All posts by Kate St. John

Giant Sneeze

Giant ragweed in bloom, Hays Woods, 20 Aug 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)

24 August 2024

This week I encountered giant ragweed (Ambrosia trifida) along the trail at Hays Woods. Though the plant I photographed was still shorter than me it typically reaches six feet tall. The flower spikes are loaded with male pollen flowers, facing downward to dangle in the wind and spread the pollen that makes many people sneeze.

Giant ragweed in bloom, Hays Woods, 20 Aug 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)

Pollen season has been wicked this year. Today is Day 9 of ragweed which officially started on 15 August. However, thanks to climate change, allergies are starting earlier and lasting longer nowadays.

If you suffer from ragweed allergies your nose knows when it started blooming but you might not know what common ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) looks like. What is making you miserable? Check out this vintage article.

Playground for Baby Stoats

Stoat (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

23 August 2024

Almost four years ago, artist and photographer Robert E. Fuller posted this video of a baby wild stoat playing on a trampoline in his garden in the U.K.

Baby stoat on a trampoline, posted in October 2020 (video embedded from Robert E Fuller on YouTube)

Stoats, known as ermine (Mustela ermina) or short-tailed weasels in the U.S, have a circumpolar distribution and are present in Pennsylvania, though maybe not in the southwestern corner. Though small, they are fierce predators that can kill prey four times their size. They are also very cute when they play.

Fuller has observed wild stoats for many years at his home in Yorkshire. The baby stoat that played on the trampoline in autumn 2020 appears to have started a trend. His video posted in July 2021 shows mother and kits at the same playground.

Mother and baby stoats in the garden, posted July 2021 (video embedded from Robert E Fuller on YouTube)

Yes, they are very cute, but … wild weasels are not good pets and it is illegal to keep them without a wildlife permit. If you want a pet weasel, get a ferret.

The Cricket’s Song Attracts a Mate

Male fall field cricket (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

22 August 2024

Right now fall field crickets (Gryllus pennsylvanicus) are in the midst of their breeding season. Like songbirds the males sing to attract a mate.

Fall field cricket chirp from Wikimedia Commons (converted at online-audio-converter.com)

It’s relatively hard to find a singing cricket because the male is on the ground, probably hidden by vegetation, and facing the entrance to his burrow. He rubs his modified leathery front wings, called tegmina, to make his chirping sound.

The burrow entrance provides an echo chamber that amplifies his sound and, if his chirping attracts a predator, he can quickly zoom underground for safety.

video embedded from Alicia Houk on YouTube

Older male crickets are better at chirping than younger males so they attract more females. She approaches …

Female fall field cricket (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

… and they mate.

Fall field crickets mating (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

She will use her ovipositor to inject 50 eggs into the soil.

And then they’ll go off to eat the seeds of their favorite foods, many of which are invasive weeds including: Smooth crabgrass (Digitaria ischaemum), lamb’s quarters (Chenopodium album), English plantain (Plantago lanceolata), switchgrass (Panicum virgatum), common ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) and chicory (Cichorium intybus). [list from Wikipedia]

Did you know that the cricket’s chirp can tell you the temperature? Count the number of chirps of a lone cricket for 15 seconds, then add 37. That should tell you the temperature in Fahrenheit … probably. If it doesn’t, I like to imagine that the burrow entrance is colder or hotter than the ambient air. 😉

Read more about the cricket’s chirp here at the Songs of Insects.

p.s. Did you ever have a cricket in your house? In my experience they are really hard to find unless they’re in the corner of a gleaming white bathroom and you’ve moved everything out of the way to find the cricket in the corner.

Both Are Evening Primroses

Biennial gaura, Hays Woods, 20 August 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)

21 August 2024

When I took this photo at Hays Woods yesterday, I knew the plant’s name — biennial gaura — but just for fun I asked PictureThis to identify it. It said “Biennial Gaura, a species of Evening Primrose.” Evening Primrose was a surprise. I didn’t think they were related.

