Pollinator Pow-Wow: Wildlife Wednesday, October 2016

Truthfully, it’s been a pollinator Wow! for this past month.

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Loads of butterflies and many kinds of bees enhanced the garden and though I didn’t get as many photos as I would have liked,  I have a few favorites to share this month. It’s Wildlife Wednesday and time to appreciate the wild critters who make the garden what it is: a dynamic, living space providing refuge and sustenance for wild things.

Monarch butterfliesDanaus plexippus, visited daily as they travel to Mexico for the winter.

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Monarch enjoying Frostweed.

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Monarch at a Gregg’s mistflower.

Most days there have been four or five fluttering from bloom to bloom.

Two cool fronts pushed through recently, ushering in pleasant  fall temperatures and providing wind for the Monarchs’ wings as they head south.  I’ve seen some Monarchs since, but only one or two in my gardens.  I’m betting more will show up in the next few weeks and am glad that I grow some of their autumn favorites like Gregg’s mistflowerConoclinium greggii, Blue mistflower, Conoclinium coelestinum, and FrostweedVerbesina virginica.

While this photo isn’t great,

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…I felt compelled to include it because this lovely Monarch was a meal for my resident male Neon Skimmer  just seconds after the photo was taken.  I was attempting a better shot, when the Monarch flew into the path of the Skimmer. The two tumbled to the ground, out of my view and behind some plants, and neither arose into the air immediately.  After a few seconds, I walked to where I thought they’d landed.  The Skimmer suddenly zoomed upward, Monarch in hand, or rather, claws. An excellent predator, Mr. Skimmer had caught himself a substantial lunch!  As he flew around my garden, holding tightly to the hapless Monarch whose wings continued flapping, I yelled at him to drop that Monarch!!  My verbal gesticulation didn’t change his mind, nor reduce his grip on the Monarch, and the Skimmer eventually took his prey to a neighbor’s yard (probably because I was being obnoxious and noisy) and I didn’t see either one again that day.  Skimmers (and all dragons and damsels) are predators, usually eating mosquitoes–I certainly wish he’d  chosen a few of those biting beasts for his meal instead of the Monarch.

Though the demise of one Monarch is sad, it’s a hallmark of nature–eat, or be eaten. It is especially sorrowful because of survival pressures on Monarchs, including habitat destruction, pesticide and herbicide use in mid-western agricultural states (where wildflowers once dominated), and the changing climate, which impacts every region. These are problems caused by people, not dragonflies, and have contributed to the decimation of the remarkable Monarch butterfly.   Home gardeners and those who create school or public gardens can help mitigate Monarch decline by utilizing good wildlife management gardening practices such as refraining from chemical use and planting for pollinators with native perennials and annuals.

Relatives of the Monarchs, the Queen butterflies, Danaus gilippus, are also in full fall flight in my gardens and enjoy many of the same Monarch nectar sources.  Queens do not migrate and are common in Central Texas throughout the year.

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Nectaring on a Gregg’s mistflower.

I didn’t take a photo of the Neon Skimmer this past month because I was pissed at him (I’m kidding.  Sort of…), but a Blue Dasher, Pachydiplax longipennis,  posed nicely on an almost-spent  bloom stalk of a Big red sage, Salvia penstemonoides;   I couldn’t resist her allure. 

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I think this one is a female because of the brown abdomen coloring.  She  also sports big, beautiful, blue peepers common in dragonflies.

There was more murder and mayhem the garden with this lovely scene:

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I was attempting a photo of one of the many fast flying tiny orange butterflies common this time of year (and was unsuccessful) when I spied this Green Lynx spider, Peucetia viridans,  who had one of my darling and pollen-sprinkled honeybees in pieces in the middle of a Rock rose flower.

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I suppose that if the end is near, it might as well be in  the middle of a flower, doing work you love.  Again, this is another predator-prey situation and while it’s painful to witness, it’s the way nature works.  Spiders must eat, too.

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The spider skittered out of the flower because of my photo interference, but the poor bee is…decapitated. Ugh.

It’s a bummer for the bee, though.

Additional sightings of the Lepidoptera sort  includes scads of Southern Broken-dashWallengrenia otho,

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Nectaring on a Purple coneflower.

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Nectaring on a Blue mistflower bloom.

…and oodles of Clouded skippers,  Lerema accius.

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The Clouded Skipper rests besides a buddy–a Common Pillbug (Armadillidium vulgare).

 

Gray Hairstreak butterfliesStrymon melinus,  are more numerous this year than I’ve ever noticed before.

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Working a Martha Gonzales rose bloom in the sunshine.

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Resting on a spent rose bloom in the shade.

 

Some of the larger, more dramatic butterflies regularly gracing the garden include Giant SwallowtailsPapilio cresphontes,

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Working the blooms of the Mexican orchid.

Tiger Swallowtails, Papilio glaucus,

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Nectaring on a Purple coneflower.

…and Pipevine Swallowtails, Battus philenor.

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Proboscis-deep in a Yellow Bells bloom.

Flowers are pretty enough, but much more beautiful when these decorative and vital-for plant-reproduction winged jewels are pollinating the blooms.

Southern pink mothsPyrausta inornatalis are sprinkling their pink selves on a variety of flowers this year, but I love this convocation of four on a Rock rose bloom.  The bloom is about an inch in diameter.

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There were five moths all in a circle, but one flew off as I approached to snap the pic;  the others maintained their positions.

