
Not Too Many Hornworms
If it weren't for the silky white
blobs, the first feature you might notice is the series
of "eye spots" (actually breathing holes), seven
of which are topped with white-and-blue slash lines. These
lines break up the shape of this sphinx moth caterpillar,
which otherwise might be hard to miss since it grows to
six inches long.
And then you notice that red, nasty
stinger-looking thingy that curves up from its butt. The
head is at the other end, by the three pairs of true legs.
Lots of people, and some potential predators, are reluctant
to tangle with this caterpillar because of that "stinger."
Actually it's all bluff. The horn is harmless.
This caterpillar eats the leaves of
tomato, potato, and other plants of the nightshade family.
At maturity, successful hornworms burrow into the soil
to escape predators, pupate, and turn into sphinx moths.
The moths are sometimes mistaken for hummingbirds; they
dart from flower to flower at dusk. Long tongues enable
them to pollinate such specialized blossoms as the prairie
white-fringed orchid.
But the hornworm shown here will not
graduate to experience the miracle of flight. Some weeks
earlier it had been attacked by a parasitic wasp, which
injected eggs under its skin. The little baby wasps ate
much of the inside of the caterpillar before crawling
back out and spinning their own cocoons, which they attached
to their host.
It's a bug-eat-bug world. And that's
a good thing. Otherwise we'd be overrun with bugs. There
are more than one hundred thousand species of parasitic
wasps known, and they're a major force for maintaining
balance in nature. Birds, bacteria and diverse other organisms
keep caterpillars and butterflies at an enjoyable level.
One day Pete Leki, whose vegetable
garden is on the northwest side of Chicago, found a large
hornworm in his tomato plants. He showed it to his family
and they marveled over it then recoiled in shock
and wonder when its back erupted with wasp larvae, which
spun cocoons and installed them on little stalks so they
looked like white, silken lollipops.
Pete's family was just absorbing the
predator idea when another species of wasp showed up and
started harvesting the new cocoons. It sheared them off
low, used their handy stems to accumulate a big mouthful,
and flew away with them to provision its own young. A
splendid lesson in complexity and balance.
The gypsy moth couple shown above
is engaged in the process of reproduction. Our continent
is still poor in the natural enemies of these invaders.
As Arthur Pearson outlines in his article in this issue,
this moth has many predators and diseases. Learning to
encourage those natural enemies is the best way to lessen
the damage from inevitable gypsy moth plagues.