Insects After a Hard Freeze

In last week’s Photo of the Week post, I mentioned that I’d spent part of a morning photographing white fluffy seeds in autumn prairie.  (It’s not a bad life, all things considered.)  As I walked that morning, I noticed how quiet it was.  In fact, the only sounds I heard were those of my feet crunching through the dried grass.  We’ve had three below-freezing nights in the last week or so (25, 27, and 28 degrees F), and those cold temperatures have eliminated most insects – and their sounds – from the prairie.

Milkweed seeds in autumn prairie.

However, the prairie was not completely devoid of insects.  As I was photographing seed heads of false boneset (Brickellia eupatorioides), I noticed that one of the flower stems seemed much thicker than it should have been.  Upon closer inspection, it turned out to be a caterpillar.  Anyone know what kind it is?  I certainly don’t.

A caterpillar on a false boneset seed head.

In fact, there were two caterpillars on the same plant.  Did they survive the cold temperatures right there on the plant?  Or did they drop down into the thick leaf litter below during those frigid nights and find enough warmth to avoid freezing?  Are they larvae of a moth that overwinters as a caterpillar?  Or are they the last reproductive gasp of a moth species that migrates north each year in the spring, produces multiple generations, and then finally succumbs to the winter cold?

A second caterpillar on the same plant.

The coloration of the caterpillars matches fall prairie foliage very well, which makes me wonder whether they are of a species that overwinters as a caterpillar – and has protective coloration to match late fall dormant stems.  Maybe one of you will know some of the answers to my questions and can solve the mystery.  That’d be great, but in the meantime, it’s just as much fun to speculate as to know!

The caterpillars weren’t the only insects in the prairie.  Just a few steps away, I found the insect pictured below.  Can you identify it from the front?

Do you recognize the face of this insect?

The photo below gives you a better look.

An assassin bug sits in ambush on the seed head of a dotted gayfeather plant.

The assassin bug appeared to be waiting quietly for another insect to venture near enough to become a meal.  Based on the scarcity of insects in the post-hard-freeze-prairie, that could be a long wait.  Besides the assassin bug and the two caterpillars, the only other insect I saw was a ladybug, though I’m sure there were others that survived the first cold snaps – including wolf spiders.  Long-time blog readers might remember a post from a couple years ago about a wolf spider I found running around on the ice on an 18 degree F day.

So how do insects do it?  They’re cold-blooded, right?  They should be particularly vulnerable to really cold weather…

Well, a good hard freeze does bring death to lots of insects.  However, their species show up again the next year, so they clearly have strategies for getting through the winter.  Many species overwinter as eggs, but others survive as larvae or even adults.  Most of those that overwinter as larvae or adults seek shelter from the worst of the cold by burrowing underground or beneath deep leaf litter.  Even so, they may have to withstand temperatures well below freezing.  Some insects produce a kind of anti-freeze solution to protect themselves from freezing, while others change the way they store liquids within and between their cells so their cells don’t rupture when those liquids freeze and expand.

…and of course there are lots of other strategies.  You can read a technical description of some of those in this research article, if you’re interested.  Or you could read a more general post I wrote last year about winter survival strategies of a number of animals.

What’s happening to the insects in prairies near you?  Have you already seen the big first freeze die off?  Maybe you live in a climate where that never happens?  I’d love to hear your stories.

Photo of the Week – October 21, 2011

Garden spiders, aka black and yellow argiopes, are one of the most recognizable spiders in many prairies (not to mention backyards).  In fact, my kids spent several weeks this August doing daily checks on one big spider in our yard, feeding it every kind of insect they could find.  They had a great time catching insects and figuring out the best way to toss them into the web so that the insect would get tangled up and the spider could rush over and finish it off.

A black and yellow argiope (Argiope aurantia) with its egg sac. Lincoln Creek Prairie - Aurora, Nebraska. (For context, the egg sac was about an inch wide.)

A couple weeks ago, I took the above photo of a black and yellow argiope and its egg sac in a local prairie.  Female argiope spiders typically lay several hundred or more eggs in the early fall, encase them in an egg sac, and die soon after.  (Remember Charlotte’s Web?)  In Nebraska, the eggs hatch in the fall, but the spiderlings remain in the egg sac over the winter before emerging the next spring.  The tough egg sac protects them from winter weather and helps protect the eggs and spiderlings from many predators.

I’ve spent this week at a big conference for scientists of The Nature Conservancy.  One of the themes of our conference has been the need to do a better job of involving people – particularly kids – in conservation.  Clearly, one of the keys to getting kids into conservation is helping them to make personal connections with nature.  I’m convinced that intimate experiences like feeding a spider, holding a turtle, or watching a butterfly emerge from its chrysalis create long-lasting impressions that shape future convictions about the importance of nature.  When my kids are older, I hope that memories of watching and feeding that big spider in our yard will be influential and inspirational to them, regardless of where they go or what they do.  Now if we could just get a big spider in the backyard of every kid in the world…

Black and Yellow Argiopes – the new worldwide ambassador for conservation!