This blog provides an informal forum for terrestrial invertebrate watchers to post recent sightings of interesting observations in the southern Vancouver Island region. Please send your sightings by email to Jeremy Tatum (tatumjb352@gmail.com). Be sure to include your name, phone number, the species name (common or scientific) of the invertebrate you saw, location, date, and number of individuals. If you have a photograph you are willing to share, please send it along. Click on the title above for an index of past sightings.The index is updated most days.

April 25

2018 April 25

 

    Gordon Hart photographed a beetle at Witty’s Lagoon yesterday, and we are much indebted to Scott Gilmore for identifying it as an Oregon Tiger Beetle.  Gordon also writes that yesterday in his Highlands garden he saw two Green Commas, and a Sara Orangetip as well as a number of Western Spring Azures.

 

Oregon  Tiger Beetle Cicindela oregona (Col.: Carabidae – Cicindelinae) Gordon Hart

 

   Jochen Moehr continues to find lots of moths in his moth trap in Metchosin.  He counted 22 Melanolophia imitata this morning.  Here is one of them:

Melanolophia imitata (Lep.: Geometridae) Jochen Moehr

 

   Next is a pug, probably Eupithecia ravocostaliata, though since we are not entirely certain how to distinguish this species from E. nevadata, we’ll put both names in the caption.


Eupithecia ravocostaliata/nevadata (Lep.: Geometridae)  Jochen Moehr

 

   Next, another pug.  Jeremy Tatum’s best guess is that it is either E. annulata or it isn’t.

Probably Eupithecia annulata (Lep.: Geometridae)  Jochen Moehr

 

Hydriomena manzanita  (Lep.: Geometridae)  Jochen Moehr

 

Triphosa haesitata (Lep.: Geometridae) Jochen Moehr

 

Alucita montana  (Lep.: Alucitidae)  Jochen Moehr

 


Nola minna (Lep.: Nolidae)   Jochen Moehr

 


Feralia comstocki (Lep.: Noctuidae)  Jochen Moehr

 

Behrensia conchiformis (Lep.: Noctuidae)  Jochen Moehr

 

Cissusa indiscreta (Lep.: Erebidae – Erebinae) Jochen Moehr

 

 


Adela trigrapha  (Lep.: Adelidae)  Jochen Moehr

 

 

    The California Tortoiseshell that has been seen on and off on the Mount Tolmie reservoir since April 19 was still there on April 24 at 3:30 p.m., when Marie O’Shaughnessy obtained this photograph:


California Tortoiseshell Nymphalis californica (Lep.: Nymphalidae)  Marie O’Shaughnessy

 

   Daniel Dönnecke writes:  I finally noticed some butterflies today on a hike in Mount Douglas Park.  There were four Sara Orangetips, a Western Spring Azure and three Propertius Duskywings.

Propertius Duskywing Erynnis propertius (Lep.: Hesperiidae)  Daniel Dönnecke

 

April 24 morning

2018 April 24 morning

 

   Scott Gilmore writes:  On Sunday April 22 I found several tiny rove beetles (Staphylinidae) in the low-mid intertidal zone in Lantzville. Both of these species are flightless and spend most of their time in air pockets of barnacles or rocks when the tide is up and only come out to feed when the tide goes out. Given where I found these they probably are only out of the water for a few hours a day. A rather remarkable habitat to find beetles.

 




Diaulota fulviventris (Col.: Staphylinidae)  Scott Gilmore

 

 


Liparocephalus sp. (Col.: Staphylinidae)  Scott Gilmore

 


Liparocephalus
sp. (Col.: Staphylinidae)  Scott Gilmore

April 23

2018 April 23

St George’s Day

 

   Jochen Moehr sends a picture of the green form of a caterpillar of a Large Yellow Underwing from his Metchosin garden.  And he writes:  I took my dog out to Matheson Lake in the hope to get closer to Western Spring Azures than here.  In the past I had often seen them mud puddling at the beach there.  

 

   I was not disappointed.  Although – being surrounded by dogs who had nothing but swimming and ball playing on their minds, and constantly disturbing the flutterbys – I was never able to count more than six simultaneously, there may have been as many as a dozen.  There was fluttering blue everywhere, and of course, when they sit down, they pretty much disappear.  

