Wednesday's WOLF School field trip to the Missouri Prairie Foundation's La Petite Gemme Prairie was a great success. With Jay Barber (MDC) and Jerod Huebner (MPF) we divided the WOLFs into three teams. The WOLF students in my exercise counted the different plants by appearance within a hula hoop (14 to a record of 22 species) before the hunt for insects began in earnest. Nothing can put terror in an insect's heart as the sight of a 5th grader armed with a sweep net.*
Students started finding leaves with small orange and black lumps adhering to them. These were the pupae of ladybeetles, called ladybugs, but these ladies aren't really bugs but beetles in the order Coleoptera. They make pupae, similar to the more familiar cocoons of moths and chrysalis of butterflies.
The students found an occasional black larva with yellow-orange stripes and spots. Now we had the question of which ladybeetle. Until recently this would have meant a trip to Google and the books but that is changing. INaturalist.org has gotten much better with time and submitting the photograph of our larva brought up the top 10 likely species. A quick comparison with online photographs of the top two picks confirmed the ID of the Convergent Lady Beetle, Hippodamia convergens.
INaturalist.com entry |
Hippodamia convergens larvae feeding on eggs of the cottonwood leaf beetle - Insectimages.org CC |
I brought home a few of the pupae and the very next morning all of them had emerged and were crawling around the insect box. Unlike the stinking, nipping and obnoxious Asian Ladybeetles that invade our homes, the Convergent Ladybeetle is well mannered and welcome in our gardens. An adult can consume 30-50 aphids a day as well as other bug eggs and even honeydew, nectar, and pollen when prey is scarce. They are important natural biological control agents in commercial fields plagued by aphids and other insect pests. Out on the prairie, they were just doing their own thing as a part of the food web.
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* Few insects were harmed aside from net bruises. Species the students found included:
- Lacewings
- Crane flies
- Grass moths and others
- Assorted diptera (flies)
- Spiders - jumping, crab and others
- Beetles - unidentified
- Preying Mantis nymphs
- Looper caterpillars
- Grasshoppers
- Katydids
- Leafhoppers
- Aphids
- Wasps (no stings)
- Solitary bees
- Stink bugs - plant and predatory
- Leaf galls harboring insect larvae
- ...and the "dick, dick, ciss, ciss, ciss" call of the Dicksissel
--> Located 30 minutes north of Springfield, just west of Bolivar, it is our favorite prairie, easily accessible, fertile, and an easy stroll through thick and beautiful plants. If you have never strolled a prairie and live around Springfield, this is a the one to start on. It is owned by the Missouri Prairie Foundation and maintained by jointly by the Missouri Department of Conservation and MPF.
You can enjoy a free weekend of prairie learning experiences and even have a Saturday night campout June 2 and 3 at the Missouri Prairie Foundation’s 9th Annual Prairie BioBlitz at its Pleasant Run Creek Prairie. Learn details at this link.
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A cloud of these showed up on radar in California in 2019.