Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Dinosaur Bug

Few insects cause more head-scratching bewilderment or jaw-dropping awe than adult Wheel Bugs, Arilus cristatus. They look like the offspring of a beetle and stegosaurus with that remarkable cog-like crest on the top of their thorax. These strange “dinosaur bugs” are members of the assassin bug family Reduviidae. While they should be welcomed in the garden as predators of pest insects, they should be treated with respect, too.

Wheel Bugs begin life looking much like other true bugs because they do not have the big crest until they reach adulthood. Young Wheel Bugs are black with a bright red abdomen. You will likely see them crawling about on foliage individually. Similar true bug nymphs, like leaf-footed bugs (family Coreidae), are usually seen in groups.

Wheel Bug nymphs go through five instars (the intervals between molts), gradually losing their bright colors and becoming covered in silvery hairs that give them a coarse, grizzled appearance.


They become larger in size with each molt, and acquire wing pads that will transform into fully functional wings as adult insects. All this time they are stalking other insects as prey, moving in a slow, methodical, deliberate manner that may only amplify the “creepiness” factor for someone prone to fear or dislike insects in general.

The final transformation from nymph to adult, accomplished in the last molt, is a dramatic one. A freshly-emerged adult Wheel Bug is a stunning pink or orange in color, and that trademark crest is now apparent. Two sets of wings are now fully developed. As its new exoskeleton hardens, the insect becomes darker, becoming gray and/or brown.

All assassin bugs use beak-like mouthparts to pierce their prey, injecting paralyzing venom and digestive enzymes into their victim. The internal tissues of the prey are liquefied by this chemical cocktail, and then withdrawn by the assassin through the same channels in its beak. Wheel Bugs are capable of taking prey larger than themselves, but small beetles and moths are among their favorites.

It is not a good idea to handle Wheel Bugs because they can deliver an excruciating bite in self-defense. They may deploy other behaviors to startle potential attackers, too. Assassin bugs have a groove in their “chest” that is flanked by ridges. Their beak normally rests inside this groove, but if alarmed the bug can bob its head vigorously, raking the tip of the beak across those ridges to make a very audible squeaking sound.

Besides making noise, female Wheel Bugs can evert a pair of stink glands from the tip of the abdomen to repel a predator. The glands are large and bright red, creating quite the visual display as well as a fragrant deterrent.

Arilus cristatus is a large insect, adult males being up to 28 millimeters in body length and females up to 32 millimeters. Females have a wider abdomen than males, when viewed from above.

Adult Wheel Bugs are seen most often in late summer and fall, earlier in more southerly latitudes. The species is found from eastern New Mexico north and east to Kansas, Iowa, southern Michigan, and southern New England. It is perhaps most abundant in the southeast states; it also occurs in Mexico.

Mated female Wheel Bugs lay their eggs in distinctive hexagonal masses. The number of eggs in such a cluster varies from about forty to 180. Look for the egg masses on tree trunks and other vertical surfaces where they will overwinter, protected by a shellac-like coating that insulates them from harsh weather, parasites, and other potential mortality factors. Nymphs hatch the following spring.

This is one of the “mystery bugs” I am most often asked about. It is so distinctive that even the most minimal description is enough to determine what the person is talking about. I like that people are curious about this species, and appreciate the opportunity to enlighten them about the unique biology of these predators.

Sources: Eaton, Eric R. 2003. “Amazing Assassins,” Missouric Conservationist. 64(6): 24-27.
Hoffman, Richard L. 2006. Assassin Bugs of Virginia. The Insects of Virginia Number 15. Martinsville: Virginia Museum of Natural History. 74 pp.
Mead, F.W. 2011. “Wheel Bug, Arilus cristatus (Linnaeus) (Insecta: Hemiptera: Reduviidae),” University of Florida IFAS Extension.
Slater, J.A. and R.M. Baranowski. 1978. How to Know the True Bugs. Dubuque, Iowa: Wm. C. Brown Company Publishers. 256 pp.

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Green Lynx Spider

My wife and I recently returned from a road trip to the southern tip of Texas, November 4-ll. One of the spiders we encountered most frequently was the Green Lynx Spider, Peucetia viridans. Several of the specimens we found were females guarding egg sacs.

The Green Lynx is atypical of other lynx spiders in the family Oxyopidae in being much, much larger than average. Adult females may reach 26 millimeters, with a legspan of 70 millimeters, though the typical size range is 14-16 millimeters in body length. Males are only slightly smaller. Most specimens are indeed bright green, though many individuals from the southwest U.S. can be yellowish or even brown, the better to blend in with drier vegetation.

