I'm loving our new habit of daily morning walks. Even the humidity has a silver lining: the hazy air is beautiful in the sunlight!
At home, the ducklings may be nearly grown, but it's quite clear that it's still very much baby time for many others. So much activity!
Sarcophaga Flies
Squash Bugs
"baby" Squash Bug
Everyone is hurrying to mate, lay eggs, and for those young who won't be overwintering in eggs: a chance to live their brief life before winter comes. Those recently born are doing what they can...
...like this Cecropia moth. The pulsating body told me that it had recently hatched. It has no mouthparts and cannot feed...its brief two-week life will be spent mating and/or laying eggs.
A group Tiger Bee flies, too, just "hatched" on the front porch. I've been absolutely fascinated by their mini drama! I kept finding these strange shells dropping from our porch ceiling:
It turns out that these are Tiger Bee larval shells.
These, too, kept falling. They seemed to be immature carpenter bees:
Tiger Bee flies don't sting or bite. They're great pollinators, and they also have been helping us in another way: they lay eggs in carpenter bee holes. Their larvae hatch and devour carpenter bee larvae, which is why I kept finding those bee corpses. We definitely have a excess of carpenter bees so this is a great development!
Strange, though, that all of the new adults were dripping a white liquid.
It turns out that it's meconium! In their pupal state, they don't excrete. When they emerge, they pump the liquid through their wing "veins" to help harden them. Once they are fully filled out, they simply drip out the excess. So interesting!
Caterpillars, like this Tiger Swallowtail, are eat, eat, eating to prepare for their pupal stage.
This little guy was on the dill that I'd potted up on our porch steps, and I checked his progress every day. Yesterday, though, he was gone. Maybe he's made a chrysalis somewhere nearby!
In other baby news, our young "chogs" have finally grown and left the nest. We've gone from seeing them multiple times a day to a complete absence, and it's about time...it only takes about 44 days for young groundhogs to mature and leave the nest! We're worried that a fox has moved in, though, judging from the smell and the increased digging. A trail cam will be set up soon to verify!
Phew! It's been busy, but I'm loving it. We're getting things done despite the suddenly-hot weather...
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