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.

March 30

2016 March 30

 

   Aziza Cooper writes:  The monthly butterfly walk is this Sunday, April 3 at 1pm. We will meet at the top of Mount Tolmie and decide on our destination. Since butterflies need sunshine and warm temperatures to fly, this walk will be cancelled if the weather is cold or cloudy.

 

   For info, email Aziza at tanageraz@yahoo.com or call her cell phone: 250-516-7703.

 

 

   Annie Pang writes:  I was so pleased to get a pose of this rather tattered but still beautiful (to me) Mourning Cloak. Taken in Victoria BC, March 29th 2016 at Gorge Pk.  I have also seen a Mesoleuca gratulata but it would not land.  Same for a Western Spring Azure –  frustrating!

 

Mourning Cloak Nymphalis antiopa (Lep.: Nymphalidae)   Annie Pang

 

   Rosemary Jorna sends a nice picture of an apparently well-marked moth from Peden Bluff, March 24, but so far it has escaped all efforts at identification.  If anyone has any clues, please let us know!

 Unidentified moth (Lep.: Pyralidae)   Rosemary Jorna

  

 Jeremy Tatum reports a Western Spring Azure,  a Sara Orangetip, and a California Tortoiseshell  from Mount Tolmie, at about 1:00 p.m. this afternoon, March 30.  The tortoiseshell was sunning itself on the reservoir, as is the custom of nymphalids on Mount Tolmie.  It looked as though it was waiting for someone to take a photograph if it.

March 29

2016 March 29


   Gerry and Wendy Ansell write:

   This afternoon (March 29) at 12:30 a.m. there was a Grey Hairstreak at the top of Mount Tolmie.  We saw one Cabbage White on our way there.  Yesterday (March 28) we found our first Mourning Cloak of the year at Swan Lake.

 

March 28

2016 March 28

 

   Jeff Gaskin reports his first Cabbage Whites of the year today, one at Jutland Road and one on Wascana Street, Victoria.  And Mike Yip reports his first butterfly of the year, a Mourning Cloak at Cross Road, Nanoose Bay.

 

Mourning Cloak  Nymphalis antiopa (Lep.: Nymphalidae)   Mike Yip

 

 

    Scott Gilmore wrote from Upper Lantzville, on March 26:  In trying to re-find the garlic snail so I could smell it I turned up a different species of land snail in my backyard, Cochilicopa lubrica.  At just under 5mm long it is not very big. 

 

Glossy Pillar  Cochilicopa lubrica (Pul.: Cionellidae)  Scott Gilmore

Glossy Pillar  Cochilicopa lubrica (Pul.: Cionellidae)  Scott Gilmore

 

 

   Jeremy Gatten writes, on March 26:  I have sent in a photograph of this longhorn beetle before, but I got much better shots of one today.  It was found at Hans Helgesen Elementary School in Metchosin (same as the only other one I have seen).  The moth diversity is not too shabby right now, with probably over 20 species on the wing at present.  The latest for me are Egira crucialis (yesterday at my place in Saanichton), E. perlubens (today at Hans Helgesen) and Anticlea vasiliata at my place this evening.

 

 

  

Plectrura spinicauda (Col.: Cerambycidae)   Jeremy Gatten

 

 

 

   Scott Gilmore wrote from Upper Lantzville, on March 27:   Today I found a Jumping Spider that is new to me. I think it is Platycryptus californicus but I do not claim to know anything about spiders.  [Jeremy Tatum writes:  Thanks to Robb Bennett for confirming Scott’s identification.]

 

Platycryptus californicus (Ara.: Salticidae)    Scott Gilmore

 

 

 

 

March 25

2016 March 25

 

   Libby Avis sends photographs of a moth and two beetles from Alberni.   The moth is Semioscopis sp.  Libby says there are three possible species, and that they require dissection to be sure of the species.  Jeremy Tatum notes that taxonomy of all organisms seems to change at a bewildering rate, and that this and similar moths, including the familiar Depressaria pastinacella and Agonopterix alstroemeriana, were formerly included in the Family Oecophoridae, but the group has now been given a new Family name, Depressariidae.

