Showing posts with label monarch butterfly predators. Show all posts
Showing posts with label monarch butterfly predators. Show all posts

Monday, July 21, 2014

Wasp Eating Monarch Caterpillar - Video

Here’s a video I shot recently of a paper wasp eating a monarch caterpillar that it caught on one of my milkweed plants.


These wasps are the main predator of the monarch caterpillar in my garden here in Orange County, California. Last year it seemed that these wasps captured 100% of the caterpillars, but this year they haven’t seemed to be able to keep up with the numbers, at least to this point. In the last few days all my milkweed plants have been completely stripped bare by large numbers of caterpillars, most of them in their 5th instar (final stage of their growth as a caterpillar). I had caterpillars wandering all over the place in search of food over the weekend. I relocated some of them to plants that had a few leaves remaining to even out the numbers on the plants, but many of them are now resorting to eating the actual stalks of the milkweed plants. So in a way this year I guess I’m a little bit happy to have the wasps taking some of the caterpillars.
An interesting thing about the wasps is that they do not seem to bother the caterpillars in their 5th instar. I’m not sure if that really is the case, but I was observing a wasp yesterday that was repeatedly patrolling a milkweed plant that had two 5th instar caterpillars on it, and despite actually brushing against the caterpillars on a few occasions, it never attacked them. I wondered if they were too big for its eyes to see, or a 5th instar caterpillar is too loaded with carotenoids that the wasp leaves them alone. Have you been able to observe similar behavior in your garden?
So now I am left with bare plants and the cycle goes back to square one. The plants will recover over the next couple of months, proving that they indeed deserve to be called “weeds”. I will cut the stems back a bit to encourage regrowth from the base of the stems. Meanwhile, in a couple of weeks dozens upon dozens of monarch butterflies will emerge from my garden and will hopefully find some milkweed to feed on and lay eggs on in someone else’s garden. Let’s hope we aren't all in this same predicament at the same time.
By the way, if you have landed here on my blog in the same manner that a butterfly lands in your garden – by chance – in addition to this blog I also have my Crazy Monarch Guy Facebook page, and The Crazy Monarch Guy’s YouTube channel where you can see similar videos to this one that I’ve taken of various aspects of the monarch butterfly life cycle and action captured in my butterfly garden. I would love it if you would consider liking my Facebook page and subscribing to my YouTube channel – well, that’s if you are crazy enough, I guess.

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Monarch butterfly parasites

I have a problem, Houston! 

Dead monarch butterfly pupae - cause unknown
Recently I have had an entire cohort of chrysalises die. I don't know the cause of their demise, but perhaps it was tachinid flies, but at no time did I observe the larvae emerging on their sticky bungee cords. This is what the dead chrysalises look like. I found another three after taking this picture. Such a shame! 100% of the pupae have died. I posted the photos to Monarch Health's Facebook page and asked if they had any thoughts, to which they replied: "It could be one of a variety of pathogens/parasitoids, possibly Nosema bacteria, nuclear polyhedrosis virus, or parasitoid flies (tachinids) or wasps (chalcids)".

In this previous post, I wrote about predators that feed on monarch larvae and butterflies, specifically paper wasps and praying mantises. Today I bring to you the horrors of parasites and pathogens that use our favorite invertebrate as an unwilling host on which to feed, especially in the larval (caterpillar) and pupal (chrysalis) stage of its life-cycle.

Chalcid wasps and tachinid flies both lay eggs on or inject eggs into the monarch caterpillar. Once the eggs hatch, the larvae feed on the insides of the caterpillar. Tachinid flies time their own life cycle so that they pupate within the chrysalis and make their way through the chrysalis wall and drop to the ground from sticky threads. All sounds very yuky, doesn't it! 

Tachinid flies are typically identified by their red eyes. Here are some images of them from Flickr and Google. I actually saw one this morning on one of the milkweed plants near three caterpillars! And here are some images for chalcid wasps from Flickr and Google. Recognize any of these monsters from your own garden?
  
In the reading about parasites and pathogens that I have been doing today I have seen research that indicates that the greater and more concentrated the milkweed and caterpillar population, the greater the level of predation and concentration of parasites. I currently have a lot of milkweed plants in pots close together and I have also been bringing final-stage caterpillars from the milkweed at the front of the house to the back of the house to avoid them wandering into the street when they head off to pupate. From the density of milkweed and caterpillars there are plenty of signals to predators and parasites that host larvae are present. Perhaps I just made an easy target for the wasps or flies that might have parasitized the caterpillars, or if one had an infection, by placing them all on the same plant, the infection was spread. A bit like putting the guy with TB in the middle of a crowd of healthy people! I am learning more and more that it is best not to meddle. 

Asilidae (Robber fly or Assassin Bug)
I also caught this picture of a "robber fly" or "assassin bug" (Asilidae family) in the garden recently. These flies have a deadly proboscis that lances the caterpillar and injects fluids that immobilize the caterpillar and liquefies its insides for ingestion. More yuck! Aren't you glad you're at the top of the food chain?

Robber flies  (Asilidae) are very bristly. Their legs have long, sharp spines to hold onto the prey. Their faces have a dense coat of bristles, called the mystax, presumably to protect them from the legs and mandibles of struggling prey.


I currently have another large batch of 5th instar caterpillars that are about to pupate. Let's hope that this will not be a repeat of the prior batch and that they will all emerge as healthy and beautiful butterflies.

Here's a good article on monarch butterfly predators and parasites from The Monarch Program: http://www.monarchprogram.org/common-monarch-predators-and-pathogens/

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