It is always fun searching for Orange Tip eggs and caterpillars on Garlic Mustard and Cuckoo Flowers. This year they seemed to be on just about every flower spike I saw. This is a group of freshly laid eggs on a Cuckoo Flower.
In a couple of days they turn bright orange.
I followed one egg with interest, which had been laid on a Garlic Mustard near the house. This was the caterpillar a couple of days after it had hatched.
The egg hatched on 11 May and I watched it develop until the 17 June when it formed a chrysalis. This is another caterpillar preparing to form a chrysalis.
And another one that unusually is about to form a chrysalis head down.
This is the chrysalis of the caterpillar I reared. It seems strange that it will remain in this state until April next year.
On 13th May I saw a Green-veined White laying eggs on the leaves of a Garlic Mustard plant.
The eggs hatched on the 21st May and the caterpillars developed until the 30th June when they formed chrysalises.
On the 9th July both chrysalises emerged.
I have found three batches of well developed Peacock caterpillars amongst the nettles here. I haven’t noted the dates of any of these, as I didn’t know when the eggs were laid, or when the caterpillars formed chrysalises. However, on 3rd July I was demolishing an old shed and discovered a mature Peacock caterpillar on a piece of wood I had ripped off.
Luckily it wasn’t injured, so I put it into a mesh cage, where it crawled to the roof and hung in a “J” shape.
Two days later it was still hanging there, but I noticed a 3pm it had moulted and formed a lovely green chrysalis.
This changed colour over the next few days and on 22nd July it emerged.
Sadly, it didn’t stick around for an open-wing photograph!
On the 5th July I was walking up our drive when I noticed a Red Admiral caterpillar crossing in front of me. Of course I collected it up and put it in a cage, where it immediately went to a Garlic Mustard plant and started stitching together the edges of a leaf to form a tent. The next day I noticed it had formed a chrysalis. I wasn’t very hopeful of a positive outcome, as I thought it unusual to find the caterpillar out in the open like that, as they usually hide away inside leaf tents.
However, on the 22nd July it emerged, the same day as the Peacock.
It was a lot more cooperative and allowed me to take some pictures of it before it flew off!
I have seen a lot of Red Admiral caterpillars and chrysalises in the nettles in our garden. There are a lot of adults flying around so hopefully they will soon be joined by more.
The orange tip caterpillar is so strange!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing. Have a lovely day.
Hello Nick :) Thank you for your good wishes. It seems it was a good year for butterflies on every blog I visit, and you were especially productive in rearing the caterpillars you found to full fruition. You can recognise the various caterpillars and eggs so are an expert in the field. That last photo is spectacular. I remember when you used to holiday in Sierra Leone and found butterflies on alpine flowers and I wondered if you would be interested in learning more about Alpine flowers because my good friend David Gascoigne. has made an excellent book review about them You may like to pass by and see the photos from the book which looks like an extremely informative and beautifully illustrated book, It is not a recent post, but easy to find.
ReplyDeleteAll the best
Sonjia.