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Sunday, November 26, 2017
Beetle Talk for the Butterfly Society
On Tuesday, November the 28th at 7 PM, I am giving a talk about the Beetles of Arizona for the Tucson Butterfly Society at the Lutheran Church in the Foothills. Given that I am working on a book with that title together with Arthur V. Evans for years now, the topic is obviously one of my faves. I hope that the lep folks get excited about it too!
My 5 posters will be available after the talk: Butterflies, Moths, Arachnids, True Bugs and Beetles.
Sunday, October 22, 2017
We need Connections, not Walls!
Ocelot and Mexican Amberwing, watercolor October2017 |
I live in Tucson, Arizona. 30.7 miles, or 50 kilometers, or 44 min by car from the US/Mexico border. In my dual role as artist and biologist I spend much of my time in the field. Tucson is surrounded by the Sonoran Desert. As deserts go, the lower Sonoran is beautiful and rich in geological formations and fauna and flora. But also hot and dry most of the year. The long drive to the Colorado Plateau and Grand Canyon in northern Arizona would take me through the endlessly sprawling metropolis of Phoenix. So I turn south instead. The borderland to Mexico, studded with sky islands and the first hints of the Sierra Madre Occidental has become my favorite hunting ground. I regularly join excursions to study the biodiversity south of the border wit groups of US and Mexican naturalists and biologists. More often, and on my own, I spend time just north of the border. Long dirt roads connect the Canelo Hills and the San Rafael Grasslands, Parker Lake and Copper Canyon, Sycamore Canyon and Arivaca. Many side roads take me directly to the border fence. There are often heavy truck barriers, but they are low enough to step over. In other places, tall metal beams, set too close to each other to squeeze through, form a more impressive interruption of the landscape, but it still seems penetrable for small wildlife and cougars have been shown to jump it. In Lochiel, an old, nearly abandoned border town south of Patagonia, AZ, I used to pet Mexican horses grazing on the other side of an old chain link fence with big holes. It's a quiet area, somehow suspended in time, and full of natural beauty.
It's not all paradise. In many areas along the fence, there is a wide gash in the vegetation, where border patrol erased every living thing to create a corridor for easy surveillance. There are strange contraptions that the agents can pull behind their trucks to sweep the ground so new tracks of border crossers show up clearly. There is thrash that crossing people abandoned and sometimes clearly the packing material from drug transports. There are water stations that good Samaritans established because the harsh desert claimed so many lives. Very occasionally I meet people who approach me for help - who ask for water or need a charge for their phones. Or even a connection to the next agents of 'la migra'. The white, green-barred SUVs of the border patrol agents are usually not far away, always cruising, waiting, watching ... but also often the last resort for people in need. The agents keep up the immigration restriction that US law dictates, but so far, the situation is very different from what we experienced in the Europe of my childhood along the Iron Curtain and most of all the Wall and Death Stripe of Berlin. I can only hope that it stays that way.
Saturday, October 21, 2017
Under a full Moon
Ringtail (Bassariscus astutus) watercolor, available |
At Carr house in the Huachucas we saw a regular visitor high on the roof, slipping in and out of the beam of our flash lights. Similar fleeting impressions were left by a couple of them very high up in a tree during a black lighting session in Ida Canyon further south. At my friend Pat Sullivan's and Lisa Lee's house I wanted to check the black light at the bug room one more time before sun rise and found myself face to face with the resident Ringtail who had had the same idea. We both jumped and he retreated. Once I slept under the stars at the Madrone Ranger station in the Rincons - when I got up a Ringtail had just tucked himself into a crucked branch above my head to spend the day. Most encounters where ghostly and swift. No photos.
But during our August trip to the Sierra Juriquipa in Sonora Mexico one of our group, Steve Minter, wasn't giving up so easily. At nightfall, he saw a little guy watching him from a tree branch, so Steve climbed after the ringtail, up into the tree, camera and all. One name for Ringtails is Miner's Cat, but in fact, the little racoon relatives are better acrobats than even cats. So why did it not run? Steve was wearing a bright headlight - so maybe it was the 'deer in the headlights' effect or maybe the ringtail knew that the thinner branches would not support even the most daring human - anyway, the miner's cat stayed put and Steve got a number of nice photographs. This painting was inspired by them.
