Fishing Spider
July 28, 2009
WTB,
I promised you these a long time ago. Here are the images of a spider
eating the frog. It’s a little hard to make out but it is probably a green
tree frog and this is on a leaf of a Sagittaria. It occurred in our little
nature area, the Kiawah Swamp Garden. Not sure of the actual type of
spider. Kinda creepy though; don’t usually consider consumption in that
direction among Phyla.
Here are a couple of other links for your enjoyment.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2PZTILeS4jo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RFg2-bkjwPg
KICA Maint
Kiawah Island, SC
February 29, 2008
Thanks for checking on this. We’ve used your site to ID a lot of our
questions already but this one had us stumped. I’ll have to send you an
image we have of a spider, I’m assuming a fishing spider, eating a green
tree frog. It was back pre-digital so we’ll see how the scan comes out.
Thanks again for the great work you do,
Norm Shea
Director, Lakes Management

Six Spotted Fishing Spider eats Tree Frog
Dear KICA Maint,
Thanks for sending these amazing documents of a Six Spotted Fishing Spider eating a Tree Frog. It is a wonderful addition to our recent posting of a Common House Spider feasting on a Skink. We enjoyed watching your videos of Alligators.

Six Spotted Fishing Spider eats Tree Frog
Exiguous scorpion listings
July 28, 2009
Dear WTB,
There seems to be a mysterious lack of scorpions listed on your site (which is a great site, BTW) so thought I’d make a submission. Not sure of the actual ID but think it is a Hentz Striped Scorpion (Centruroides hentzi). The picture was taken just before I hit it with my shoe. Just joking! Don’t want to end up on your Unnecessary Carnage page. This was found on a coworker’s bedroom wall one night several months ago right under the light switch. It miraculously was not squished, but brought in to us for identification. It is residing in Critter City for the moment until a positive ID can be achieved.
KICA Maint
Kiawah Island, SC

Hentz Striped Scorpion
Dear KICA Maint,
We agree on two counts. Yes, there is a noticeable dearth of scorpions on our website. Perhaps some older postings were lost in the site migration last September. We cannot recall posting any scorpions since that time. Part of the problem probably resides with our editing of letters. Much of our editing is unintentional because we are unable to read all of our mail. We gravitate to subject lines that catch our attention, and some days we are able to devote more time and post more letters than other days when we are too busy conducting our lives. On the second count, we agree that this appears to be a Hentz Striped Scorpion, though we are far from experts on the topic. According to BugGuide, the Hentz Striped Scorpion is found in Florida, Georgia and Alabama. Your sighting may be normal range expansion since it is not far from the typical range. The genus Centruroides is in the family Buthidae. Here is what BugGuide has to say about the family: “The family Buthidae is the largest scorpion family with over 50 genera and over 600 species worldwide. Of the known 25 (or so) species of dangerous scorpions, only one species is NOT in the family Buthidae (it’s Hemiscorpius lepturus, in the family Hemiscorpiidae, and it has a highly virulent haemotoxin). Dangerous buthids are in the genera Centruroides (North America and Mexico), Tityus (South America), and Androctonus, Parabuthus, Leiurus, Mesobuthus, and Hottentotta in the Old World. Oddly, with all the deadly animals in Australia, none of the buthids there are known to be dangerous.“ Thanks for your submission.

Hentz Striped Scorpion
weird bug/larva in vermicompost
July 27, 2009
I’m thrilled to be new mom to a worm factory since the original owners are moving out of state. I just found some weird bugs that I thought may be a type of beetle larva, but I really have no idea. If they won’t harm my worms, I’ll put them back in the composter. They seem to be segmented, dark gray-brown, no legs or discernable head but do travel in one direction from the pointy part (that looks like the tip of a fine ballpoint pen) by moving the little hairs that cover them. There are more hairs on the bottomside. They’re pretty big, about an inch long and quarter of an inch wide. Kind of creepy. but I love bugs and would love to know what the heck they are. Thanks for your help.
wormfarmer
vermicompost bin in pasadena, ca