Green Lynx Spiders are agile and can actively pursue prey by running and even jumping, but most of the time you find them sitting motionless among flowers or foliage where they can ambush insects like bees, wasps, and caterpillars. They are also not averse to eating their own kind, as demonstrated in the image below.

I have seen many individuals, both adults and juveniles, on prickly pear cacti (Opuntia spp.), where they are protected from many of their own predators while supplied with prey that visit the flowers or seek shelter on the shady side of the cactus pads.

The scientific literature states that Peucetia viridans does not spin a web, but my own observations reveal that females at least construct what could be described as a “nursery web” around the vicinity of their egg sac. The spiderlings that emerge from the sac may add their own silk strands to the web. Images I have of other specimens show a weak network of silken lines that may help anchor the spider to the substrate should it encounter strong, struggling prey.

The egg sacs of Green Lynx Spiders have a surprising array of predators, so it is no surprise that the mother spider vigorously protects her offspring from danger. One study showed that the longlegged sac spider Cheiracanthium inclusum is a major threat to egg sacs and the spiderlings that hatch from them. Other predators include acrobat ants (Crematogaster sp.), soldier beetle larvae (Chauliognathus pennsylvanicus), and even grasshoppers and tree crickets (Willey and Adler, 1989).

Each egg sac contains between 25 and 600 eggs. The bowl-shaped sac averages 12-25 millimeters in diameter but can be easily embraced by the female’s legs. Females in captivity have produced up to six egg sacs during their lifetime.

Female Green Lynx Spiders are known to spit venom from their fangs to repel perceived attacks by scientists studying them, and probably perform this behavior in the face of threats from other vertebrate predators and/or large invertebrates (Fink, 1984).

Despite their large size as adults, these are highly cryptic spiders, so look carefully to find them. They seem to prefer fields, forest edges, and arid habitats, from Maryland to Florida and across the southern third of the U.S. to California. There is an additional species in the southwest, P. longipalpis, that can be easily confused with P. viridans. It requires examination of the mature sexual organs to tell them apart.

Enjoy hunting for the Green Lynx. It is a truly beautiful and photogenic arachnid.

Sources: Bradley, Richard A. 2013. Common Spiders of North America. Berkeley: University of California Press. 271 pp.
Fink, Linda S. 1984. “Venom Spitting by the Green Lynx Spider, Peucetia viridans (Araneae, Oxyopidae),” J. Arachnol. 12: 373.
Willey, Marianne B. and Peter H. Adler. 1989. “Biology of Peucetia viridans (Araneae, Oxyopidae) in South Carolina, With Special Reference to Predation and Maternal Care,” J. Arachnol. 17: 275-284

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Redwinged Grasshopper

Fall is a very colorful season, but it is not just the leaves on the trees that furnish brilliant hues. Take for example the subject of today’s “OrThoptera Thursday,” the Redwinged Grasshopper, Arphia pseudonietana. At rest it is a perfectly bland blackish, grayish, or dark brown insect. In flight, however, it exposes bright red hindwings. Their short aerial forays are often accompanied by loud crackling noises created as the front edge of the hind wing rubs against the posterior margin of the narrow front wing (tegmena). These “crepitation flights” are sometimes more conspicuous in sound than in visual display.


© Bob Parks

A Redwinged Grasshopper on the ground is nearly impossible to spot. They are usually well-camouflaged, but they also crawl rapidly into tangled grasses upon alighting. So, even if you happen to see where a flying specimen lands, good luck discovering it before it sees you and takes flight again. They are among the most challenging of grasshoppers to photograph because they are so wary and easily spooked.

The posterior pair of wings in grasshoppers are used in flight, and they are folded in accordion fashion, like a Japanese fan, when not in use. Those bright flight wings are concealed by the camo-mottled or banded front wings when the insect is on the ground.


Specimen accidentally impaled itself on a yucca leaf; I extricated it after this image was taken

Arphia pseudonietana is a widespread species in North America. Their distribution has a funnel shape, with a point of origin in central Mexico. The species ranges northwest up through eastern California, Oregon, Washington, and southern British Columbia; and east through Texas, Oklahoma, the northern half of Missouri, northern Illinois, Michigan, and extreme southern Ontario, Canada.

This is a decidedly grassland species that is most abundant in prairie habitats, and savannahs with shrubs and scattered trees. In the northeast U.S., look for it in dry, sandy or gravelly situations; and arid hilltops. Some populations in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan have bright yellow hindwings instead of the customary red.


Specimen in typical basking posture in full sun

Adults and nymphs feed on grasses and sedges, occasionally doing minor damage to winter wheat in areas where that crop grows adjacent to prairie habitat. It is not considered more than a minor pest to agriculture and rangeland.