Ringtails are omnivores that feed on everything from bird eggs to berries, lizards and bugs. They like rocky areas with crevices and cavities for their dens and they tend to live close to water. I keep thinking of them as typical southwestern animals, but they can be found from southwestern Oregon, south through California, southern Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, Oklahoma, eastern Kansas, Baja California and northern Mexico. I have sometimes seen a couple of them together, but those may have been litter mates or a female with a sub-adult kid. Normally ringtails live solitary in small territories.
Wednesday, October 18, 2017
She loves me, she loves me not ...
'She loves me, she loves me not' Peachfaced Lovebird Watercolor, October 2017 |
The little gregarious parrots in the genus Agapornis were brought over from Africa for the pet trade. Escaped or released by unconscientious breeders, they found backyards and parks in the Phoenix area quite hospitable. Humans like them because they are pretty and their antics are entertaining. So the Love Birds find feeders and bird baths filled. As cavity breeders, they appreciate the work of Gila Woodpeckers and Gilded Flickers. A peachy head poking out of a Saguaro cavity delights many valley (Phoenix) photographers. As a biologist I cringe, though. There is no telling yet what the impact of this invasive species will be. Can they adapt to real desert conditions and seriously compete with native Saguaro breeders? I got the impression that house sparrows (from Europe) manage to do so to a degree, while the European Starlings seem to stay around urban and agricultural neighborhoods and golf courses. This does not mean they are not depriving our endemic birds of prime 'oasis' living space. So far, the Peach-faces seem to stick to the Phoenix area and some backyard bird watchers in Tucson are clamoring to see them here. Tucson, with its proximity to the southeastern sky islands could be the jump-off point for the birds to colonize the sky islands. To me, a night mare. So I love them (in Africa) and love them not (in Arizona).
Monday, October 9, 2017
Sycamore Canyon with Leslie, Sue and Curtis
In southern Arizona, October can still be a pretty good month for insect ans spider observations. So the four of us headed west on Ruby Road for Sycamore Canyon in Santa Cruz County.
Close to Pena Blanca Lake, Ruby Road turns into a dirt Road that winds its way up through the Atascosa and later the Pajarito Mountains.
Montezuma Quail |
It's a lush, beautiful place, not the hard unforgiving desert that claims so many lives, but border patrol keeps a permanent presence. We met an agent peacefully lunching in the shade way up the canyon. We also came across a big cache of supplies for the greatest needs of human wanderers.
Leslie Brown Eguchi and Sue Carnahan |
Further down, fish were crowded in little remaining ponds, but the rare chubb species that occur here are well adapted and can survive buried deep down in mud if they have to.
Neon Skimmer |
Flame Skimmer
Rhantus gutticollis,, Boreonectes sp, , Laccophilus fasciatus, Thermonectus nigrofasciatus, Rhantus atricolor, Thermonectus marmoratus |
Grasses and perennials setting fruit |
Ericydeus lautus, Conotrachelus arizonicus, Zygogramma continua Collops grandis, Lobometopon fusiforme or related Pimelinae, Phaenus quadridens |
Only very little water washed over my favorite bedrock area, but a dragonfly photographer was set up to patiently wait for a rare damselfly that had been reported from here recently.
Desert Firetails et al - Damseflies by Lealie Brown Eguchi |
Piezogaster spurcus and Pselliopus near zebra |
Phidippus octopunctatus and P apacheanus males |
Arctosa litoralis spinning electric blue silk? |
Tarantula Hawk |
Zenodoxus rubens Photo Sue Canahan |
Thursday, September 21, 2017
September in Picture Rocks
Our resident pair of ravens visits regularly, but by now without this year's brood of 3. I hope the kids moved on and are healthy! Our dogs have no patients for the ravens' performance of bows and songs of clicks and clucks.
