frog – Field Station /field-station/tag/frog/ UW-Milwaukee Wed, 15 Jan 2025 18:58:37 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Wildflower Watch – Cup-Plant Cosmos II /field-station/bug-of-the-week/wildflower-watch-cup-plant-cosmos-ii/ Wed, 15 Jan 2025 18:45:40 +0000 /field-station/?p=15850 Note: All links are to an external site. Greetings, BugFans, The BugLady usually times the Wildflower Watch episodes so that BugFans can rush out and see the flower in bloom with its attendant bugs, but it’s the middle of January, …

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Note: All links are to an external site.

Greetings, BugFans,

The BugLady usually times the Wildflower Watch episodes so that BugFans can rush out and see the flower in bloom with its attendant bugs, but it’s the middle of January, and the BugLady is ready for spring. At least the Technicolor part of it (with apologies to the Cardinals and Blue Jays at the bird feeder but not to the Mourning Doves and Juncos).   

katydid Silphium perfoliatum
Silphium perfoliatum

Cup-plant (Silphium perfoliatum) is one of four Silphium species (prairie dock, compass plant, rosinweed, and cup-plant) that are typically seen in our tallgrass prairies. The size and shape and arrangement of leaves varies with the species, but all are tough and gritty leaves that are difficult for insects to chew on. They are in the Aster family, related to sunflowers. Our shortest Silphium, rosinweed, may grow four or five feet tall, but the flowering stalks of the other species may be well over six feet.

It gets its name from the way the clasping, opposite leaves are fused around the stalk at their bases, forming a cup. They’re called perfoliate leaves, and the plant looks like its square stem is growing through a series of single leaves.

Cup-plant was used medicinally for colds, rheumatism, fevers, stomach ailments, and back pains, on burns, to prevent nausea, and more. Young leaves were cooked (and were rated by one author as “acceptable greens”), and the resin was used as a chewing gum. 

In Where the Sky Began, John Madson writes about compass plants that, “[Pioneers] found that [the compass plant] produced a pretty good brand of native chewing gum. Drops of clear sap exude from the upper third of the stem and solidify with exposure.

It has an odd, pine-resin taste that’s pleasant enough, but it must be firmed up before it’s chewed. A couple of summers ago I tried some of this sap while it was still liquid. It’s surely the stickiest stuff in all creation, and I literally had to clean it from my teeth with lighter fluid.” 

[DO NOT TRY THIS AT HOME]

Insects land on plants to eat them, to rest for a bit, or to hunt for other insects, but there’s a fourth reason they land on cup-plant, and that’s to drink. After a rain, the cup contains water that attracts a variety of critters to drink and maybe to cool off. But despite what was once written in a prominent Midwestern seed catalog, the water in the cups does not digest the plant and animal debris that lands in it, like a pitcher plant does.

cup-plant
Cup-plant

Cup-plant is what a gardening friend of the BugLady’s used to call, “a thug.” It can tolerate dry and rocky soils as well as rich, damp ones, and it “spreads vigorously” by both seeds and rhizomes (underground stems) – so much so that it’s considered an invasive in the Adirondacks and in some Northeastern states. Some people keep it in check by removing the flower heads before the seeds disperse, but its flowers are much appreciated by pollinators (especially, says the Xerces Society, “by honey bees, bumble bees, and big, showy butterflies ….. and leafcutter bees may use the hollow stems as nest sites”), and its seeds are eaten by birds. Because it is so easy to grow and grows so densely, it has been considered as a potential source of bio-fuel in recent years.

Cup-plants are a great place to find insects:

CUP-PLANT WATER collects after a rain and often lasts a few days before it dries out again. 

RED APHIDS come to cup-plants to eat (and be eaten). These are probably in the genus Urleucon, many of whose species feed on members of the Aster/Composite family. Multiple generations adorn the stalks and leaves of cup-plant, all wingless (unless, from an aphid’s point of view, things get really crowded and they need to disperse) and all are female (through the wonders of parthenogenesis – virgin birth) until they produce a winged generation with males at the end of the season. Watch the video and see “collective twitching and kicking response”, a.k.a. “CTKR” ().   

Click on image thumbnails below to view larger images.


Cupplant ladybug
Cup-plant ladybug
Bird dropping moth
Bird-dropping moth

A SMALL BIRD-DROPPING MOTH appears to be sipping the water.

And so does the RED or POLISHED LADYBUG, which is one of the BugLady’s favorite ladybugs/lady beetles because of the wonderful pattern on its . It’s one of three species of “Spotless Ladybugs” in the genus Cycloneda. Ladybugs are serious aphid predators both as .


brochyemna
Brochymena

The BROCHYMENA, or Rough stink bugs, of recent BOTW fame, are plant-eaters. Their camouflage was designed for tree trunks, not green leaves.

Daddy longlegs
Daddy longlegs

Although this DADDY LONGLEGS looks like it came for the water, its camouflage will allow it to nab some unsuspecting, visiting insect. 


Land snail
Land snail

A LAND SNAIL takes advantage of some water and maybe rasps the cup-plant’s leaves looking for algae, fungi, and leaf-bits to eat.

Jumping Spider
Jumping spider

A DIMORPHIC JUMPING SPIDER subdued something that had very long, slender legs. Another daddy longlegs?


Cicada
Cicada

The CICADA is one of the Dog-day/Annual cicadas in the genus Neotibicen. Unlike the fancy , these are our everyday cicadas. They take several years to develop underground, but the generations overlap and so they are present every year (which is why they’re called “annual”). They get their liquid by poking their strong “beaks” into twigs and drinking the watery sap, so the cup was just a perch for it.


Candy-stripped leafhopper
Candy-stripped leafhopper

CANDY-STRIPED LEAFHOPPER – what a gem!