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I wonder what they were talking about?  Or were they knitting?  Or, perhaps working on dance moves?

It wasn’t all butterflies and moths in the garden this past month, though.  Many individuals of my favorite native bee, the Horsefly-like Carpenter beeXylocopa tabaniformis, are still active and stealing nectar.

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Love those snazzy stripes,

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…and dreamy blue eyes!

I’m thrilled that American Bumble BeesBombus pensylvanicus, are in the garden this fall. I couldn’t get a good shot, but at least one bumble is in the garden on a daily basis and working hard.

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Yellow BellsTacoma stans, is a perennial shrub which has attracted multitudes of pollinators this month, including several native bee species, honeybees, a variety of smaller skippers and moths, all of the large swallowtail butterfly species, and hummingbirds.  It’s a pollinator plant for the win!!

Other charming critters honoring my garden are the ubiquitous Green Anole lizards, Anolis carolinensis.

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This one had just caught and gobbled down something–I wasn’t quick enough to see what the prey was or to configure my camera into action, but I suspect the snack was a small bee or moth.  Mr. or Ms. Anole  was smacking its pleasure after the treat and looking smug.

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Most of the Anoles I see in the garden now are juveniles and darn cute for teenagers. They’re dormant once our chilly weather arrives and I miss them during the winter months.

This Leaf-footed bug, Leptoglossus phyllopus, owns this space atop a Red Yucca seed pod (which they like to munch), and is serving as a mentor to some offspring.

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Perhaps not as pretty as some insects, these have a certain panache and I don’t mind seeing them occasionally in the garden.  They can be destructive (they’re sucking insects and damage foliage), but they’ve never proved a problem for my plants.

Pretty–or not, did wildlife visit your garden this past month? Please post for October Wildlife Wednesday. Share the rare or mundane, funny or fascinating, beneficial or harmful critters you encounter. When you comment on my post, please remember to leave a link to your Wildlife Wednesday post so readers can enjoy a variety of garden wildlife observations.

 

Monarchs!

They’ve arrived!

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Male Monarch nectaring on a Frostweed (Verbesina virginica), with fellow pollinator on the next bloom cluster below

They’re bulking up on autumn-blooming rich nectar sources for the remainder of their migration and the long winter ahead!

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Sometimes, they rest.

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Resting on a Drummond’s ruellia (Ruellia drummondiana) leaf

Always, they’re beautiful!

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Nectaring on Gregg’s mistflower (Conoclinium greggii)

Monarch butterfliesDanaus plexippus  are in the process of one of the longest insect migrations in the world.  Click on this link for information about the Monarch and a “Journey North” map which shows the spring migration northward from Mexico. Currently, the southbound migration from Canada to Mexico is underway.  The major routes of the Monarch converge in Texas and it’s imperative that they have plenty of nectar sources to feed on for migration and preparation for overwintering in Mexico.   Much has been made of the importance of milkweed for Monarch survival because it’s the host plant for this insect. Monarchs having adequate milkweed to lay their eggs on and to nourish the larvae in spring and summer is vital for their survival, but for the fall migration back to Mexico, nectar plants (of all kinds, but native flowers are the best) are required  to sustain the health of the adults who will over-winter in Mexico.

 

Monarchs are in my back garden,

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Nectaring on Ruby red runner, a pond plant

…and front garden too!

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Resting on a Martha Gonzales Rose

Travel well, remarkable ones, and have a safe winter in Mexico.  Come back soon–maybe next March??

 

Not-Yet-Autumn-Greens

While today may be the autumnal equinox, it remains hot and humid here in Central Texas.  A wet and (for Texas) mild August lulled me into stupidly thinking that summer 2016 had breathed its last hot breath.  During this past week, summer returned with a fry-an-egg-on-the-sidewalk-it’s-so-hot reminder that summer is not done with us yet.  While it’s been toasty, some of my hot season blooming favorites are now showing off  their cooling foliage.

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This lush group of perennials soothes my perspiring brow.

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This group includes Garlic chives,  Allium tuberosum,  Branched foldwing, Dicliptera brachiata,   Drummond’s ruellia,  Ruellia drummondiana, Katie’s Dwarf Ruellia, Ruellia britttoniana ‘Katie’s Dwarf’, and Gulf penstemon,  Penstemon tenuis.           .

There are some blooms flowering on these perennials.

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Looking closely, you can see the small, lavender flowers of the Branched foldwing and the larger flower of Katie’s Dwarf Ruellia.

Except for the spring blooming/summer seeding Gulf penstemon, all of these plants flower prolifically in July and August, slowing, but not ending, flower production during September and October.

The green onion-like foliage of Garlic chives pairs nicely with the full-leafed Drummond’s ruellia,

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…and mixes it up well with the petite leaves of the Branched foldwing.

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This particular group of Garlic chives hasn’t bloomed this year, but I  appreciate their slender leaves mingling with other foliage nearby.

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Throughout the warm months, there are always Texas Crescent butterflies, Anthanassa texana flitting in my garden.  Host plants for this little cutey insect are those  in the Acanthus family, like this Drummond’s ruellia, whose leaf serves as a resting spot for this Texas Crescent.

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A wider view of the Drummond’s ruellia, sans butterfly.imgp9963-new

Cooler weather is on its way in the next few days–the first cool front of the season!

I’m thanking Christina and her lovely Creating my own garden of the Hesperides for hosting Garden Bloggers’ Foliage Day.  Check out her blog for foliage from many gardens and from many places, and then share your own leafy loveliness.

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