Showing posts with label Roesel's Katydid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roesel's Katydid. Show all posts

Sunday, January 19, 2020

Small Delights and Big Discoveries: Field Season, 2019


Gladiator Meadow Katydid singing Mentor Marsh in 2019 after the marsh 
was freed from its phragmites invasion and native plants and insects 
began to return.

Each year in the field brings a few surprises along with interesting documentation of cricket and katydid range expansion. There’s also moments of delight at the small discoveries I’d never see or hear were it not for careful observation as I creep around the meadow vegetation at night. When I step out into the darkness of the singing insect concert halls, I never know in advance everything I’ll hear and see.

The restoration of Mentor Marsh presented an encouraging example of singing insect population recovery with the removal of horribly invasive phragmites. I only heard one Gladiator Meadow Katydid there last year (2018).  This year, visitors on a marsh night walk heard  - and even found - numerous Gladiator Meadow Katydids singing in the native plants on either side of the boardwalk (photo above). 

And look at this lovely couple I discovered at Bath Nature Preserve in western Summit County! 


This female and male Curve-tailed Bush Katydid (Scudderia curvicauda) had just mated, as evidenced by the spermatophore he deposited before they separated. I never see mating katydids, and it’s rare for me to even see the couple together. Bath Nature Preserve provides 404 acres of habitat that supports a healthy diversity of singing insects.


Although I do see molting katydids on occasion each year, I always feel honored when I observe this miracle. The photo below is a bush katydid nymph (genus Scudderia) along Cleveland Metroparks' North Chagrin Lily Lagoon trail along the Chagrin River.




If you’ve read this blog for a while, you know that I study northward range expansion of crickets and katydids, especially as more southern species more into NE Ohio’s “snow belt” counties. 


It's quite apparent why the northeast corner of the state is called the 
"snow belt." It's our gift from Lake Erie and occasionally, Lake Huron.

Documentation and data are more than making lists and obtaining photos and recordings. I’m watching change over time occurring right before my eyes and ears. There’s an engaging element of discovery to it, even when I’m stuck in a blackberry tangle again. 

Here’s some of what I learned this year. Where species names are highlighted, the links will take you to pages in my online field guide where you can hear recordings and see more photos.


Several species are steadily – and rather quickly – moving north to Lake Erie, and I document these changes every year. Additionally, any time spent in the field could possibly bring some unexpected observations. 


I used to go down to Summit County to hear Jumping Bush Crickets, as they weren’t up in the Cleveland area. I was delighted the first time I heard one in our Cleveland Heights neighborhood and thrilled when the first ones arrived in our back yard! 

 Jumping Bush Cricket singing in a hydrangea next to our driveway

Now, however, I search the snow belt for the places they haven’t yet arrived. This year was their Lake County triumph. Instead of being in scattered locations, they seemed to be everywhere I checked. There were still a few locations in Geauga County where I didn’t hear them, but that could certainly change next year. 



Handsome Trigs (Phyllopalpus puchellus) are moving fast as well. They, too, are becoming common in Geauga County and are certainly widely present in Lake County. I seldom even mention Cuyahoga and Lorain counties, where both Handsome Trigs and Jumping Bush Crickets are now abundant.




Round-tipped Coneheads (Neoconocephalus retusus) are also lining up along the lakeshore, as I’ve noted in previous posts. I didn’t hear them in rural NE Geauga County, though, so once again, that may be the area where more southern species are going to take longer to get established. Here’s a Round-tipped Conehead I heard - and eventually located with considerable effort – at Leroy Wetlands in Lake County.




A charming little cricket I’ve been documenting recently is the Spring Trig (Anaxipha vernalis). This southern and central Ohio resident is spreading rapidly in NE Ohio. Their silvery songs are even more lovely than the higher-pitched songs of the Say’s Trigs, and they sing well before most singing insects. Just when I feel I can’t wait any longer for the first cricket and katydid songs, there they are, singing in meadows and edges as soon as evening shadows fall across the vegetation. 

As you'll see in my updated map below I’ve discovered additional locations for them this year. I'm learning that they're increasingly common in NE Geauga County and in Lake County, as are the other northbound crickets and katydids I monitor. 




