We were collecting walnuts to make walnut ink when I discovered life living under the husk. It turns out that the space between the nut and the rind is a busy place. These little wigglers might have given the normal observer a bad case of the heebie-jeebies but they only piqued my curiosity. These are the larvae of the walnut husk fly (WHF), Rhagoletis completa.
Husk fly eggs in groups of up to 15 are deposited under the outer husk surface and hatch after five days into little white maggots. Older maggots turn yellow with black mouthparts. The maggots feed inside the husk, gradually turning the husk mushy and black. After feeding for a month, the maggots drop to the ground and burrow into the soil where they will spend the winter as pupae.
Walnut husk fly - wsu.edu |
Husk fly male - Don Loarie |
Damaged walnut husks laying on the ground may host other insects. I have found other insects and tiny spiders hiding inside damaged husks and on a WOLF field trip while looking for husk fly larvae we found this tiny winged creature pictured here which I couldn't identify.
I recently found some other even more mysterious critters, but you will have to wait for them in another blog. Speaking of tiny creatures, A Chaos of Delight has hooked me on "mesofauna" - photographs and stories of the wide variety of 0.1 mm to 2mm creatures living in soil. It is addictive so enter at your own risk.