Categories
Insects Photography Uncategorized

Working a Dogbane Patch

I’ve been checking on a patch of Dogbane (Apocynum cannabinum) and photographing insects on the flowers. Although the plant is poisonous to most mammals, including humans, the flowers are very attractive to insects. All parts of the plant are toxic to mammals and can cause cardiac arrest if eaten. It is a member of the Apocynaceae family and other plants in the family are also poisonous. Dogbane is a host plant for many insects, including the Snowberry Clearwing Moth. Although I found many species of flies, the lack of bees is quite concerning. Not much is known about most of these species, just a name and a distribution. It is fun and challenging photographing them; I used a 100mm f2.8 macro and a ringflash.

A soldier fly, Odontomyia cincta.
Hobomok Skipper.
Common Thick-leg Fly, Tropidia quadrata. This is a species of hover fly. Larvae are aquatic.
Broad-headed Marsh Fly, Helophilus latifrons.
Yellow-shouldered Drone Fly, Eristalis stipator.
Clay-colored Leaf Beetle, Anomoea laticlavia. According to comments in BugGuide, larvae are myrmecophiles having an association with ants of the genus Formica.
Categories
Birding

Back at Pierre

I’ve been back in South Dakota for two weeks now. Amazingly, I’ve added two new birds to my state life list. It is hard just to add one species to that list, after birding in this state for over 50 years. I’m now up to 372 species seen in South Dakota. I also keep three county life lists, and both of those species were added to my Hughes County list, which is at 316.

The first one I added was White-winged Dove. This species is showing up more often in South Dakota in recent years. I could probably have added it a long time ago if I wanted to drive a long way chasing reports. But I just waited and eventually got it right here in Pierre. There were actually two of them. Thanks to Charlie Bessken for this bird!
This one was a complete surprise. A Mississippi Kite at Farm Island, a very rare bird in South Dakota. My sister Susan Leach and her husband Rick also saw it. I’m not sure if Charlie Bessken saw it but she was there too.
A take-off shot, showing plumage typical of a subadult Mississippi Kite.
This is the best photo I’ve taken since I got back, a Red-headed Woodpecker that posed nicely.