At only 3mm B spotted this tiny beetle while we were out in the yard. Their host plant is Dandelions and the larva feed on the seeds in the flower heads.
Saturday, June 9, 2012
Saturday, April 28, 2012
Dung Beetle - Aphodius fimetarius
For whatever reason I’ve always associated dung beetles with the prairies where I grew up. On the farm, whether in the chicken coop, the pig barn or the cow pasture, there was lots of dung for these beetles to eat. I was pleasantly surprised to find this guy on our walking trail up here in the Boreal forest. This species was introduced from Europe and is about 7mm in size.
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Dance Fly - Rhamphomyia
Winter can sometimes bring surprises and at 5mm in size this tiny guy was one of them. I found this dance fly in mid February in our sunroom. It had just landed in one of our potted herbs we have growing there.
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Baldfaced Hornet - Dolichovespula maculata
In mid-August B went to St. Peter's Abbey in Muenster. I decided to tag along and check for bugs to photograph. As I was wandering around one of the many beautiful gardens I met Jim who was collecting seeds from some of the flowers that had finished blooming. He told me that he had seen some hornets on one of the sunflowers. I checked it out and found these hornets crawling around holes on the stalks. They seemed to like the frothy goo that was oozing out.







Saturday, July 23, 2011
Scarab Beetle - Trichiotinus assimilis
Sunday, June 26, 2011
Prairie Long-lipped Tiger Beetle - Cicindela nebraskana -
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Saturday, February 19, 2011
Mayfly - Callibaetis ferrugineus hageni
I'm fascinated with Mayflies and with the help of some of the experts over at Bugguide I now have a better understanding of them. They pointed me to some excellent resources. Right now I am reading a masters thesis by Jeffrey Michael Webb which can be found on the University of Saskatchewan website.
I would have never guessed that there are 675 known North American species of Mayfly; 321 of these occur in Canada, Saskatchewan having 107 species. The possibility of finding and photographing them seem limitless. It would probably take me 107 years to try and get them all. According to the thesis, Mayflies arose during the Carboniferous and are the oldest order of extant winged insects.
Most of all, I am fascinated by their eyes. I've learned that Callibaetis is one of the more sexually dimorphic species. The photos in this post are of the same species as my last post, but these are males, which have turbinate eyes (raised on a stalk), so they look different.
One of my older posts of a different species of Mayfly show just how different the eyes can be.



I would have never guessed that there are 675 known North American species of Mayfly; 321 of these occur in Canada, Saskatchewan having 107 species. The possibility of finding and photographing them seem limitless. It would probably take me 107 years to try and get them all. According to the thesis, Mayflies arose during the Carboniferous and are the oldest order of extant winged insects.
Most of all, I am fascinated by their eyes. I've learned that Callibaetis is one of the more sexually dimorphic species. The photos in this post are of the same species as my last post, but these are males, which have turbinate eyes (raised on a stalk), so they look different.
One of my older posts



Friday, February 4, 2011
Mayfly - Callibaetis ferrugineus hageni
Saturday, November 20, 2010
Broad-nosed Weevil - Sitona lineellus
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