- Author: Annemiek Schilder
In this weekly blog, Dr. Annemiek Schilder, Director, UCCE Ventura County and Hansen Agricultural Research and Extension Center, shares her observations about the natural world across the seasons. As she says:
"Gently observing your surroundings with curiosity will teach you some amazing things. There are so many fascinating things happening under our noses, only wanting for an observant eye."
As I was poking around my garden and looking at flowers, my eye suddenly fell on an odd-looking green spider carrying a honey bee on the spadix of a calla lily. My first thought was “poor bee”, working so hard to pollinate flowers and then getting caught by a spider – life is not fair!
A spider and a bee: eat or be eaten. Photo: Annemiek Schilder
Of course I was fascinated by the little scene and was wondering what was going on, what kind of spider was that? It was green with a large patterned abdomen and looked like one of those spiders that hang out in flowers. The spider hung on to the bee for a while, walking this way and that, it almost seemed too big for it to handle. The next day, I saw the dead bee lying at the bottom of the flower and no sign of the spider. I wondered if it had given up on the bee. As I looked into it, I discovered a much more sinister thing had taken place…
The spider turned out to be a flower crab spider (genus Misumena). These spiders are harmless to humans and often take on the color of the flower background to camouflage themselves. They have long “arms” like crabs to capture their prey and can walk forwards, backwards and sideways.
According to the Missouri Department of Conservation: “Crab spiders don't use webs to capture their prey; instead, they hide in flowers and wait for insects to come to them. Crab spiders often look like part of the flowers they inhabit. Unlike spiders that spin webs, crab spiders have good vision. When a bee, fly, or other prey lands on the flower seeking nectar, the crab spider attacks, injects venom into the prey, then holds it while drinking its juices.”
Flower crab spider feeding on honey bee blood, like a vampire! Do you notice another insect in the picture? This is an ant looking for nectar. Photo: Annemiek Schilder
So there we have the answer! The crab spider obviously sucked out the hemolymph (insect blood) and then discarded the bee corpse after dinner.
The next day it looked like the tables were turned: to my surprise, I saw a motionless brown spider being dragged by a blue-black insect into a hole in the ground. Before long, the same insect was walking nervously, zigzagging and fluttering its wings, over the ground. It was difficult to photograph since as soon as I approached, it would fly away.
However, I got a closer look at it by zooming in on the photograph: it turned out to be a spider wasp in the family Pompilidae, which often have a bluish-black body with a metallic sheen. They have long spiny legs and curved antennae. Spider wasps are solitary and the adults feed on flower nectar. The female wasps hunt spiders which they sting and paralyze, then drag to their burrows in the ground. Next, the female wasp lays a single egg in the spider and as the larva grows, it eats the insides of the still-living spider. How's that for a horror story to keep you up at night?
Spider wasp looking for a spider to attack among wood chips and leaves. Photo: Annemiek Schilder
I then remembered seeing a giant wasp over 2 inches long in Costa Rica. That wasp was a Tarantula hawk, which hunts and lays eggs in tarantulas. They are not aggressive towards humans but can give one of the most painful insect stings in the world when handled!
Did you know that Dr. Justin Schmidt, an entomologist (someone who studies insects) from Arizona, devised a scale known as the Schmidt Sting Pain Index? To develop this scale, he allowed himself to be stung by a variety of wasps, bees and ants. He rated the Tarantula hawk's sting as a “4” on a 0-4 scale and described it as "blinding, fierce, and shockingly electric. A running hair dryer has been dropped into your bubble bath. A bolt out of the heavens. Lie down and scream."
So look, but don't touch, is the best strategy!
- Author: Cris L. Johnson
The Entomology Association of Southern California will be holding a quarterly meeting at the Los Angeles Arboretum. These meetings address a variety of entomological related subjects relevant to local and state pest issues and are a great way to meet and share information with other individuals who are interested in this area of science.
Presentations on:
- Bark beetle-caused tree mortality and risk following various management regimes in south California.
- Polyphagous Shot Hole Borer/Fusarium dieback: Recognizing symptoms and removing hosts.
- Observations on the control of bark boring and other wood boring beetles in landscape trees.
- Polyphagous Shot Hole Borer - a voracious Ambrosia Beetle threatening California's crops and native plants.
- Environmental effects on Polyphagous Shot Hole Borer.
- Influence of air pollution on bark beetle outbreaks.
This association has an annual membership fee of $45. Memberships cover annual registration for all four quarterly meetings in December, March, June and September.
If you are interested in attending:
Date: September 9, 2014
Time: 9:00 am - 4:00 am
Location:
Los Angeles Arboretum
301 North Baldwin Ave.
Arcadia, CA
Contact: Dr. Jim Downer, 805-645-1458 or ajdowner@ucanr.edu
- Author: Cris L. Johnson
The Entomology Association of Southern California will be holding a quarterly meeting at the Los Angeles Arboretum. These meetings address a variety of entomological related subjects relevant to local and state pest issues and are a great way to meet and share information with other individuals who are interested in this area of science.
Presentations for this meeting will cover:
- California's invasive slugs, future threats & some novel approaches for their control
- Asian Citrus Psyllid research at California Polytechnic University
- County Reports
- Natural history and IPM practices for use against an atypical stink bug, the Bagrada bug
- GIS database of land gastropods of California - native and not
This association has an annual membership fee of $45. Memberships cover annual registration for all four quarterly meetings in December, March, June and September.
If you are interested in attending:
Date: March 4, 2014
Time: 8:15 am - 3:00 am (presentations start at 9:00 am
Location:
Los Angeles Arboretum
301 North Baldwin Ave.
Arcadia, CA
Contact: Dr. Jim Downer, 805-645-1458 or ajdowner@ucanr.edu
See here for the agenda.
- Author: Cris L. Johnson
Pollination is crucial to the survival of much of our ecosystems and maintaining viable environments for them to thrive provides not only benefits personal outdoor space, but adds to the well being of the community at large.
This publication focuses on ways to make your garden and outdoor environment more attractive to pollinators by identifying pollinators and the plants and landscaping practices that appeal to them.
ANR Publication 8498 is free of charge and available as a downloadable PDF.
You can download this publication here.
- Author: Cris L. Johnson
Anna Howell, UC Ventura County Cooperative Entension's staff researcher and entomologist, will join UC advisors and California agricultural experts for a "Mite Pest Management in Strawberry" meeting in Salinas, California.
Presentations include management of destructive mites, chemical and alternative options for control and identification of mites.
Speakers will also focus on the two-spotted spider mite and Lewis Mite. Anna Howell has been part of a research project studying the Lewis Mite which has been known to cause damage in strawberry and raspberry crops. The two-spotted spider mite causes damage to strawberry in coastal areas.
Growers interested in attending:
Date: Thursday, June 27, 2013
Time: 7:30 am to 11:00 am
Location:
UC Cooperative Extension Augitorium
1432 Abbott Street
Salinas, CA
Contact: Dr. Shimat Joesph, (831) 759-7359 or svjoseph@ucdavis.edu
View the agenda here.