Common evening primrose (Oenothera biennis) has four evenly spaced petals with stamens and pistil in the middle. Though the flower appears to be open here, it actually opens more widely in the evening.

Evening primrose, September 2020 (photo by Kate St. John)

Biennial gaura (Oenothera gaura) also has four petals but they are all on one side of the stem with stamens and pistil drooping below. The shape of the flower looks “irregular” to me and “evening” doesn’t seem to apply either. The flower looks like it stays open all day.

Biennial gaura (photo by Kate St. John)

However, studies of the former genus Gaura caused all of it to be absorbed into Oenothera (Evening Primrose ) in 2007. The reason I was surprised 17 years later is that my hardback copy of Newcomb’s Wildflower Guide was published in 1997. I should rely more on apps these days.

Here are additional photos of both flowers for further comparison.

Biennial gaura, Hays Woods, 7 Sep 2022 (photo by Kate St. John)
Common evening primrose near Herrs Island, 18 Aug 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)

Both plants are “weedy” species so they’re pretty easy to find in the field. Look for common evening primrose in sunny or mostly sunny places, often along trails. Biennial gaura wants full sun and dry, rocky soil. At Hays Woods it grows at the powerline cut.

Note that biennial gaura flowers are much smaller than evening primrose. Tiny but beautiful.

Black Swallowtails Are Born

Female black swallowtail butterfly in Betty Rowland’s garden, 18 August 2024 (photo by Betty Rowland)

20 August 2024

You may remember in early August when I wrote that two friends had black swallowtail caterpillars (Papilio polyxenes) in their gardens. By now those caterpillars are, or will soon become, butterflies.

After Betty Rowland discovered her caterpillars on 1 August her neighbor, Aaron Johnson, loaned her a butterfly tent.

Two black swallowtail caterpillars on fennel, 1 August 2024 (photo by Betty Rowland)
Shelter to protect the caterpillars from predation, 2 August 2024 (photo by Betty Rowland)

Soon thereafter, on 4 August, one caterpillar posed in the pre-chrysalis position and the other had already become one.

Black swallowtails: Caterpillar in pre-chrysalis position (left) and chrysalis (right), 5 August 2024 (photos by Betty Rowland)

Last Sunday I heard from Betty that after two weeks both black swallowtail butterflies had eclosed (emerged from chrysalis).

Two black swallowtail butterflies, discarded chrysalis is circled, 18 August 2024 (photo by Betty Rowland)

Both are female (photo at top) which is easy to see from their coloration. Female black swallowtails have orange and blue highlights; males have yellow highlights with only a hint of orange and blue (male pictured below).

After their wings dried, Aaron and his wife Erica came over to help the butterflies leave the tent. Aaron carefully flipped the tent to let them out.

Betty’s neighbors help the butterflies leave the tent, 18 August 2024 (photo by Betty Rowland)

Ta dah! Two black swallowtails have completed the cycle.

For a quick refresher on butterfly life cycles, here’s the monarch story from the American Museum of Natural History in New York. Black swallowtails follow the same pattern.

embedded video from the American Museum of Natural History on YouTube

(Thanks to Betty Rowland for the photos and story.)

Schenley Park Outing, August 25, 8:30am

Ironweed in bloom, 18 August 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)

19 August 2024

Late summer flowers are blooming, bugs are buzzing, and the first migrating birds are on the move.

Join me for a bird & nature walk in Schenley Park on Sunday, 25 August 2024, 8:30a – 10:30a. Meet at the Schenley Park Cafe and Visitor Center where Panther Hollow Road joins Schenley Drive. 

I know we’ll hear True Bugs whirring, see lots of flowers, and encounter Carolina wrens and goldfinches.

Carolina wren (photo by Christopher T)

Dress for the weather and wear comfortable walking shoes. Bring binoculars and field guides if you have them. If it’s hot be sure to bring water, sunscreen and a hat.

Visit my Events page before you come in case of changes or cancellations. The outing will be canceled if there’s lightning or heavy downpours.

Hope to see you there!

