Thursday, June 04, 2026

Bugs

I've been taking lots of insect photos this trip. At the campground near Yakima, Washington I spotted a milkweed plant so I checked it out, hoping for a Monarch caterpillar. No luck with that, but there were a few other insects visiting.

Small Milkweed Bugs

leafcutter bee ?

sweat bee ?

I also spotted this one on a tree nearby. I think it's a common Boxelder Bug nymph.

Western Boxelder Bug ?

At Five Springs, one of the first hikes we did was to Painted Canyon. Around the parking area there were cicadas everywhere. I've seen individual cicadas here before, but never so many. I think these are Putnam's Cicadas, in which case they live 3 to 5 years, but all but 4 to 6 weeks is spent underground as nymphs.

Cicada

Cicada

Although lots of them had obviously emerged, I only spotted one of the "skins" they shed when the nymphs emerge from underground and transition to adults.

cicada "skin"

Even the ants were taking advantage and were hauling this piece of a cicada.

ants with part of a cicada

I didn't see a lot of caterpillars, but there were some Western Tent Caterpillars.

Western Tent Caterpillar

There were lots of grasshoppers around, but they are always skittish and even with a photograph, they are hard to identify.

Red-shanked Grasshopper ?

I always search the flowers for insects. In this dry country the flowers are a focus.

Flower longhorn beetle ?

Jewel beetle ?

Ornate Checkered beetle

bristle fly ?

Bee Fly ?

Pollen Wasp ?

I watched this wasp visit several flowers, crawling inside to feed. But then it stopped inside one flower and didn't budge. I thought maybe a crab spider had ambushed it, but I couldn't see anything. Even when I peeled the petals back, the wasp didn't move. I later found another one also "sleeping" inside one of the flowers. Strange.

Pollen Wasp ?

Several times, something green flew up from the ground but it moved too fast to identify. Finally, one flew up, but another stayed on the ground. It was a green tiger beetle which apparently are sometimes purple and therefore the name, Purple Tiger Beetle.

Tiger Beetle

From a distance I thought this was a plant gall, but it turned out to be a crab spider, waiting patiently for its prey to visit. It wasn't very well camouflaged, maybe it was normally on a different type of flower.

Crab Spider

These photos were almost all taken with the little Olympus 60mm macro lens on an OM-1, a great combination for this kind of photography, and very compact for travel.

See all the photos in this batch

No comments:

Post a Comment