Showing posts with label Maryland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maryland. Show all posts

Monday, October 17, 2011

Tomato Hornworm Caterpillar



Date Found: July 14, 2011

Common Name: Tomato Hornworm Caterpillar

Scientific Name: Manduca quinquemaculata

Found: In Finksburg, MD on my Mimi's tomato plant - one on the under side of a leaf, another on the stalk.


Fun Facts:

They live mostly in the Northern United States.

Commonly found in home gardens, and they attack tomato plants.  They are also know to eat pepper plants, potatoes and eggplants.

Eggs are light-green in color and can be found on the top and bottom sides of leaves in the late spring.

It gets to be 3 1/2 - 4 inches as a full-grown adult.

Instead of building a cocoon, this caterpillar buries itself in the soil to pupate for 2 weeks. After that time, the Sphinx moth will surface, mate and lay eggs for round 2 that year. These second set of eggs will hatch and grow to adult, like their parents, but they will bury themselves and pupate over the winter.  They will emerge as moths the in the spring.

Praying Mantis



Date Found: October 17, 2011

Common Name: Praying Mantis

Scientific Name: Mantis religiosa

Found: On the screen of our back door, Hampstead, MD


Fun Facts:

It eats caterpillars, moths, flies, mosquitoes, bees.

The Praying Mantis can be found in meadows, on foliage and flowers in the Eastern US up to Ontario.

Mantids lay their egg sacks on sticks and twigs that are exposed above the snow. When the weather warms up in the late spring, all the eggs hatch. The tiny nymphs are carried away on the wind.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

It's a Mystery!

OK, two blogs in one day tells you that mom is helping out BIG time so I can get some playtime in.  We're at my  Mimi and Poppy's house in Finksburg, MD and look what Poppy found!

We don't know what it is yet because we found it already in it's chrysalis stage.  Thankfully, my sister let me borrow her habitat to keep it in for now.

Here is what we do know - the rest will have to be added later.

Found: April 10, 2011 (by Poppy)
Cocoon location on a branch of Rosemary in the garden.  You will have to check back to see if and when we solve this mystery!

Banded Woolly Bear

This one will have stages and more pictures since it is a caterpillar.  Also, the format may be different too as we try to show the different stages.
These two pictures are not our own.  

Found: April 7, 2011
Common Name:  Banded Woolly Bear Caterpillar
Scientific Name:  Isia isabella

Found again in our backyard, in the grass, in Hampstead, MD.  I brought this one inside, and mom let me keep it.  After Google, we found out that it eats grasses and broad leaves, so I got a fist full of grass and a dandelion leaf.  I put the caterpillar and grass in the habitat my Mimi gave me.  Over night, it made itself a cocoon.


He choose to build his cocoon right up against the door of the habitat, so this was the best picture we could get.  Chrysalis stage started Friday, April 9th.  If it hatches, I will let you know, but here's a preview of the Isabella Tiger Moth that is should become if all goes well!
Clicking this link will take you away from my blog - my info came from:  http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/butterfly/activities/printouts/Woollybear.shtml

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Red-backed Salamander


Date Found: April 6, 2011

Common Name: Red-backed Salamander

Scientific Name: Plethodon cinereus

Found: This salamander was in the same place as the Black Salamander. In the back yard under a wet log and leaves that were left from Fall.

FUN FACTS:

This salamander grows to about five inches long.

Red-backed Salamanders lay their eggs in a cluster, like grapes, hanging underneath a rock or inside an old log. They are born looking like mini-salamanders, about an inch long.

Like the Black Salamander, the Red-backed Salamander has no lungs and breathes through its skin which must remain wet or moist at all times. It comes out after it rains to hunt for its food. They eat arthropods (animals with exoskeletons, jointed legs, and segmented bodies).

Salamanders help plants when they tunnel through the dirt, because it breaks up and mixes up the soil which allows the plants to get the nutrients easier.

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Black Salamander


Date Found: April 6, 2011

Common Name: Black Salamander

Scientific Name: Aneides flavipunctatus

Found: Under a piece of wood that was lying on the ground on top of wet leaves and mud.


FUN FACTS:

This salamander has no lungs. It breathes through its skin, and the tissues lining their mouths. They must keep these surfaces moist in order to respire, and so have to live in damp environments, such as beneath logs, in caves or in wet rock crevices, and only venture out in humid weather.

The Black Salamander lays its eggs on land. The babies are hatched full grown. They eat earthworms, slugs, snails, spiders and a variety of insects. They are nocturnal and hunt at night. In captivity, they can be fed crickets, earthworms and mealworms. They have 3 toes on the front feet and 4 toes on the back feet.

Be careful to wash hands before and after handling amphibians as they sometimes secrete poisons through their skin. It isn't poisonous to touch.