Friday, November 19, 2010

Larvae Match-up Part 4

Eastern Tiger Swallowtail Butterfly
Papilio glaucus

Larva (photo: bugguide.net)

Adult (photo: this past summer)

Wheeler Mountain Road  (14)


Giant Leopard Moth
Pyrrharctia isabella

Larva Woolly Bear Caterpillar (photo: December 2006 in garage)

Pyrrharctia isabella (larval form)

Adult (photo: bugguide.net)


Eastern Tent Caterpillar Moth
Malacosoma americanum

Larva (photo: June 2009 in New Hampshire)

Eastern tent caterpillar (Malacosoma americanum) - 13

Adult (photo: bugguide.net)


Cabbage White Butterfly
Pieris rapae

Larva (photo: bugguide.net)

Adult (photo: New Hampshire, summer 2009)

Cabbage White Butterfly (Pieris rapae) - 2


Clouded Sulphur Butterfly
Colias philodice

Larva (photo: bugguide.net)

Adult (photo: New Hampshire, summer 2009)
Better photos from summer 2010 will be posted next week.

clouded sulpher


Owlet Moth
Family Noctuidae

Larva (one representation for this family)
(photo:
bugguide.net)

Adult (photo this past summer)

Owlet Moth


Curve-toothed Geometer Moth
Eutrapela clemataria

Larva (photo: bugguide.net)

Adult (photo: this past summer)

Curved-toothed geometer moth  1

 
 

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Thursday, November 18, 2010

Larvae Match-up Part 3

I never knew I had so many species of butterflies and moths photographed! This series will have two, maybe three, up-coming sections. Tonight, two of the species I have matched up were not matched by me, but by Pete. He commented on the Lost Larvae post with his match ups for the first two larvae of the night — the Modest Sphinx and the Bristly Cutworm moths. I can't contact him to thank him personally, so I thank him here!

Modest Sphinx Moth
Pachysphinx modesta

Larva (photo: bugguide.net)


Adult (photo: this past summer)

Modest Sphinx moth (3)


Bristly Cutworm Moth
Lacinipolia renigera

Larva: bristly cutworm (photo: Insects of Alberta)

Adult (photo from this past summer)

Bristly Cutworm Moth  2


Viceroy Butterfly
Limenitis archippus

Larva (photo: bugguide.net)

Adult (photo: summer of 2009 in the drivway)

Viceroy Butterfly (Limenitis archippus) - 08


Luna Moth
Actias luna

Larva (photo: bugguide.net)

Adult (photo: New Hampshire, 2009)

Luna Moth (Actias luna) - 01


Harnessed Tiger Moth
Apantesis phalerata

Larva (photo: bugguide.net)

Adult (photo: this past summer)

Harnessed Tiger Moth  (13)


Robin Moth
Hyalophora cecropia

Larva (photo: bugguide.net)

Adult male (photo by Grandson Wingnut, July 2007)

Male Robin Moth - 6

 
 

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Wednesday, November 17, 2010

The Night of the Flash Flood

Flash flood damage - Copy
The washed out lower driveway near the apple orchards.

The new septic system was completed the week of July 20. Every day after that, John graded the leach field by tractor and by hand. I helped a bit with removing rocks — tons of rocks — from the ground, to buckets, to the pay loader on the tractor. It was hot and dry in the sun, yet John continued every day, all day long. And finally, on August 5, the grading and seeding was finished.

Late on August 5 the thunder and rain came. It was falling at the rate of inches per hour and it continued for hours. As the rain hit the roof, it was so loud you had to yell so that others could hear you. I went to bed about midnight because the sound of storms relaxes me. John stayed up because he was worried about the brooks from the mountain overflowing and about his newly seeded leach field.

I woke at 1 AM to the sound of the tractor in the night. Opening the window and looking out, I heard the roar of water all around the house. I grabbed a sweatshirt and went downstairs to see what I could do to help. The roar was deafening outside. I could see the lights reflecting in water all about me and I knew immediately what had happened: a flash flood from the brooks on the mountain. I knew that John was working hard to block the water as it roared down from behind the house, around the barn, through the orchard's edge and down the driveway. But there was nothing I could do to help. Later, when John was done, he told me he had dammed an old, broken culvert and made a levee to redirect the water behind the house. The kids told me the basement was totally flooded (but that was okay, because the furnace and water heaters are on blocks because this has happened before. The basement would drain by itself.).

The next morning, I went out with the camera to view the damage. The lower driveway was washed out. The back meadow had been flooded, one brook had cut new banks and undercut old banks. One old culvert that had not been replaced yet had been pulled out of the ground. The orchard was fine, the driveway could be graded. More sections of the ancient, cast iron furnace had been exposed by the rushing water. But the leach field! It was destroyed. There was erosion, gullies, and all the seed had washed away. It would have to be done all over again. Weeks of hot, hard work had been lost!

Flash flood damage (2) - Copy
A temporary earthen dam to stop the water from running into the house.
This is where the old culvert had been torn out of the ground by the flash flood.

Raccoon track after the flood
Raccoon and cat tracks in the mud the day after the flood.

Flash flood damage (6)
The old culvert that was torn out of the ground from under the back road.

Flash flood damage (11)
The lower, washed out, driveway near the apple orchard.

Flash flood damage (13)
The washed out lower driveway. The new culvert that the town put in held up well and did its job.

Flash flood damage (16)
The destroyed leach field.
John completed the work, again, and it is now lush with thick meadow grasses.
John re-buried the cast iron furnace pieces
because they were simply too large and embedded to retrieve.
Future owners of the property in the next century can find and recycle them.

_/\_/\_

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Some Random Shots of Summer

Day lily
One of our day lilies

Day lily (1)
I am fascinated by the stigma

geometer moth (3)
A geometer moth

another brown geometer moth (2)
Another, different, brown geometer moth

Bumblebee on red clover (3)
Bumblebee on red clover

Flash flood damage
Five-toed raccoon track and tiny, round Zorro the Cat
tracks in the mud after a flash flood.

Little zinnia (1)
Dwarf zinnia that Ironman successfully planted

Little zinnia (3)
They bloomed continuously until the first heavy frost in September.

Carolina grasshopper (2)
A Carolina grasshopper

Yellow woolly bear caterpillar
Yellow woolly bear caterpillar

HELP. . . Nashville warbler?
An unidentified warbler

Question Mark Butterfly (11)
Question Mark Butterfly

_/\_/\_

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Lost Larvae

As I match larvae and moths / butterflies, I have photographs of seven species for which I cannot find photographs of the larvae on the Internet. Perhaps one of you knows where a photo exists and could leave a comment and let me know. Thank you!

Name My Photo

White-spotted Sable Moth
(Anania funebris)

White-spotted Sable Moth (Anania funebris) - 4

Large Maple Spanworm Moth
(Prochoerodes lineola)

Large Maple Spanworm Moth (Prochoerodes lineola) - 31

Common Ringlet Butterfly
(Coenonympha tullia)

Common Ringlet Butterfly (13)

Bristly Cutworm Moth
(Lacinipolia renigera)

Bristly Cutworm Moth  4

Modest Sphinx Moth
(Pachysphinx modesta)

Modest Sphinx moth (3)

Unmarked Dagger Moth
(Acronicta innotata)

Unmarked Dagger Moth (6)

Dark Marbled Carpet Moth
(Dysstroma citrata)

Dark Marbled Carpet Geometer Moth (3)




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