Our biggest Diamondback Rattler by far |
Small Diamondback Rattler |
A very tiny Long-nosed Snake |
Lesser Long-nosed Bats Photo by a FB friend |
White Thorn Acacia |
Gyascutus caelatus |
Saguaros and Palo Verdes at dusk. Tortollitas in the back |
Laika, now definitely an elderly wolf dog, is still excited about our walks, but today she returned home early. Randy had stayed home and she probably just missed him.
Mecki and Bilbo tired themselves out too, racing and digging, and trying to find the cattle that is somewhere out there.
Laika was faithfully waiting for us at the gate by the garage. Even though I wasn't worried when she disappeared, I was still happy to find her there.
For the pups it's now time for a dip in the tub. That means that the will not come into the house until dry. In theory. In praxis, Mecki just stormed through the door and is now licking his feet on the carpet right behind me. Oh well. It's dark by now and the rattlers are roaming.
Thursday, July 13, 2017
Santa Rita Mts after the first rains of monsoon 2017
Megathymus ursus, Ursus Giant Skipper |
Butterfly folks always ask if I see these. Now I know why, this is one very impressive skipper! Big and heavy! Rare enough to for mine to be the first for AZ on BugGuide.net, even though the type-location is the Catalina Mts in Pima Co (Type-location: where the originally described specimen was found). The inside of the wings has yellowish-gold markings, but It would not sit still to have those photographed.
Campsomeris ephippium male |
The females are usually busy scouting the ground for big scarab larvae, but males can be found nectaring on flowers. These Mexican wasps are now permanent residents in SE Arizona including the Catalinas (Sabino Canyon). I think we saw the first ones around 2010 in the Huachuca Mountains.
Triscolia ardens females |
Pogonomyrmex sp. mating |
A nice Mydas Fly along Proctor Road. |
Ammophila Wasp and a nice metallic bee |
Macrodactylus uniformis (Western Rose Chafers) |
Anomala nimbosa pair |
Euphoria monticola (Photo Sue Carnahan) and Euphoria leucographa |
The long face of Lycus arizonensis |
Cicindela sedecimpunctata |
Arhaphe cicindeloides |
Mecki would like to point out that all the photos above, except the Pogo ones, where a cooperative effort. From Bear Skippers to Tiger Beetles, we faced and stalked them all of them together, connected by the legally prescribed leash. How else would she keep the camera steady?
Wednesday, July 5, 2017
Rediscovering the lost species Adoceta ignita (Lycidae)
Lycus sanguinipennis, Lygistopterus rubripennis, Lycus fulvellus femoratus, Lycus arizonensis |
Joe Cicero's collection of Adoceta apicalis |
Lyomorpha regulus, small Milkweed Bug, Sisenes championi, Ptychoglene phrada. |
Some strange Lycids |
Mating pair of Adoceta ignita |
I was thrilled that I had found Joe's species. But being part of a group of naturalists who usually don't collect and who might be offended, I only collected a few specimens, making sure to get males (there were many) and females (much fewer) both.
Later, from home I sent photos to Joe to report proudly "mission accomplished".
I was pretty disappointed when Joe at first glance called my beetles 'just small Lycus sanguinipennis' - he had immediately noticed that the pronotum of these guys wasn't black ... and then he thought that maybe I had a new species ...
Male and female of Adoceta ignita |
"It keys out as Adoceta ignita Green, 1950, a species I've never seen before (so the ID is just based on the description). A. ignita was described from two specimens from Arizona and is apparently very rare. I don't know how many times it was found after the description." Soon other specialists in the field like Michael Ivie and Vinicius Ferreira were alerted to our quest and agreed wit Michael Geiser's ID.
We also learned that there is an ongoing discussion about the taxonomic status of the genus Adoceta. In their 2017 paper Motyka et al. merged the genus Adoceta with the genus Lygistopterus. But since until now there were only so few specimens of the American species, these were not part of the genetic sequencing that the study was based on. We will now send a specimen to the lab around Bocak - I'm curious what the result will be. I also thought I would get up the mountain in time to collect a few more specimens, but right now Catalina Highway is closed because of an out of control wild fire. So I'm afraid the species I found may just get lost again.
P.S.
so far unidentified specimen which has to be another A.ignita in the SWRS collection |
References to cited papers will be added later