The eggs of this species, buried in the soil in a conglomerated “pod,” hatch in mid- to late June. The nymphs take a minimum of 42-56 days to reach adulthood, passing through five instars (the intervals between molts) prior to becoming fully-winged and sexually mature. The adults are large insects ranging from 30-47 millimeters in body length. Females are longer and larger-bodied than males.

Males make display flights with loud crepitations to attract the attention of females. They fly horizontally or nearly vertically to a height of over one meter, slowly fluttering back to the ground. Mated females deposit pods of eggs in the soil, as depicted in the image below.

The Redwinged Grasshopper is worth seeking out, if only to see those bright red wings flashing in the sun. Be on the lookout for other species of “bandwinged” grasshoppers, too, named for the dark band across the hindwing of most species that contrasts with the red, yellow, or even blue basal disc.

Sources: Bland, Roger G. 2003. The Orthoptera of Michigan – Biology, Keys, and Descriptions of Grasshoppers, Katydids, and Crickets. East Lansing: Michigan State University Extension. 220 pp.
Branson, David, and Bethany Redlin. 2012. Grasshoppers: Their Biology, Identification and Management. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service.
Capinera, John L., Ralph D. Scott, and Thomas J. Walker. 2004. Field Guide to Grasshoppers, Katydids, and Crickets of the United States. Ithaca: Comstock Publishing Associates (Cornell University Press). 249 pp.

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Red-shouldered Bug

Today’s edition of “True Bug Tuesday” is all about the Red-shouldered Bug, Jadera haematoloma, family Rhopalidae. Last week, my wife and I happened upon a large number of this species in various life stages here in Colorado Springs. I went back a couple of times to get more and better images.

At first glance, it is easy to mistake Red-shouldered Bugs with boxelder bugs in the genus Boisea. Indeed, they both fall under the more general category of “soapberry bugs,” named for the affinity of these insects for the fruits of certain trees in the family Sapindaceae. Their appetite extends far beyond the berries and seeds of those and other trees and plants, though. They have been observed feeding on flower buds, oozing sap, and even dead insects.

Adults of Jadera haematoloma are overall slate gray with fewer red markings than boxelder bugs. They measure 9.5-13.5 millimeters in body length. Some specimens are brachypterous, meaning they have shorter wings than normal, revealing a bright red abdomen with a black bar or two on those exposed segments.

Nymphs lack wings, so the front half is gray while the back half is red. The nymphs can get very bloated while feeding, as demonstrated by the one imaged below. The nymphs pass through five instars (an instar is the interval between molts) before reaching adulthood. Freshly-molted adults are bright pink or orange.

There are usually at least two generations per year, more in the southernmost states. The bugs mate “tail-to-tail” and are thus easily distinguished from solitary individuals. Females unreceptive to mating signal that fact to approaching males by making noise. They stridulate by rapidly rubbing lateral edges of the abdomen against the adjoining thoracic segments.

A mated female digs a hole about one centimeter in depth in dry soil. There, guarded by the male, she lays a batch of up to twenty eggs. The ova hatch in about two weeks. One female, which usually mates multiple times with different males, can produce between 400 and 800 eggs in her adult lifetime.

Both nymphs and adults can overwinter in cracks, crevices, and other cozy niches. They occasionally take shelter inside homes and other buildings like boxelder bugs, rendering them a “nuisance pest” in some places.

The Red-shouldered bug is also known as the Goldenrain Tree Bug. It is native to the U.S. from Virginia south to Florida and west to Wisconsin, Kansas, Colorado, Arizona, and southern California. South of the border the species occurs from Mexico and the Caribbean to Colombia and Venezuela. It has also been accidentally exported overseas, at least to Asia.

This insect is easily confused with boxelder bugs, and any number of seed bugs in the family Lygaeidae which can be of similar size, coloration, and abundance. One must look at various subtle structural characters, rather than color and pattern, to distinguish them with any degree of certainty. With practice, however, one can render a confident ID in the field.

Sources: Carroll, Scott P. 2013. “Jadera haematoloma,” Soapberry Bugs of the World.”
Eaton, Eric R. and Kenn Kaufman. 2007. Kaufman Field Guide to Insects of North America. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company. 392 pp.
Jing-Fu Tsai, et al. 2013. “The soapberry bug, Jadera haematoloma (Insecta, Hemiptera, Rhopalidae): First Asian record, with a review of bionomics,” Zookeys 297: 1-41.
Slater, J.A. and R.M. Baranowski. 1978. How to Know the True Bugs. Dubuque, Iowa: Wm. C. Brown Company Publishers. 256 pp.