While I toil away on beautiful bird #2 who better to fill the space but some camera-shy, very tiny weevils:


I found loads on our hollyhocks yesterday but every couple seemed to "disengage" the moment I turned my camera upon them.
minor musings on the macrocosm
While I toil away on beautiful bird #2 who better to fill the space but some camera-shy, very tiny weevils:


I found loads on our hollyhocks yesterday but every couple seemed to "disengage" the moment I turned my camera upon them.
Drama excessive?

Harlequin Cabbage Bugs (Murgantia histrionica)
The soldier beetles have an interesting arrangement:

Soldier Beetles (Cantharis sp.)
It gets worse (better?). Those frisky Asian Lady Beetles (Harmonia axyridis), stars of a previous post, are at it again. But this time they’ve brought a male Convergent Lady Beetle (Hippodamia convergens) along for the ride.
As if polyamory wasn’t risque enough, these beetles are blatantly breaking the “inter-species sex taboo“. I imagine the “spicy” personal ad in the Ladybird Beat went something like this:
Mature Asian couple seeks unattached male Coccinellid, gender unimportant, microsporidia and std free, for friendship first…then?
It’s nice to see a California native (though widely exported as a pest-control agent) on top, even if he is a bit too typically misguided.
I would not expect viable offspring to result from a Harmonia x Hippodamia mating, though my knowledge of the breeding biology of beetles is rather slim.
I also came across a Harmonia larva, mowing down aphids on a Fava:
Much commentary on the Pharyngula prop centered upon negative impacts resulting from the introduction of the Asian Lady (H. axyridis). No doubt may Harmonia may well turn out to be the beetle equivalent of the starling or mongoose. Still, I have to confess a personal respect for these super-predators after watching larva and adult alike carve swathes through pulsating flocks of aphids.
I also stumbled across a mating Crane Fly (family Tipulidae) couple adopting a more exotic position in the onion rows:
Crane Flies are throbbing here in California just as they are in Maryland and surely much of the Northern Hemisphere. Better Crane Fly pics and much more, including a stacking of Japanese Beetles that puts the ladybugs to shame, can be found at the Bug Love portion of whatsthatbug.com.
I’m still standing on the elytra of goliaths.
As regulars to my Flickr collection may have noticed, I've developed a bit of a penchant for invertebrate NC-17 moments, especially amongst ladybird beetles (née ladybugs). I find the black bean aphids (Aphis fabae) a charming touch to this shot of asian ladybird (Harmonia axyridis) relations. One is tempted to analogize to pair of humans coupling on a counter at Denny's amidst a pile of grand slam specials. Or at least I am tempted to draw that comparison.
You'll also note that this photo has a good view of the male's aedeagus. Sperm delivery organs have evolved independently within many animal lineages: there is the infamous "tentacle sex" of cephalopods, the gonopodium of certain live-bearing fish species, the double-trouble hemipenes of snakes and lizards and the impressively lengthy duck phallus (not to mention similar structures known in annelids, gastropods and, of course, mammals).
Indeed, evolution has had a ball with genitalia (weak pun not intended), and for good reason: sex and reproduction are at the core of the struggle for existence. Evolution is so picky with penes that penile morphology is often used as a key method for sussing out phylogenetic relationships in such diverse groups as flies and primates. Here's an interesting paper on the influence of contrasting selection pressures on the morphology of the male member in a group of tropical fish. In this case males cope with the perpetual struggle of attracting potential mates while trying to avoid attracting predators.
What would quality porn be without another angle?
For those of you more inclined to read your erotica, here's an account of ladybird reproduction courtesy of the Ladybuglady.
Once a male has found a female to mate with, he will grasp her firmly from behind using the front most part of the leg, called the tarsi. The tarsi is like a serrated claw with sticky pads. This allows the male to get a stable grip of the female during copulation. In this position, it looks as though one is getting a "piggy-back" ride. The male's genetic material is passed to the female through an ejaculatory gland, much like an oviposititor for the female. The male's genetic material than passes into the female through the oviduct to the spermatheca. This is a special sac in the female's body where the sperm can be stored for up to several months before it is used to fertilize the eggs as they are laid.
One thing I've noticed about the beetles in our garden is that copulation seems to take a long time for such small critters. I've seen pairs carry on happily for hours. All that love-making must do wonders for the appetite:

This is actually a shot of a seven-spotted ladybird (Coccinella septempunctata) which, like the asian ladybird, has been introduced to our area as a pest control agent.
Those of you craving more graphic invertebrata should check out this post on Snails Tales, which answers the age-old question "who would win in a cage match between a garden slug and an earth worm?" (hint it's the one with a radula). If you've recently gorged yourself, I suggest you wait a bit for it to settle before heading over there.