 

Large Yellow Underwing Noctua pronuba (Lep.: Noctuidae)  Jochen Moehr

 

Western Spring Azure Celastrina echo (Lep.: Lycaenidae)  Jochen Moehr

 

Western Spring Azure Celastrina echo (Lep.: Lycaenidae)  Jochen Moehr

 

 

Western Spring Azure Celastrina echo (Lep.: Lycaenidae)  Jochen Moehr

 

 

   Jeremy Tatum writes:  I went to Munn Road today, to Pike Lake substation and nearby.  I, too, saw lots of mud-puddling Western Spring Azures, mostly near to the yellow gate, I also saw one Sara Orangetip and one Western Brown Elfin there.  The vegetation of huge parts of that area has been flailed down, so that the area now looks like an ugly industrial wasteland.  Presumably it has been done to ease access to the electricity pylons, and the vegetation, in time, will grow back.  I hope no permanent destruction is in progress.

 

  The California Tortoiseshell that has been reported off and on from the Mount Tolmie reservoir since April 19 was still there at 4:30 this afternoon.

 

  Marie O;Shaughnessy sends a photograph of a Mourning Cloak that she saw along the lower trail at Mount Douglas, April 10th.

 

Mourning Cloak Nymphalis antiopa (Lep.: Nymphalidae) Marie O’Shsughnessy

April 22 evening

2018 April 22

 

   Jeff Gaskin and Kirsten Mills saw a California Tortoiseshell at 4:00 pm on the Mount Tolmie reservoir today, as well as three Cabbage Whites elsewhere on the hill.  The tortoiseshell was presumably the same individual that Val George photographed on April 19.  However, Val photographed another California Tortoiseshell today on the summit of Mount Douglas. 

 

California Tortoiseshell Nymphalis californica (Lep.: Nymphalidae)  Val George

 

 

    Aziza Cooper puts me a little on the spot!  She writes that she saw some commas on the tracks near the Goldstream campground, and she wants to know what species they are.  Well may you ask, Aziza, and you are just as good (or bad) at these things as I am!

Well, I (Jeremy Tatum) shall put a label under the photographs, and if anyone disagrees with them (or even if you agree), please do let us know!  Aziza also saw a Sara Orangetip and a Cabbage White there.

 

Satyr Comma Polygonia satyrus (Lep.: Nymphalidae)  Aziza Cooper

 

Male Satyr Comma Polygonia satyrus (Lep.: Nymphalidae)  Aziza Cooper

 

Green Comma Polygonia faunus (Lep.: Nymphalidae)  Aziza Cooper

 

Green Comma Polygonia faunus (Lep.: Nymphalidae)  Aziza Cooper

 

 

   Jeremy Tatum saw only his second butterfly of the year today – a Western Spring Azure at Blinkhorn Lake.  He comments that after a dull winter, he had forgotten how very beautiful these butterflies are.

 

 

   On April 20, Nathan Fisk found a bee holding fast to a Flower of Deltoid Balsamroot.  Thank you Sean McCann for identifying the bee as a kleptoparasitic bee of the genus Nomada.

 


Nomada sp. (Hym.: Apidae)  Nathan Fisk

April 22 morning

2018 April 22 morning

 

   Gordon Hart writes:  I visited Francis/King Park yesterday and saw one Sara Orangetip Anthocharis sara, and a Propertius Duskywing Erynnis propertius. There were also several Mesoleuca gratulata flying. This was in the area across the road from the Nature House. At home in the Highlands, a Green Comma flew by, but I saw no other butterflies.

 

Propertius Duskywing Erynnis propertius (Lep.: Hesperiidae)  Gordon Hart

 

   Jochen Moehr sends a picture of Lithophane petulca from Metchosin.

 


Lithophane petulca (Lep.: Noctuidae)  Jochen Moehr

 

   Jeremy Tatum sends a photograph of a caterpillar of the Silver-spotted Tiger Moth from Munn Road.

 

Silver-spotted Tiger Moth Lophocampa argentata (Lep.: Erebidae – Arctiinae)

Jeremy Tatum