The non-native Roesel’s Katydid (Roeseliana roeselii is not invasive, and this species actually seems to be less common now than several years ago. I realize that’s an anecdotal observation. Still, I find I'm  somewhat surprised when one of these gorgeous little shieldback katydids shows up in NE Ohio’s fields and meadows

A strikingly colored female caught my attention on a hilltop of a closed Lake County landfill that’s being managed for grassland. The grassy habitat was appropriate, but how did she and her predecessors establish themselves up there? I was determined to catch her to show the participants at a park program in progress, and she ultimately was happy to sit on my arm while being admired. 
 



Northern Bush Katydids are arboreal insects with high, soft, elaborate songs. Consequently, it’s difficult to know where they occur and how common they are. But they do come to lights, and it occurred to me last year that these katydids could inadvertently be attracted by moth enthusiasts to their night-time moth lighting sheets. I inquired about them on Facebook, and sure enough – I got responses and photos from counties where I hadn’t found them.


My amusing Northern Bush Katydid (Scudderia septentrionalis) sighting this year took no effort on my part. While shining a flashlight on a shrub along a trail at the Rookery in the Geauga Park District, a Northern Bush Katydid flew down from the trees and landed right in the flashlight beam on a leaf as if it were a spotlight onstage! Here he is:




Geauga County was also the location of one of my excellent surprises of the season.


I’d gone to Frohring Meadows in the southwest corner of the county just to walk after dark. I had no expectation of hearing or seeing anything of interest. It was cold and I was moping about the chilly weather that had curtailed my annual Black-horned/Forbes’s Tree Cricket survey. Even though I was brooding about whether I’d have another opportunity to resume the study, I still watched all the grasses and wetland edge plants I passed until suddenly…

 

At least three Dusky-faced Meadow Katydids! This is a katydid I only recently found in our area, though it’s one that should still be present in our remaining wetlands. It seems to have been fairly common at some point in the past. Still, my only locations for them were Bath Nature Preserve in western Summit County (2016) and at both Wolf Creek Environmental Center and Chippewa Inlet Trail North Wetlands in Medina County (2017). 


Most of Frohring’s wetlands were created. I think just one original wet area had been present across the trail from the 2007 wetland construction. (Additional wetlands were created across the meadow in 2013.) I never saw or heard this species when I surveyed Frohring Meadows in detail in 2012, nor did I expect they might possibly be present. But now, there were those beautiful faces and long, elegant wings, and I was amazed and delighted!


In addition, I also found Long-tailed Meadow Katydids (Conocephalus attenuatus) with the Dusky-faceds. 
 

This uncommon wetland species is one I find only occasionally. Other than a few Short-winged Meadow Katydid, no other crickets or katydids were visible or audible anywhere I walked. 


My mood improved substantially that evening.




Back in Cleveland’s University Circle, there was a new song outside the institutions around Wade Oval. 


Japanese Burrowing Crickets. Velarifictarus micado had arrived.

  

I knew the song from southern Ohio, where they're now becoming quite common. They often sing from hiding places between rocks, bricks, and pavers. 



But as of 2018, I’d only heard one individual up in NE Ohio. Hidden among the stones and plantings outside the Rocky River Nature Center in the Cleveland Metroparks, he was singing loudly enough to be heard all around the nature center. Here's a recording of him:



What a change this year! Individual males sang triumphantly at the Cleveland Museum of Art, the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, the Cleveland Botanical Garden, and near the Cleveland Institute of Music. 


Were there Japanese Burrowing Cricket eggs in the mulch used around Wade Oval? I imagine they’ve begun to get established now, so I’ll listen for them next fall semester. Maybe they will have spread across the CWRU campus.



I've saved my most exciting discovery till last – a discovery by ear. 


While half-attentively listening to crickets and katydids at dusk in my friends’ yard in Peninsula, I heard several Lesser Angle-wing Katydids! 

Lesser Angle-wing at the Arc of Appalachia in southern Ohio.




Lesser Angle-wingeds (Microcentrum retinerve) are not supposed to be up here. They should be singing down in Columbus and south. I only knew the songs from my trips to southern Ohio. 

