frosted with white pruinosity as the dragonfly ages. An opaque, pigmented (usually white/blue-white), waxy substance develops on the cuticle that covers the dragonfly’s exoskeleton, and it gives the abdomen (and sometimes other body parts) a powdered or hoary appearance. The brilliant white of a Common Whitetail’s abdomen is due to pruinosity. Female CfCs are a duller, browner version of the males with only a little pruinosity, and juveniles are a pinkish-brown with thin “shoulder” stripes and a black line down the center of the abdomen. All ages have small black spots at the base of each wing. They are about 1.6” long with a 2 ½” wingspread.

CfCs like swampy, marshy, boggy wetlands with plenty of decaying plant material in it (other members of the genus like less-congested waters), and they can abide somewhat acid water."

Thread-waisted Digger Wasp - Paradejeania rutiloides  

We went for a hike on the Round Lake Trail again and I caught this partial view of a large wasp with my camera (inset photo).  It looked vaguely familiar and it turned out to be a Thread-waisted Digger Wasp! Several years ago I had watched a Thread-waisted Digger Wasp put a small green caterpillar in a hole in the ground. It then put several more small pebbles in the hole to seal it up! Wow! I have since read that these wasps paralyze a caterpillar, put it in a tunnel in the ground, lay an egg on it, and seal up the tunnel with small rocks. The egg hatches into a larva which eats the caterpillar, pupates, and emerges out of the tunnel as an adult! As an adult they feed on the nectar of flowers!!  The adult in the inset photo was feeding on the nectar of Angelica flowers!

White-lined Sphinx Moth Caterpillar and Adult - Hyles lineata

We were up at Howard Meadow again when I saw this large (5" long!) White-lined Sphinx Moth Caterpillar with little white objects on its back.  These caterpillars are a type of Hornworm Caterpillar. You can see the orange "horn" on top of its end segment. It turns out that this caterpillar had been parasitized by a Braconid Wasp, and that the tiny white things were the cocoons of the wasps larvae! The following information on how a Braconid Wasp parasitizes a hornworm caterpillar is from https://www.thoughtco.com/what-are-braconid-wasps-1967998

"Braconid wasps that kill hornworms are larval parasitoids. The female braconid wasp deposits her eggs inside the hornworm caterpillar's body. The wasp larvae develop and feed inside the caterpillar. When they're ready to pupate, the braconid wasp larvae chew their way out of their host, and spin silk cocoons on the caterpillar's exoskeleton. The tiny adult wasps emerge from these cocoons a short time later.

The affected caterpillar may continue to live as the braconid wasps are developing inside its body, but it will die before it can pupate."

Insects have a lot of weird life cycles.  It's definitely "tough out there" in the wild, even among the insects!!!


What's happening in the Lakes Basin?

What's happening on the River?

Check back in two weeks for the answers to these questions and more!

After 8 years of posting my blog, I've decided that I'm only going to post my blog twice monthly from now on. My next post will be on the weekend of August 17th. See you then!

Your questions and comments are always appreciated. Please email me at northyubanaturalist@gmail.com. Thanks!