(photos by Christopher T and Kate St. John)

The Insect Apocalypse Comes Home

Common house mosquito (Culex Pipiens) sucking blood (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

18 August 2024

Thanks to climate change, Pittsburgh is hotter and wetter, a combination that’s perfect for breeding mosquitoes and spreading West Nile Virus (WNV). WNV has few or no symptoms in 80% of infections but a <0.1% chance of death when it turns severe. (Less than 1% of infections turn severe.)

Last week I learned from PublicSource that WNV in Allegheny County has prompted the Health Department (ACHD) to fog neighborhoods where the virus is detected in adult mosquitoes. Unfortunately the weapon in use is a broad spectrum bomb rather than a bullet aimed only at mosquitoes. PublicSource examines the issue: Allegheny County ramps up mosquito control. Could it harm local ecosystems?

The fogging is done at dusk and night by a pickup truck with a dispersal (fogging) unit using insecticide Zenivex E20 (active ingredient etofenprox). I don’t have photos of ACHD’s trucks — this mosquito control truck is in Cuba, not in Allegheny County — but the photo gives you an idea of what fogging looks like. See photos of local fogging in the PublicSource article, linked above.

Truck fogging against mosquitoes, Cuba 2019 (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

Here’s the active ingredient and what it kills:

Etofenprox is a pyrethroid derivative which disturbs insect nervous systems following direct contact or ingestion. It is active against a broad spectrum of pests including Lepidoptera (butterflies and moths), Hymenoptera (bees, wasps, ants), Diptera (flies and mosquitoes), Hemiptera (cicadas, aphids, leafhoppers, bed bugs, shield bugs), Coleoptera (beetles), and Thysanoptera (thrips).

Wikipedia entry for etofenprox, paraphrased

The fogging creates a miniature insect apocalypse for small night-flying insects touched by the insecticide. This ripples up the food chain to the plants, birds and animals that rely on them. One of them is my spark bird, the common nighthawk. PublicSource points out:

A bird conservation advocate agreed that nighttime pollinators could be affected, which could have ripple effects in bird populations, such as the common nighthawks that feed after dusk. 

“Even when these products are used with the best intentions … in a highly targeted manner, they certainly do have the potential to affect non-target invertebrates,” said Hardy Kern, director of government relations of the birds and pesticides campaign at the American Bird Conservancy. “And these non-target invertebrates are really important food sources for birds.”

— PublicSource: Allegheny County ramps up mosquito control. Could it harm local ecosystems?

However, “The county wouldn’t need to spray as much if more people knew how to keep mosquitoes from breeding near their homes.”

And that’s where you come in. Mosquitoes breed in stagnant water. If you have standing water in your yard mosquitoes will breed there — even in a bottle cap. Dump out the standing water to kill the larvae. Dump out abandoned tires!

Mosquito larvae in stagnant water (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

Here’s what to do:

video embedded from PA DEP on YouTube
Big Takeaway from the video:

If you are being bitten by mosquitoes it’s most likely that those mosquitoes are being produced on your property. Mosquitoes do not like to travel very far. They are very weak fliers, and if they can find all the things that they need to survive on your property that’s where they will begin and end their life cycle.

— quote from PA DEP Video: Help Prevent Mosquitoes from Breeding

Read more about local West Nile Virus mosquito control at PublicSource: Allegheny County ramps up mosquito control. Could it harm local ecosystems?

NOTE that every ACHD spray effort is preceded by an ACHD press release that lists the neighborhoods to be fogged. ACHD’s press release for the week of 19-23 August (click here) includes Leetsdale, Edgeworth, Sewickley, Glen Osborne, and 10 city neighborhoods.

p.s. Here’s where West Nile Virus is in PA as of 18 Aug 2024

WNV activity map as of 18 Aug 2024 from PA DEP

Seen This Week: Warblers and Late Summer Flowers

Black-throated green warbler, Frick Park, 14 Aug 2024 (photo by Charity Kheshgi)

17 August 2024

This was a week of still-nesting swallows, pretty flowers, migrating warblers, and many, many deer in the city parks.

