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Monarch Monday
Big poops on a Common Milkweed leaf underneath a seriously chewed-back leaf? That’s a sign! Ah… not on the Milkweed, but down in the grasses, perhaps in retreat from all the rain. Two days later at the same patch, more eaten leaves, more poop. And ah-hah again! Was this the same individual? Maybe, but as…
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New Blue Jay Day
One. Two. Three, or just another view of No. 2? I’m not sure; this tree was rather thickly leaved.
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Gold Bug Vs. Parks Department
Dogbane Leaf Beetle/Chrysochus auratus is one of the most spectacular beetles found in our parts. Their specific epithet means golden, but as you can see they’re something of an iridescent rainbow. Their common name comes from their association with Hemp Dogbane/Apocynum cannabinum. I found my first beetles of this species last year in a patch…
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Raptor Wednesday
The Staten Island Ferry passes this octagonal sewer outfall structure (circa 1915) near Robbins Reef Lighthouse. The other day… … you can see why I did a double-take. A mature Bald Eagle was perched upon it. (Yes, that’s a golf course on the Bayonne Peninsula beyond.) From another angle.
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Hedgehog Galls
On White Oak/Quercus alba, the distinctive galls of the Hedgehog Gall-maker wasp, Acraspis erinacei, are in full “flower” right now. These growths are induced in the plant by the tiny wasps to serve as nesting and feeding chambers. Yes, this is oak DNA being manipulated by wasp DNA. Galls are tough, but they are not…






