Showing posts with label mugs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mugs. Show all posts

Wednesday, 15 September 2010

Beast or Beauty?

The Large White Butterfly, Pieris brassicae, also known as the Cabbage White, is a common visitor to my garden and with very good reason. This butterfly is a very beautiful creature but is best known as a pest of vegetable crops, particularly cabbages, but it also feeds on other Brassicas such as Broccoli and Brussels. It may also incur the wrath of some gardeners with its taste for Nasturtium leaves.

It is actually the caterpillar that causes the problems as the butterfly is merely the egg-layer and does not damage the crops itself. The adult butterfly feeds on nectar, which it collects from lots of wildflowers including common garden weeds such as Dandelion, Thistle and Bluebell.

This particular butterfly begins laying eggs in spring. The larvae will quickly hatch and gorge themselves on the foodplant they have hatched on. They are quite a mobile species and will move to neighbouring plants. They begin by sticking together when they first hatch but soon move away from eachother to find fresh leaves to feed on.

This caterpillar doesn't have things entirely its own way. There is a parasitic fly that injects its eggs into this species of caterpillar. The eggs hatch into larvae which feed on the caterpillar. When sufficiently full the larvae burst out through the skin of the caterpillar. They will then spin a silken coccoon in which they change into wasps then hatch and fly away to start the cycle over again. This gruseome sight is very common but does not aid the gardener as the caterpillars continue to feed on the crops while the parasite develops inside them. Once the parasites beak out the caterpillar stops feeding and twitches defensively when you go near it. It is basically tricked by the parasites into guarding them until they are safely in their coccoons. The caterpillar then starves and dies.

A second brood of caterpillars hatch later in the summer and will overwinter in the form a a pupa to hatch in spring and begin the cycle again. THere is another species of butterfly called the small white. This is, as you might expect, smaller than the large white and the caterpillar is a velvety green colour, whereas the Large White caterpillar is a mottled mixture of greens and yellows.

I grow Broccoli and Brussels in my vegetable patch and I also typically grow some nasturtiums in a wild section of my garden. I see a lot of both Large and Small White butterflies in my garden and many of their caterpillars on my crops.

I can't bring myself to but bug spray and kill them all off. Instead I make a trade off with them. I bring the caterpillars indoors and keep them in containers. They munch on my old Broccoli leaves that will wither and die if left on the plants. This way my crops are safe, as long as I check for caterpillars every day, and they get to live and become butterflies.

This system works very well and I get the pleasure of releasing the adult butterflies back into the garden where they belong when they emerge from their chrysalis.

On one occasion I was fortunate enough to have my camera handy when one landed on a Cape Daisy flower in my garden. I don't know if it was taking nectar from the flower or just having a quick rest.

I managed to get a lovely photo of this butterfly, which I was later able to identify as a female based on the spots on its wings. I made this image into lots of different products in my zazzle store Natural Beauty. I'm hoping my dedication to this much hated pest might bring me a reward in the shape of an odd sale here and there. If not no matter I will carry on caring for the last few caterpillars of this year and start anew next year with another generation of hungry mouths to feed.

Here are some products featuring a photo of the butterfly I raised and released that sat on the Cape daisy flower for just enough time to allow me to get the shot.






Butterfly and Pink Flower Ladies T Shirt shirt
Butterfly and Pink Flower Ladies T Shirt by Fallen_Angel_483
Browse zazzle for a different tshirt zazzle.com

Monday, 16 August 2010

Time to welcome the foreigners?

Immigration is all over the news all the time in England. There are always debates in the paper about whether or not immigrants are a good thing for the country and should they be made welcome on our shores.
That is a debate that will run and run but what about the immigrants of the animal world? There are so many animals around the world that have made itt to somewhere they don't belong. Many have thrived and some cause problems to native wildlife. You only have to look at the damage being caused in Australia by the Cane toad (Bufo marinus). There are ozzy possums running riot in New Zealand, not to mention foxes and rabbits.
In the UK we have our "immigrants" too and one of them may come as a bit of a shock. We all know about mink. They were being farmed for their fur in captivity when some escaped and others were liberated by well-meaning but naive animal rights activists. The water vole population has suffered as a result.
Now we have Indian Ringneck parakeets flying free over London and Canada Geese swimming alonsgide our beautiful Aylesbury Ducks. Wild boar have escaped and are reclaiming the forests they once roamed.
My favourite of our "aliens" is the Grey Squirrel, an animal that is not native and cannot legally be released into the wild even if it was rescued and helped to recover. This seems a bit wrong to me. If you haven't read about Horatio the squirrel on my blog go back and read his story. Had it been possible to catch him and help him recover from his injuries it would be illegal to let him go back in the wild. I hate this law, why should a wild animal be caused suffering by being kept in a cage when it was born in the wild here and does not pose a significant threat to other animals.
The squirrel issue really winds me up. Yes they pass disease to red squirrels, but guess what they catch diseases from reds too. The real villian in the plight of the red squirrel is man for cutting down their trees and building houses and roads through their habitat.
Surely by now it must be time to accept our immigrant animals where they are not causing significant harm to native wildlife, I think so.

I conclude with some products from ny store Natural Beauty showing these "aliens" free and wild doing what they do and charming us all.








Thursday, 12 August 2010

The Amazing Vapourer Moth

I have quite an interest in moths. I can often be found out late at night hunting for interesting moths to photograph. One of the most fascinating species I have found so far was the Vapourer moth. I actually found this species as a caterpillar. It was the most extroadinary beast I have ever found. Here is a photo I took of this rather ugly beastie.





This animal totally fascinated me so I kept it indoors and fed it on dandelion leaves, not its typical diet but it ate them with gusto. It grew rapidly, as caterpillars tend to do, and soon entered into a chrysalis.


In the meantime I had identified the species as a Vapourer moth. Not just an extroadinary looking caterpillar but quite an unusual moth. Firstly the female is wingless. She will release chemical signals called pheromones. These chemical scents will attract a male. The male mates with her and she lays her eggs on the remains of her own cocoon. The female never flies.

The male is a day flying moth, not nocturnal like the majority of moths. He is very beautifully marked with his brown wings and their striking white eye spots.

Luckily mine turned out to be a male and after taking a few photos I let him go on his way. Here are some of the lovely products I made using one of my Vapourer moth photos.