Moraine State Park, 11 August. Charity Kheshgi and I were surprised to see cliff swallows still nesting on 11 August at the Rt 528 Boat Launch area. Parents were feeding young at four to five nests.

Cliff swallows with young in nest, Moraine State Park, 11 Aug 2024 (photo by Charity Kheshgi)

Late summer flowers: Best photos this week are butter-and-eggs (non-native), spreading dogbane and blue vervain.

Butter and eggs, in the snapdragon family, Southside Riverfront Park, 12 August (photo by Kate St. John)
Spreading dogbane, Moraine State Park, 11 August 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)
Blue vervain, Southside Riverfront Park, 12 August (photo by Kate St. John)

Warblers at Frick Park: On 14 August Charity Kheshgi and I saw a good flock of warblers on Trough Trail. Blackburnians were still considered rare on the 14th (too early for them) but we found five! Here’s one eyeing a bug on Japanese angelica, a devil’s walking stick look-alike.

Blackburnian warbler, Frick Park, 14 Aug 2024 (photo by Charity Kheshgi)

We recognized distinctive plumage on each of the 5 Blackburnians. As if to prove there were so many, three posed in one shot.

3 Blackburnian warblers in one shot, Frick Park, 14 Aug 2024 (photo by Charity Kheshgi)

We also saw one immature chestnut-sided warbler hanging out in the flock.

Immature chestnut-sided warbler, Frick Park, 14 Aug 2024 (photo by Charity Kheshgi)

Deer: Schenley and Frick Parks, 14 and 16 August

It was a big week for deer in the city parks. I saw 10 in Frick on Wednesday, and 9 in Schenley on Friday. Of the 9, more than half were young or spotted fawns that were born this year. If my tally is representative, the Schenley deer population has doubled itself in just one year.

3 deer in Frick Park, 14 Aug 12024 (photo by Kate St. John)

I believe that the doe in this photo is shedding her summer fur (rusty color) to switch to her winter coat (gray-brown).

Spotted fawn with doe in Schenley, 16 Aug 12024 (photo by Kate St. John)
2 of the 9 deer seen in Schenley on 16 August 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)

Why are deer so easy to see in Schenley Park? Because there is no underbrush to hide them. There are so many deer that they ate all the underbrush. So there’s nowhere to hide.

p.s. The green grass in the photo is Japanese stiltgrass, a plant that deer don’t eat.

Helpers Eating Spotted Lanternflies

Praying mantis closeup, European species (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

16 August 2024

Though the number of adult spotted lanternflies (Lycorma delicatula) is growing this month in Pittsburgh, their population does not match the invasion we saw a year ago. Among the many reasons for this happy news is that local bugs are eating them.

On Wednesday Kalehism Kheshgi found a small praying mantis eating a spotted lanternfly on Carnegie Mellon’s campus.

video by Kaleem Kheshgi, Pittsburgh, 2024-08-14

Several species of praying mantids were imported for pest control: Green ones are from Europe, brown ones are from China. If the brown mantids have deep ancestral knowledge, they will recognize the lanternfly as food from home. 😉

Spiders, yellowjackets, wheel bugs and birds (including northern cardinals!) all eat spotted lanternflies. For photos of the devouring, see this 2022 article.

How Birds Deal With Heat: Manipulate the Feathers

Song sparrows: warm in October, cold in snowy March (photos by Steve Gosser)

15 August 2024

Here’s a little Before and After exercise that spans five to six months. Observe birds who are in your neighborhood all year long. Song sparrows and cardinals are two good choices.

  • Before: On a hot day in August notice how plump or thin the birds are. Even better, take a picture of a bird in the heat.
  • After: On a cold day in winter, again notice how fat or thin the birds are. Take a picture of the same species out in the cold.

The song sparrows above were photographed by Steve Gosser on a warm October day and on a snowy day in early March.

Spoiler Alert! Here’s what you’ll see.

This vintage article is 7 years old.