[Ctleps-l] Cove Island Park
Rick
rcech at nyc.rr.com
Mon Oct 23 20:43:29 EDT 2017
Maybe the mantis was eating the core of the Monarch, possibly avoiding
toxic-laden exoskeleton .
https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__rbc-2Dpix.smugmug.com_Nature_Cove-2DIsland-2DPark-2D102217&d=DwICAg&c=cjytLXgP8ixuoHflwc-poQ&r=DxSBJXRvd7MQp-AlXAtLeydve7SiywLWLcinsn9EdPE&m=IbZAF5f_ORXvvYjwhID1aDx_erwL_pFFWAjD8PYqF7Q&s=UoJBsqE50Z2mCAiJ99kjGgulbB50EbmdrahblOWQZmg&e=
Note: The offending mantis had a badly damaged right eye, looks black. Hey,
being a mantis isn't as easy as it looks.
Rick
From: ctleps-l-bounces at mailman.yale.edu
[mailto:ctleps-l-bounces at mailman.yale.edu] On Behalf Of Rick
Sent: Sunday, October 22, 2017 6:43 PM
To: ctleps-l at mailman.yale.edu
Cc: nyleps at googlegroups.com; Emily Peyton <eapeyto at us.ibm.com>; Peter Joost
<phjoost1 at gmail.com>; NYSButterflies at yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Ctleps-l] Cove Island Park
The abundance of late season butterflies continues. At Cove Island Park in
Stamford, a coastal site close to the NY state line, 8 species:
Cabbage White 15+
Orange Sulphur 12
Cloudless Sulphur 1
Painted Lady 10
Common Buckeye 25+
Monarch 30
Fiery Skipper 25+ (both sexes)
Ocola Skipper 1
Monarch numbers were declining, as a Chinese Mantis (Tenodera sinensis) sat
near a flowerhead, lunging at them as they landed, then devouring them (I
saw one Monarch escape after being attacked, but others were not so lucky).
Chinese Mantises have often been observed preying on Monarchs. They aren't
deterred by the toxins (leap at the Monarchs the moment they land), and from
the way they chow away at the butterfly, top to bottom like a buzzsaw (as
with other hapless victims), it doesn't appear as if they are avoiding toxic
areas, although maybe they keep to the insides and avoid the exoskeletons.
There is evidence that these mantises avoid eating the guts of Monarch
caterpillars, possibly as a means of avoiding toxins
[https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov_pubmed_28300580&d=DwICAg&c=cjytLXgP8ixuoHflwc-poQ&r=DxSBJXRvd7MQp-AlXAtLeydve7SiywLWLcinsn9EdPE&m=IbZAF5f_ORXvvYjwhID1aDx_erwL_pFFWAjD8PYqF7Q&s=jSaBut9AFbRQuF9UCR9X8CmlZNn0gpdTRfEDF11AuWA&e=], but I'm not sure the full
story is known concerning adults.
Anyway, hope the good run of late butterflies continues.
Rick Cech, Emily Peyton & Peter Joost
P.S. I'm hearing stories of fresh Juniper Hairstreaks and late swallowtail
broods (several species) in recent days. What's next?
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