Caterpillars hatch

On the 13th day after they were laid, the eggs of the Cecropia moth hatched. I placed a few freshly-cut shoots from my lilac bush into the container with the tiny caterpillars, which already appear much larger than the eggs from which they recently emerged.

The caterpillars chew their way out of the 2mm-diameter eggs and almost immediately begin feeding on the leaves of suitable host plants including maple, birch, cherry, and lilac (shown here).

1st instar Cecropia moth caterpillars on lilac leaves. Empty egg shells at bottom of container.

Cecropia moth caterpillar, 1st instar.

1st instar Cecropia moth caterpillars are black with black hair-bearing spicules on their backs and sides.

Hatched Cecropia moth eggs.

Hatched Cecropia moth eggs.

1st instar Cecropia moth caterpillars on a lilac leaf.

1st instar Cecropia moth caterpillars on a lilac leaf.

These so-called “1st instar” larvae (caterpillars that have not performed their first molt) are entirely black with tiny black “spicules” on their backs. The spicules are hard, shiny projections and at this stage carry long hairs that extend from tiny turrets along their crowns.

This one has already begun gnawing on the edge of the lilac leaf on whose edge it clings.

For the next 3 months or so, the caterpillars will do nothing but eat leaves and grow. Their size will increase about 20 times until they are larger than an adult finger. They will shed their skins four times and emerge from each molt with a different color scheme.

The 5th instar caterpillars will then construct a durable silken cocoon which will turn to a dark brown color. After passing the winter in the cocoon they will emerge as spectacular adult moths in late Spring. During their brief life as adults - about a week - they will mate and then die, with the females producing up to about 100 eggs to carry the species forward into its next generation.

Cecropia moth

I stumbled upon a wild adult female in my yard on 27 May.  She looked freshly emerged from the cocoon in which she would have spent the winter, and I wondered if she might have already mated and be ready to lay eggs.  So I placed her in an enclosure:

Cecropia moth, Hyalophora cecropia.  Adult female.

Cecropia moth, Hyalophora cecropia. Adult female.

I hoped that even if she had not mated, her scent would draw local males and she could mate with them.  I planned to get up an hour or so before dawn to see if any wild males were around, and if so to try and capture one or more of them to put in the cage with the female.

I went out with a flashlight a couple of times in the pre-dawn hours the following morning, but alas I didn’t catch a glimpse of any “wild boys” in the vicinity of the cage.

However, when I went out later in the early morning light, I saw that the captive female had laid about 40-60 eggs on the wires at the top of the cage.

I carefully gathered the eggs into a plastic container by using a straw to dislodge the eggs.  Then the waiting began, as it typically takes 7-10 days for Cecropia eggs to hatch.  In the meantime, I released the female from the cage.

Cecropia moth eggs. Each egg is about 2mm in diameter.

January 2021

Some images from this month.

COVID Masks - some choices

Since it is now clear that a major mechanism of dispersal of the COVID virus is through aerosols - fine mists in the air similar in scale to smoke particles - the CDC has finally recommended that we should all be wearing masks equipped with filters that are able to block such particles.

However there seems to be little emphasis on ensuring that whatever masks we wear are worn in a way that prevents leakage around them. If your mask is leaking, you are allowing air to reach your respiratory system that does not pass through the mask filter. And when you exhale, you are expelling air into your environment that is not passing through the mask, either.

In my opinion, most of the masks being sold and worn today are not up to the task - they are simply not able to seal properly against the face - and that means the mask cannot really do its job.

So in the video below I’ve reviewed three masks that I have tried recently and explained the importance of having a mask that has the proper filters, and seals well enough against the face so that all of the air you inhale and exhale is filtered.

Here are links to the masks I refer to in the video:

Envomask

Available from the Envomask Web site. Price: ~USD $70-80.

Dentec

Dentec USA Web site. Available from their US distributors such as Critical Tools. Price: ~USD $23-40

GVS

GVS SPR644 ELIPSE P100 on amazon.com. Price: ~USD $28