Photo of the Week – May 19, 2011

A ground beetle showing off its massive mandibles. Aurora, Nebraska

I found this ground beetle in my yard when I was pulling up some bricks.  It’s a very common, though not often seen, beetle around here – and its close relatives are abundant throughout much of the United States.  This one appears to be Scarites vicinus, though it’s difficult to be sure.

This Carabid beetle spends its days beneath the ground, burrowing in moist soil or beneath logs (or bricks!).  It comes out at night to hunt on the surface, killing and eating just about any small invertebrate it encounters. 

If it is spotted by a mouse or other potential predator, the beetle’s first defense is often to “play dead” (see below) but if that doesn’t work, a pinch from its impressive mandibles can be a good fallback option!

When threatened, the beetle pulls in its vulnerable legs and antennae and stiffens up, looking for all the world like a dead beetle.

Many thanks to Ted MacRae for his help with identification and supplemental information on this beetle.  Visit his blog at: http://beetlesinthebush.wordpress.com/

Updated Website on Nebraska Prairies

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Looking for information on upcoming prairie events in Nebraska?  Trying to find resources to help you restore or manage your own prairie?  Interested in learning more about prairie ecology? 

PrairieNebraska.org has been rebuilt and updated as a clearinghouse of information on Nebraska prairies.  The site has been around for a while, but we’ve given it a facelift and added much more information.  Please check it out.

More importantly, please help us improve the site!  The site is up and running but we have much more work to do on it.  If you’re working on prairies somewhere in the state and have something to share, let us know.  If you have questions about prairies and can’t find the answer, we’ll try to add something to the site.  Let us know if you have a prairie-related website we should add to our links. 

Please contact Mardell Jasnowski at 402-694-4191 or mjasnowski@tnc.org and help us make this website as useful as it can be.

Thank you.

http://prairienebraska.org