- Author: Kathy Keatley Garvey
Published on: May 2, 2011
Gotta love those solider beetles (family Cantharidae).
When an army of soldier beetles goes on patrol in your garden, just thank them. These "leatherwings" are there to mete out justice to the plant-sucking aphids and other undesirable critters. Aphids are high on their menu preferences. So are grasshopper eggs, caterpillars and other soft-bodied insects.
The Cantharids look almost comical as they scoot down limbs and leaves--and then suddenly run out of room. We watched this one (below) reach the end of a leaf. Its antennae twitching furiously, it paused and looked around for another foothold.
No more leaf. Just air. End of the line.
Tags: Cantharidae (4), soldier beetle (3)
Comments: 1
I have been arguing with the weed abatement people about their slash, poison, and burn approach to anything that grows above a few inches high, and have finally come to an agreement to continue pulling weeds and cutting less of "my crop" (vetch) growing among the wild grains. I have apple, apricot, walnut, and elderberry trees, with less success with pear and pomegranate.