Kelly’s first photo almost had us believing this dragonfly had four wings on the left side, due to some shadows. The top dragonfly is a female and the bottom is […]
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Macculloch’s Forester Moth (Androloma maccullochii)
Aidan photographed this striking, day-flying moth while monitoring trumpeter swans near Ovando. We initially thought it was a Ridings’ Forester Moth (Alypia ridingsii), but it lacks the “white stripes” on the […]
Read MoreNotes from the Lab: Dairying Ants
Welcome to the Lab! It’s another season of Barcoding US Ants, our collaborative community science project with the DNA Learning Center in Long Island. After spending last summer searching for ants, it […]
Read MoreCottonwood Leaf Beetle (Chrysomela scripta)
It looks like a new generation of beetles will soon be on the way. Adults and larvae like to feed on willows, poplars, and (as you might guess) cottonwoods. They can be […]
Read MoreNorthern Checkerspot (Chlosyne palla)
This is one of several species of checkerspot butterflies in western Montana. Checkerspots are generally medium-sized, larger than crescents, and have orange and black checkered uppersides. Their flight is fairly fast, direct […]
Read MoreWhite-sptted Sawyer Beetle, female (Monochamus scutellatus)
This long-horned beetle can be found in coniferous forests across North America, especially in the northern United States, upper Midwest and much of Canada. The males have one white spot […]
Read MoreMonarch Butterfly, female (Danaus plexippus)
This sighting is very exciting. Monarch butterfly populations are not doing well, especially for the western population of monarchs (overwintering off the coast of California). Despite growing conservation efforts, both populations […]
Read MoreSnakefly, male (order Raphidioptera, genus Agulla)
These beautiful and seemingly elusive insects get their name from the long “neck” of the adults (part of their thorax). Snakeflies in this genus can be found in SW Canada […]
Read MoreCeanothus Moth, male (Hyalophora euryalus)
This massive moth was ensnared in a spider web at the University of Montana campus …probably more than the spider bargained for. Brady gently freed it. They can be found from British Columbia […]
Read MoreWestern Sheep Moth (Hemileuca eglanterina)
Western sheepmoth caterpillars (also called the elegant sheepmoth) feed on trees and shrubs that include rose, hawthorn, cherry, willow, aspen, and birch. In their younger stages they prefer to dine […]
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