Katydid Bush
Katydid bush

FORK-TAILED BUSH KATYDIDS are found in grasslands, woodlands, and thickets across most of North America from Mexico well north into Canada. There are some . The BugLady loves their . They don’t yell “Katy-did” – in fact, .


praying mantis
Praying mantis

The PRAYING MANTIS did not just come for the view.

Swallowtail
Tiger swallowtail

TIGER SWALLOWTAIL – the BugLady’s favorite large, showy butterfly.

Not all of the cup-plant’s visitors are invertebrates – the BugLady often sees TREE FROGS cooling off in cup-plant water on hot summer days, and small birds drink water there.. 


Tree Frogs
Tree frogs

This is the second in the Cup-plant Cosmos series (for the first installment). The BugLady has also seen paper wasps, yellowjackets, a two-striped grasshopper, mirid plant bugs, a variety of flies, a land snail, and a spring peeper on its flowers and leaves. 

For Northern BugFans, those colors are Green and Yellow. You remember them. 

The BugLady

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End of Summer Scenes /field-station/bug-of-the-week/end-of-summer-scenes/ Wed, 23 Sep 2020 15:23:57 +0000 /field-station/?p=11778 Howdy, BugFans, Wow! The first day of fall! Much as she loves a nice fall day, the BugLady clings to summer (maybe that’s why she keeps buying peaches even though she knows she’ll be disappointed). If you want to find …

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Howdy, BugFans,

Wow! The first day of fall! Much as she loves a nice fall day, the BugLady clings to summer (maybe that’s why she keeps buying peaches even though she knows she’ll be disappointed). If you want to find bugs, look at flowers, so the BugLady has been searching the riot of wild sunflowers, asters, brown-eyed Susans, and goldenrod. Here are some of the bugs that have posed for her in the past month.

Caddis fly

This mothy-looking CADDISFLY is actually not too distantly related to moths and butterflies. Caddisflies’ aquatic larvae use silk to form a , though some skip the case and spin a net on a submerged rock so they can stay put in swift currents. What are they good for? Two words – Fish. Food. Fish prey on the larvae and on the emerging adults, and .

Eastern tail blue butterfly

Tiny (wingspread under an inch) EASTERN TAILED-BLUES have several broods throughout the summer. They’re on the scene from May through September, and according to the , a few hardy individuals have been recorded into the first week of November! In September, look for them close to the ground, ovipositing on white clover in mowed paths. If your eyes are spry, you can see the contrast between their slate blue upper wings and their pale blue underwings in flight.

katydid

OBLONG-WINGED KATYDIDS should be green, right? It turns out that color is negotiable in some Orthopterans (grasshoppers, katydids, etc.). This species comes in brown, orange, , , and .

Here’s a paper about , and here’s .

swamp spreadwing damselfly

A female SWAMP SPREADWING damselfly deposits eggs into a plant stem as the male guards her by clinging to the back of her head.

tree frog

This small TREE FROG bit off a little more than it could chew. It managed to swallow the front half of a meadowhawk dragonfly, but it doesn’t seem to have enough room to swallow the rear half. Lots of roughage in dragonflies.

sawfly larvae

OAK SAWFLY LARVAE—If you turn over a partially-skeletonized oak leaf in summer, you may find these cute little skeletonizers, which look like slightly gooey caterpillars but are actually the larvae of members of a primitive wasp family. They eat the tender leaf tissue and leave the tough veins, and the end result looks like a macramé project.

meloe beetle

A MELOE BEETLE, a male, based on that crook in mid-antenna, descended the side of the log and joined another Meloe beetle, and hanky-panky ensued. Meloe/Oil beetles, in the genus Meloe, are members of the blister beetle family. “Oil beetles” because when they’re alarmed, they secrete oily drops from their joints that contain poisonous cantharidin, which causes nasty blisters on skin and does serious damage if taken internally.

meadowhawk dragonfly

AUTUMN MEADOWHAWKS are the last dragonflies of the season, able to survive a few light frosts and operate in daytime temperatures down to about 50 degrees (although by then, there’s not much prey in the air). This one chose a backdrop of colorful dogwood leaves.

jumping spider

The BugLady found this handsome JUMPING SPIDER, Marpisa bina, at a nearby State Natural Area (thanks, as always, to BugFan Mike for the ID). Not a lot is known about the 10 species in the genus, but most are wetland-dwellers.

carolina locust

Well-camouflaged CAROLINA LOCUSTS hunker on the trails, waiting until the BugLady practically steps on them before taking off on yellow-trimmed, black wings, and imitating, briefly, butterflies.

BUMBLE BEES, honey bees, and wasps of all stripes are abundant on flowers these days. Honeybees maintain their hives throughout the winter, but bumble bee and paper wasp nests are annual affairs – started from scratch by new queens every spring. The activities of the nest will cease with the frosts, but nobody’s told the workers.

asian ladybug

MULTICOLORED ASIAN LADYBUG—Oh sure, it’s cute now, but pretty soon it will be looking for a way into your house.

monarch butterflies

MONARCH—What would a late summer round-up be without Monarchs? About a week ago, the BugLady walked the prairie trails at Forest Beach Migratory Preserve and saw 249 crisp, new Gen 5 monarchs (the migratory generation), most nectaring on asters and goldenrods, sometimes 10 or 20 butterflies on a single clump of plants. Quality nectar plants are critical on the leisurely trip south – a newly-emerged Monarch has about 20 milligrams of fat in its body, but it needs to pack in another 100 milligrams of fat before it arrives in Mexico. () These fat reserves sustain it during the winter. (If you never click on any of the BOTW links, .)

Go outside – it ain’t over until it’s over.

The BugLady

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