Michael Kellough said:Sadly we have seen fewer butterflies and birds in the years since.
We have a substantial patch of milkweed but I’ve only seen one monarch this year.
Richard/RMW said:Every fall we get the monarch migration stopping over on their way to central Mexico. We'll be walking along the beach and they flutter past kinda zigzaging in the breeze, 2 flaps forward one flap sideways, at maybe 3 MPH.
I imagine them huffing and puffing and muttering "Only (puff) 3,000 (puff) miles left"...
Nature is amazing.
RMW
Yardbird said:Ever wonder how a butterfly's brain must be wired to make that zigzag pattern seem normal??
Haven't had them in our herbs, but once we had two caterpillar eating in our Tomato plants- they were chewing so noisily that I actually heard them in the backyard, standing near the Tomato plants before I saw them..... [eek] [eek] Never had any again in all the years since, but I've never forgotten that sight, and sound, of those 2 plant marauders.... [wink] [wink]Michael Kellough said:Five years ago I was lucky enough to witness the metamorphosis of a black swallowtail caterpillar into a butterfly.
The caterpillars like to eat dill.
After feeding enough it went looking for a safe place to roost.
It took a couple days for me to find the roost.
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Packard said:We used to see lightning bugs almost every hot night in June, July and August. I have not seen any this year. I suspect that car exhaust fumes are to blame.
USA Today partially agrees:
https://www.usatoday.com/in-depth/g...ghtning-bug-extinction-explained/70257108007/
Worldwide, there are more than 2,000 types – many that have been around for millions of years.
But some species [of fireflies] are threatened with extinction.
Habitat loss, overuse of pesticides, climate change and increased light pollution threaten some fireflies. Yet, these hazards have varying effects on species depending on their genetics and environments.
Sparktrician said:Packard said:We used to see lightning bugs almost every hot night in June, July and August. I have not seen any this year. I suspect that car exhaust fumes are to blame.
USA Today partially agrees:
https://www.usatoday.com/in-depth/g...ghtning-bug-extinction-explained/70257108007/
Worldwide, there are more than 2,000 types – many that have been around for millions of years.
But some species [of fireflies] are threatened with extinction.
Habitat loss, overuse of pesticides, climate change and increased light pollution threaten some fireflies. Yet, these hazards have varying effects on species depending on their genetics and environments.
We have plenty of lightning bugs here in Virginia. When I take my critter out for her last walk, if it's after dark, the parkland behind my house is lit up with them. If I look out the window in the middle of the night, they're EVERYWHERE. [smile]
six-point socket II said:The new “normal”. Either it is warm and rains - everything overgrows. Or it is hot as heck. Picture from Tuesday around 2 PM.
Kind regards,
Oliver