 

Did I have my recording equipment with me? No. Of course, I came back as soon as possible and recorded as best I could. It was a challenge, as they live up in the trees and I had to listen past the noise from the three freeways nearby.




What route had they taken north? Would I be able to trace them back to central Ohio? I wish I could tell you that I figured it out.



I drove all through Cuyahoga National Valley Park after dark on two subsequent nights, assuming it would be relatively easy to find my way around this extensive park. Not surprisingly, this was quite an unreasonable assumption. However, my pathetically disoriented nighttime rambling did turn up a Summit County Japanese Burrowing Cricket singing near Riverview Road.  

The Lesser Angle-wingeds seemed limited to the Peninsula area along Stine and Riverview Roads. The map below shows the four locations where they were singing in the trees.


The pioneers are definitely up here. With so many species are moving north, why shouldn’t Lesser Angle-wings begin to join their Greater Angle-wing cousins as they do in southern Ohio?



Discoveries and data, songs and surprises to be continued in 2020…

 Female Dusky-faced Meadow Katydid, Frohring Meadows


Tuesday, July 2, 2013

The first singing katydid of the season

There’s a new sound in the meadows now – it sounds like an electrical buzz in the tall grasses or damp sedge meadows.  You look and look, and don’t see where it’s coming from... but  it’s right down there somewhere!



Wait a minute….what's clinging to the stems?




Roesel’s Katydids – the first katydid to sing in our area.  (And that picture of the tall grasses has three Roesel’s Katydid nymphs staring right at you from their perches.)



Now I will be the first to admit that it’s not the most delicate, melodic song, but it announces the beginning of the katydid concert.  And they are very pretty little insects with an interesting story!



This species is an accidental European introduction, having reached our continent around 1950.  It landed in Montreal and spread throughout the Northeast; until recently, the range map for this species only showed it in that area…and a curiously isolated population in Illinois.


That wasn’t really the case, however.  They are all over NE Ohio and are actually quite common.  I’ve recorded and photographed them in Cuyahoga, Geauga, Lake, and Summit counties, and they are certainly in other nearby counties as well.  Illinois naturalist Carl Strang (Forest Preserve District of DuPage County in the Chicago area) has now tracked these katydids from his area back to our NE Ohio katydids, so we now know that these populations are connected. (You can follow his singing insect research in his blog, “Nature Inquiries.”  There is a link in my sidebar)


Roesel’s Katydid – Roeseliana roeselii - is a type of katydid called a “shieldback.”  In the pictures below, you can see the “shield” behind its head.   



 We have native shieldbacks as well, but they are not as colorful and are less likely to be seen during the day.  In fact, I see our native shieldbacks far less often.   This is not because of competition from Roesel’s, however.  Roesel’s Katydids are a late spring/early summer insect that does not seem to compete with our native katydids, and their time onstage is ending when our first native katydids begin to sing.  The recording below is a Roesel’s Katydid singing with Spring Field Crickets at Springfield Bog in southeastern Summit County.


So how did they get here?  Roesel’s Katydids have short wings that barely seem long enough to create songs, let alone fly anywhere.   



But although most of them do indeed have short wings, there are also long-winged males and females that are capable of flying into new areas when the population gets a little crowded.  Here is an example of a long-winged female. 



Even short wings can generate those high-pitched songs.  One wing has a file and the other a scraper, and they rub one wing against the other at an incomprehensible rate of speed.  Their wings are a blur when they sing.  



The most prominent frequencies in their buzzy, crackling songs is between 12 -19 kHz- higher than many older adults can hear – and my WAV file recordings show frequencies well about 20kHz (the threshold of human hearing.   The mp3s I use for this blog actually cut off the top frequencies of the songs!

In my opinion, the nymphs of this species are adorably cute.   
 


Actually, I think the adults are quite attractive as well.  Katydids are gentle, harmless insects and will often be quite willing to sit on your hand.   


They really have no defense other than escape and camouflage, but they blend astonishingly well with the plants in which they live.   They eat plants – and they certainly seem to like grasses. 



Good luck searching for these little singers.  Our earliest native katydids will start singing any time now, so you only have a few more weeks to find Roesel’s Katydids!