Recently, I started two websites and a Facebook community page called "EL PASO BUGS" with the mission to create awareness and appreciation for local insects and related arthropod species with which we share this land. This is a large gallery of insects and related invertebrates (labeled to species or genus in most cases) that I have had the opportunity to photograph in this beautiful corner of Texas.
These websites have been well received by the El Paso community and beyond and have been promoted on radio as a local resource for Master Gardeners, Pest Control Operators, farmers, and anybody interested in nature, wildlife, and the environment.
To view EL PASO BUGS as a taxonomic list go to:
http://elp.tamu.edu/integrated-pest-management/el-paso-bugs/
To view EL PASO BUGS as thumbnails go to:
http://elp.tamu.edu/integrated-pest-management/el-paso-bugs-thumbnails-2/
This is El Paso Bugs Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/ElPasoBugs
Showing posts with label insects. Show all posts
Showing posts with label insects. Show all posts
Thursday, September 10, 2015
EL PASO BUGS:
Labels:
ants,
aphids,
bees,
beetles,
cockroaches,
crickets,
damselfly,
dragonfly,
El Paso Bugs,
flies,
grasshoppers,
insects,
katydids,
mantis,
moths,
scorpions,
spiders,
termites,
wasps
Tuesday, June 9, 2015
Denizens of El Paso and the American Southwest: the carpenter bee & the cuckoo wasp
I want to share with you a YouTube video that I filmed on May 7, 2015 in my
patio of a carpenter bee (Xylocopa spp.) and its kleptoparasite (Family Chrysididae):
Monday, June 10, 2013
Is the Hickory Shuckworm becoming a more serious pest in El Paso County?
Mr. Kevin Giraud, Manager of Helena Chemical Company in
Tornillo, placed two pheromone traps for hickory
shuckworm (HSW) south of Fabens, near the Rio Grande, on June 3. Just three
days later, he had collected 41 HSW moths. In previous years, I have found minimal
amounts of HSW larvae and nut damage. This year, I did not set up HSW pheromone
traps, but I have done so in the past with little success. Although in other
regions HSW is considered a serious pest, pecan growers in El Paso generally do
not monitor for HSW. This pecan pest has received little attention and might
have been under the radar. Based on these recent captures, I am afraid that HSW
populations might be increasing in El Paso region. It is hard to interpret what
these captures mean in regards to affecting pecan nut yield and quality. When
asked about this subject, Bill Ree commented: “HSW pheromone seems to catch adults early in the season, a few during
the summer, then more in the late summer or fall”. He added “We (pecan entomologists) just don’t know
what the trap catches are telling us so treatments are based on the fact that
there was a problem last season and kernel development has reached the half
shell stage.” It is not time to panic, but a good moment to monitor the
development of this pest. If past events are good indicators of the future, we
should find comfort in the fact that this pest has caused only a minor damage
in pecan production during recent years. Fortunately, insecticide applications
for second generation PNC, in case they are needed, may also reduce HSW
population levels. I will be placing HSW pheromone traps in the field soon to monitor this pest more closely.
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