Soldier Fly Larvae
Dear Wormfarmer,
You have Soldier Fly Larvae, Hermetia illucens, a species Charles Hogue refers to as a Window Fly in his book Insects of the Los Angeles Basin. The following is an excerpt from the Oregon State University Garden Hints website and the quotes are from Cindy Wise, compost specialist volunteer coordinator with the Lane County office of the Oregon State University Extension Service. “Soldier fly larvae are voracious consumers of nitrogen-dominant decaying materials, such as kitchen food scraps and manures.
‘Don’t worry, soldier flies don’t usually invade houses, unless your compost pile is close to your house,’ said Wise. ‘They almost exclusively populate compost bins or sheet mulch compost piles and manure piles,’ she said. ‘In the southern United States they are being utilized to reduce hog manure, as they can consume up to 30 tons of hog manure in two days.’
Soldier fly females lay eggs on the surface of nitrogen-rich material that is exposed. So, if you want to avoid having these large flies and their maggots in your compost pile, make sure you have enough leaves, dry grass, shredded paper and other organic “brown” material in the pile to cover the nitrogen food sources by at least two to four inches. Be sure to bury food scraps deeply in the pile and cover them well.
You can further discourage these flies by putting window screen over any holes in the bin and gluing it down with a waterproof caulking (like an exterior household caulk) on the inside of the bin to help exclude the flies in their egg laying stage.
They often thrive in worm bins, as well as compost bins, where they may out-compete the worms for food.
‘In a worm bin, bury food scraps down at least six inches for the worms and let the flies eat what is on the surface,” said Wise. “The flies don’t eat the worms or their eggs so they aren’t predators of the worms.’ …
Wise and her colleagues are experimenting with soldier flies in compost bins and then analyzing the resulting compost to see what differences there may be in the nutritional content of the compost.
The maggots are known to break down organic material in the pile so it can further decompose. And the flies inoculate the compost with beneficial bacteria from other sources.“ In our opinion, you should return the Soldier Fly Larvae to the worm bin.
3
Big body little winged moth.
July 27, 2009
We found this bug on our front porch last night and we can not figure out what it is.
The Tuttle Family
Raleigh, NC

Imperial Moth newly metamorphosed
Dear Tuttle Family,
It appears that tobacco has stunted the growth of this Imperial Moth. Seriously, this Imperial Moth has just emerged from its underground pupa. The wings have not yet expanded. That will take several hours and then your male, evidenced by more purple markings on wings, will be ready to take flight and search for a mate.
Would like help identifiying this insect
July 27, 2009
My husband took these photos in early to mid June on the side of our garage. He said this critter seemed very interested in the wasps nest that was up under the overhang. I have never seen such a thing and out there, i have seen some crazy looking “bugs”. There are cornfields nearby and a small spring fed creek on the property (however, its 150 yds from where this was taken)
Ann Matlock
Central Indiana, USA

Dobsonfly
Hi Ann,
We just finished posting an image of a California Dobsonfly, and our response mentioned the eastern Dobsonfly, Corydalus cornutus, and then we opened your letter, only to find an example. Your photos are of a formidable looking but harmless male Dobsonfly. Dobsonfly larvae known as Hellgrammites are aquatic and are prized by fisherman.
Unknown Bug From San Diego County
July 28, 2009
Found this Bug on the side of a shaded rock adjacent to perrenial creek with a really low water flow. Found it during the day on July 20. When I approached it to photograph it it did not move away at all.
Frank Santana
Boulder Creek, San Diego California

California Dobsonfly
Hi Frank,
Our reference book, Insects of the Los Angeles Basin by Charles Hogue, identifies this as a California Dobsonfly, Neohermes californicus. This is a distinct genus from the eastern Dobsonfly, Corydalus cornutus, which is a much larger insect and can be viewed on our site as well as on BugGuide. Your specimen is classified on BugGuide as a Gray Fishfly in the genus Neohermes, but there is no page devoted to Neohermes californicus. There is an acknowledgment on the genus page that the species Neohermes californicus is known as the California Dobsonfly. We provide this background information because when we did a web search of California Dobsonfly, we found some wonderful images on BugGuide that referenced out own website as a source. Interestingly, those photos from El Dorado County in northern California were taken the same day as your photo. Since it is not terribly professional to cite oneself when doing research, we wanted more assurance that we could properly identify your impressive creature. So, for clarification, your insect is Neohermes californicus, a Gray Fishfly sometimes called the California Dobsonfly.
Red-and-black insect, size of grasshopper
July 28, 2009
I saw this lovely red and black insect swaying around on the top of a flower in a fairly strong wind. Size of a grasshopper, but didn’t seem to be typically grasshopper-y, to my eyes at least. Location was grassland and scrub around clay pit in the Surrey Hills ANOB, time was late afternoon late July.
Louise
Hambledon, Surrey Hills ANOB

Six-Spot Burnet
Dear Louise,
We believe your lovely diurnal or day flying moth is the Six-Spot Burnet, Zygaena filipendulae. There is a wonderful website for the identification of UK Moths that has a quick way to reference moths by families, the thumbnail index, and the Six-Spot Burnet was quickly located in the family Zygaenidae, the Leaf Skeletonizer Moths. According to UK Moths, the Six-Spot Burnet has a “Wingspan 30-38 mm. This is the commonest of Britain’s day-flying Burnet moths, and is found throughout Britain, with a coastal bias in the North. Occupying meadows, woodland clearings and sea-cliffs, it flies from June to August. The larvae feed mainly on bird’s-foot trefoil (Lotus corniculatus).“ Thanks for educating us today that AONB stands for Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
¶ Posted 28 July 2009 § Moths ‡ °