Photo of the Week – November 24, 2010

Sometimes the world gives me a big dope slap and reminds me to stop and look around.  This photo comes from exactly that kind of moment.

It was late afternoon and I was on an ATV, returning to the shop from doing some work on one of our prairies, when I suddenly realized that the light around me was pretty stunning, and the clouds and prairie weren’t too shabby-looking either.  Fortunately, although I didn’t have my “good” camera with me, I did have the sense to carry my little digital camera with me, and I was able to squeeze off a few shots before the light went away.

Restored sand prairie in late autumn - Platte River Prairies, Nebraska.

Even in the late fall after everything is well past blooming, and even most of the fluffy seeds have fallen, prairies are still beautiful.

I can’t imagine working anywhere else.

An Inchworm in Disguise

This has to be my favorite prairie insect, although there are a lot of close runners-up.  This photo is of a camouflaged looper – an inchworm that disguises itself by gluing bits of flowers to its back.  It grows up to be a cute little green moth.

A camouflaged looper caterpillar on a black-eyed susan flower. The inchworm has camouflaged itself by attaching pieces of the flower to itself.

This one (above) was on a black-eyed susan flower in one of my backyard prairie gardens.  The only reason I saw it was that it was walking across one of the flower petals.  It looked like a bit of mung, but I stopped to look more closely and figured out what it was.  It’s only the second time I’ve seen one – the last one was on purple prairie clover, and the photos I took of that one (below) showed up in a lot of places, including NEBRASKAland magazine.

Camouflaged looper on purple prairie clover.

As far as I’m aware, the decorator crab is the only other invertebrate that attaches pieces of its environment to itself for camouflage – though some others, like caddisfly larvae construct protective cases that incorporate pebbles etc.  Not only does the looper create its own camouflage, it also refreshes it by replacing withered pieces with fresh over time.  When the caterpillar starts feeding on a different species of flower, it replaces its whole costume to match.  If you’re interested, there’s a short and interesting research paper from the late 1970’s by Miklos Treiber describing this process.

See some excellent photos of both the larva and adult stage by M.J. Hatfield here.

See my 2008 NEBRASKAland magazine article on this subject. Looper-April2008