 

Semioscopus sp. (Lep.:  Depressariidae)   Libby Avis

Libby writes that the next image is Rathvon’s Ladybeetle, found on March 20 at the McLean Hill.  She writes: It’s pretty big for a ladybird – this one was 12 mm. [Jeremy comments:  Have a look at a ruler – you’ll agree that that’s large!]  Libby continues: It’s been reported from elsewhere on the island, but it’s the first time we’ve seen it in the Alberni valley.

 

Anatis rathvoni (Col.:  Coccinellidae)     Libby Avis

Libby’s third photograph is  Thanatophilus lapponicus, the Northern Carrion Beetle, found at Rathtrevor Provincial Park on March 18th. She was able to identify this one thanks to Scott Gilmore’s photo on Bug Guide.

 

Thanatophilus lapponicus  (Col.:  Silphidae)     Libby Avis

 

There have been few reports of butterflies, though Virginia Miller reported to Aziza Cooper that she had seen an anglewing (comma) in Goward Park, Cadboro Bay on March 16.   Annie Pang saw two Cabbage Whites in Gorge Park Community Gardens on March 23. She closely watched and photographed the interesting behaviour of one of them, a female, which perched with raised abdomen.  She writes:  I am assuming that she has already laid her eggs and is trying to discourage further mating or is about to lay eggs.  In this correct?  Cris Guppy responds:  The female was indeed trying to discourage males from mating with her. She raised her abdomen to release pheromones that ‘turn off’ the male’s interest in mating. I once had a laboratory colony of Cabbage Whites, and found that I if I had many females in a cage with males there would be a very low rate of mating. The first couple of females that mated would turn off all the rest of the males in the cage, and the rest of the females would not get mated with. All the Pieris and Pontia species do this (probably orangetips and marbles as well, but I am not sure).

 

Cabbage White Pieris rapae (Lep.: Pieridae)   Annie Pang

Cabbage White Pieris rapae (Lep.: Pieridae)   Annie Pang

 

Jeremy Tatum writes that he has either been confined to the classroom (with some excellent students) or to bed (with a miserable cold), and hasn’t seen many invertebrates recently, though a bunch of organic Brussels sprouts from the grocery store produced a nice crop of Diamondback Moths.  The first photograph is of one with unusual markings and colour, which had me guessing at first, but Eric LaGasa and I agree that it is probably a Diamondback Moth.  The other two photographs show dorsal and lateral views of more typical individuals.  The little blob of liquid near the third one is meconium from a newly-ecloded individual.

 

  Plutella xylostella (Lep.: Plutellidae)     Jeremy Tatum

 Plutella xylostella (Lep.: Plutellidae)     Jeremy Tatum

 

Plutella xylostella (Lep.: Plutellidae)     Jeremy Tatum

 

March 21

2016 March 21

 

   Jeremy Tatum sends a photograph of a rough stink bug Brochymena sp. from his Saanich apartment.

 

Brochymena sp.: (Hem.: Pentatomidae)   Jeremy Tatum

 

 

   Scott Gilmore writes, from Upper Lantzville:  At the beach on Saturday (March 19) there were flies everywhere on the rocks at low tide. I decided to investigate. With the help of John Carr they were identified as being from the genus Oedoparena from the family Dryomyzidae. Turns out the larval stage of these flies eat barnacles which explains the location. There are three species world wide with two of them in North America, one of which is known from Canada. That along with a few features led me to conclude that it fits with the descriptions of Oedoparena glauca. There are not too many marine insects!   If you want to know more (or even too much) about this crazy group this is a pretty good article

 

http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/part/56140

 

 Oedoparena glauca  (Dip.: Dryomyzidae)   Scott Gilmore

Oedoparena glauca  (Dip.: Dryomyzidae)   Scott Gilmore