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Re: Death by fungus
by Chuck » Fri Sep 20, 2024 3:22 pm
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Re: Don't collect in Sri Lanka!
by Chuck » Fri Sep 20, 2024 3:20 pm
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Re: Outsized/Oversized specimens + species
by Chuck » Fri Sep 20, 2024 3:13 pm
That is my experience raising Saturnids. Those exposed to crowding and competition for food results in surprisingly small adults.
Also- John had mentioned spring individuals tend to be smaller. We know that pupae lose weight during dipause, and the loss accumulates over time, which can only result in a smaller adult.
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Re: Lantanas blooming again
by 58chevy » Fri Sep 20, 2024 2:18 pm
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Re: Outsized/Oversized specimens + species
by Cabintom » Fri Sep 20, 2024 2:18 pm
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Re: Lantanas blooming again
by livingplanet3 » Fri Sep 20, 2024 2:07 pm
Interestingly, deer stopped coming around my yard after the Lantatas were planted. Apart from being unpalatable, I wonder if they also have a repellent effect, if planted in sufficient quantity? If so, it's helping protect my other plants as well.kevinkk wrote: ↑Thu Sep 19, 2024 11:22 pm Nice. Lantana also seems to be deer resistant. That means that deer choose my other plants first, and have as yet, not chomped any Lantana.
Finding nice looking plants that flower, are less tasty than others and will do well where you put them isn't always easy.
Proactive can be the order, the lupine had to be fenced in this year, and successfully bloomed, I could have photographed it I suppose ,a
nice yellow and purple colored cultivar.
it's always too late when you realize you have deer salad or your plant is homesick.
Some varieties have flowers that change color as they mature, and others (such as "New Gold") don't. I'd long had a variety here that goes from yellow to orange, but until quite recently, I really wasn't aware of the cultivars that have pink/purple coloration. One that I planted this spring (a purple variety of Lantana montevidensis), is a trailing form that I really should have kept in some large pots, because when planted in the ground, it's growth was exponential - it rapidly took over and became impossible to keep in check. In a single season, two small plants took over an entire area, smothering everything else around them.
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Re: Outsized/Oversized specimens + species
by jhyatt » Fri Sep 20, 2024 1:59 pm
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Re: Large for UK!
by Eddie-Bug » Fri Sep 20, 2024 12:12 pm
Thanks Johnny
PS/ I assume you agree with the ID?
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Re: Large for UK!
by Johnnyboy » Fri Sep 20, 2024 9:01 am
The females were around 2 inches (5cm) in bodylength (if you include the ovipositer). I decided to keep some in an old aquarium, I picked one up and it bit me very severely, the blood was running from my finger and I had to wrap tissue around the tip to soak up the blood. It put me off keeping them as pets so I returned them all to the place I found them. A rather stout, chunky insect.
Of course they were used to bite off warts in years gone by. Interestingly anther insect used to treat warts is the Spanish Fly beetle (Lytta vesicatoria). They secrete a vesicant, the poisonous Cantharadin. This is applied to the wart topically to chemically burn it away. If consumed in small amounts, cantharadin also acts as a sexual stimulant through irritation of the urethral tract.
The Great Green Bushcricket, (Tettigonia viridissima) is even bigger. One of my friends has found them ovipositing on the dunes on the Kent Coast, near Sandwich. The females reach over 7cm in bodylength (including ovipositer) and are the largest cricket found in the UK.
Regards
Johnny
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Re: Outsized/Oversized specimens + species
by Johnnyboy » Fri Sep 20, 2024 8:30 am
Regards
Johnny
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Re: Lantanas blooming again
by 58chevy » Fri Sep 20, 2024 2:04 am
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Re: Lantanas blooming again
by kevinkk » Thu Sep 19, 2024 11:22 pm
Finding nice looking plants that flower, are less tasty than others and will do well where you put them isn't always easy.
Proactive can be the order, the lupine had to be fenced in this year, and successfully bloomed, I could have photographed it I suppose ,a
nice yellow and purple colored cultivar.
it's always too late when you realize you have deer salad or your plant is homesick.
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Re: Outsized/Oversized specimens + species
by 58chevy » Thu Sep 19, 2024 10:21 pm
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Lantanas blooming again
by livingplanet3 » Thu Sep 19, 2024 5:58 pm
Lantana has proven to be a good choice for my yard - they tolerate the summer heat, and need very little maintenance apart from watering. They die back to the ground after the first hard freeze, but quickly grow back from the base in the spring. Same with Cannas, so for a few months of the year, I don't even need to water them.
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Re: Outsized/Oversized specimens + species
by Trehopr1 » Thu Sep 19, 2024 2:38 pm
Measurements are also helpful if you have no "typical" examples to show us.
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Outsized/Oversized specimens + species
by Trehopr1 » Wed Sep 18, 2024 10:14 pm
oversize examples exist. Naturally, we collectors are keen
to finding such unusual examples whether we collect it
ourselves, purchase it, or bid on it in earnest at auction.
I suppose its just part of human nature to strive for bigger
and better especially if you have an affinity for collecting
something.
Thought this could make for an interesting thread.
So, if any hobbist of insects out there has ANY "unusual-sized"
insect in their collection to show us for ooh's and aah's sake
then feel free to post it here on this thread (along with any
pertinent background info. on how you came across it).
My initial entry to this topic revolves around a couple of
common Colias species (here in the eastern US).
Pictured below are 2 sets of (male) Colias eurytheme
and Colias philodice. Both males at the top are typical
sized examples for their respective species. The considerably
larger males at the bottom are something one only runs
across (here and there) in the field.
In fact, if I had to compare "apples to oranges" here I would
have to say from experiance that super-size males of C. philodice
are MUCH less often encountered between the two.
Both oversized specimens were collected by me in the same field
recently on Sept.03. 2024
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Re: Mantids: the noble, patient predators.
by Trehopr1 » Wed Sep 18, 2024 9:25 pm
As is the case these days with much of this "semi-prepared" and packaged material one gets very little information except for perhaps a (general) locality and maybe a date of capture.
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Re: Mantids: the noble, patient predators.
by livingplanet3 » Wed Sep 18, 2024 6:11 pm
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Re: Mantids: the noble, patient predators.
by littlegreenmantis » Wed Sep 18, 2024 1:18 pm
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Re: Large for UK!
by Eddie-Bug » Tue Sep 17, 2024 10:44 am
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