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Check out this big Guy or Girl????

by , Posted to on 07/04/2011 09:53 AM | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 07/12/2003
Location: ND
Was at a oil well site,came back to the truck to write up a JSA and this bug was sitting on it!!
Re: Check out this big Guy or Girl????
by on 07/04/2011 10:07 AM | Reply #1 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 08/02/2010
Location: SD
 
Re: Check out this big Guy or Girl????
by on 07/04/2011 10:23 AM | Reply #2 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 07/10/2010
Location: ND
Ceanothus Silk Moth. Native to the California / West Coast area.  They probably sent it here on a recon mission.....kill it.
Re: Check out this big Guy or Girl????
by on 07/04/2011 10:30 AM | Reply #3 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 08/02/2010
Location: SD
ndwalleyes Said:
Ceanothus Silk Moth. Native to the California / West Coast area.  They probably sent it here on a recon mission.....kill it.
Man bud they look like they are ready to star in any number of the new alien shows on the tube lately :   

Ceanothus Silk Moth (Family Saturniidae)
© W.P. Armstrong 15 April 2009
 

 

Lateral view of an adult ceanothus silk moth (Hyalophora euryalus).

 

Dorsal view of an adult ceanothus silk moth (Hyalophora euryalus).

 

 

Dorsal view of an adult ceanothus silk moth (Hyalophora euryalus) sitting on the native California shrub called blue lilac (Ceanothus thyrsiflorus). This beautifulul moth is native to the local hillsides of chaparral above California State University San Marcos.
The above ceanothus silk moth was observed visiting Starbucks across the street from CSUSM on 7 February 2007. It appears to be a male with his robust antennae. As a biologist, I felt compelled to photograph this lovely insect and write a brief synopsis about it. Its scientific binomial is Hyalophora euryalus and it belongs to the wild silk moth family Saturniidae. This family includes some of the largest and most spectacular moths in the world, particularly the tropical rain forest. The valuable textile silk comes from the larvae of a different moth family, the Bombycidae (see link below). The ceanothus silk moth lives in the nearby chaparral-covered hillsides above CSUSM. The larva (caterpillar) feeds primarily on species of California lilac (Ceanothus). Two species are native to the nearby hills, coast blue lilac (C. tomentosus ssp. olivaceous) and coast white lilac (C. verrucosus). Both of these species grow at nearby Jack's Pond Park located on La Moree Road east of CSUSM. The larvae are also known to feed on other native shrubs, including laurel sumac (Malosma laurina), mountain mahogany (Cercocarpus minutiflorus) and manzanita (Arctostaphylos) species. At maturity in the fall they grow to a length of up to four inches (10 cm) and resemble fat, light green sausages with stubby legs. The back (dorsal) side is decorated with yellowish or reddish projections (tubercles). After feeding all summer, the larva spins a flask-shaped, silken cocoon that hangs from the host shrub.

 

 

Ceanothus silk moth cocoon attached to branch of laurel sumac.
Within its cocoon, the larva transforms into a pupa. During the fall and winter months the pupa gradually undergoes metamorphosis and by late winter or early spring, an adult moth emerges from its pupal case. This is a large moth with a wing span of over five inches (13 cm). As an adult, its primary purpose is to find a member of the opposite sex and hopefully copulate. Females emit a chemical scent (pheromone) that attracts a male suitor. Adult moths have atrophied mouthparts and do not feed. They soon die after completing their sole function which is to mate and lay eggs, thus passing on their DNA and perpetuating the species. Hopefully, sufficient native chaparral will remain in this rapidly growing region of southern California to maintain a viable population of these beautiful insects. The ceanothus silk moth is also known to visit Starbucks during its brief adult life. It is not known whether the moth visits Starbucks before or after copulation
 
Re: Check out this big Guy or Girl????
by on 07/04/2011 11:04 AM | Reply #4 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 04/23/2011
Location: ND
impresive find.
free thinker = no thinker
Re: Check out this big Guy or Girl????
by on 07/04/2011 11:13 AM | Reply #5 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 01/09/2002
Location: ND
Huh, I always called them Goliath moths as well.  Pretty subtle differences between that and the silk moth.

Not exactly your everyday visitor to the windshield in ND.  I have maybe seen only a dozen or so over the years.  Then again, I don't exactly go looking for them either.
“Sometimes I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or by imbeciles who really mean it.” ~ Mark Twain
Re: Check out this big Guy or Girl????
by on 07/04/2011 3:03 PM | Reply #6 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 02/18/2008
Location: ND
I believe that is a Cecropia moth which is native to ND. When my father was working on his masters degree in entomology back in the sixties, we used to catch those all the time by smearing molasses on telephone poles.


en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyalophora_cecropia

Re: Check out this big Guy or Girl????
by on 07/05/2011 10:25 PM | Reply #7 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 12/04/2009
Location: ND
 Old Jake,  has it right.  Cecropia moth (not sure on the spelling)  you should see them in the larvae stage.  Bright green color with lots of colored pegs on them and about half the length of a hot dog.  Same girth as a hotdog.  


Live every day!
Re: Check out this big Guy or Girl????
by on 07/05/2011 11:31 PM | Reply #8 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 01/09/2002
Location: ND
Tritonman Said:
 Old Jake,  has it right.  Cecropia moth (not sure on the spelling)  you should see them in the larvae stage.  Bright green color with lots of colored pegs on them and about half the length of a hot dog.  Same girth as a hotdog.  




Damn, I've seen those caterpillars a lot more than I have the actual moth.  Cool link there Old Jake!

“Sometimes I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or by imbeciles who really mean it.” ~ Mark Twain
Re: Check out this big Guy or Girl????
by on 07/05/2011 11:45 PM | Reply #9 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 09/11/2002
Location: ND
hope you included "insect distractions" on your JSA

I say to hell with that pot o' gold.

Re: Check out this big Guy or Girl????
by on 07/06/2011 04:48 AM | Reply #10 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 07/12/2003
Location: ND
ggenthusiast Said:
hope you included "insect distractions" on your JSA
I identified the hazard,bug in truck,action taken to avoid the hazard-smash bug!!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Job_Safety_Analysis
Re: Check out this big Guy or Girl????
by on 07/06/2011 11:32 AM | Reply #11 | "Quote" | "Quick Reply" |

Joined: 01/07/2002
Location: ND
How big of gun do you use to hunt them>
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Posted On: 07/04/2011 09:53 AM
2222 Views, 11 Comments

Tags: girl, check, guy, jsa, oil, site, sitting, write, truck
More Tags: oil well site, Law_CrimeHospitality_Recreation
Region: North Dakota

Categories: Outdoor Sports > Wildlife Photography
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