Speaking of recycling, spiders eat their webs. The zigzaggy pattern you often see in webs, known as stabilimenta, may be there to alert birds to the presence of the web. Moths sacrifice their scales to escape the drops of spider glue on webs. Some stinkbugs can dissolve webs with their saliva. Spiders can autotomize, that is, cut off their legs to escape painful counter-attacks by prey. And if I may expand on Gerry's lovely exploration of milkweed: some beetles will cut the leaves' laticifers (tubes that carry latex) to bleed off the dangerous latex, then proceeding to eat the leaf beyond the cut, now free of the defensive latex.
Today is my bud Jim’s birthday, which means my birthday twin Erica’s b-day is nine days away. And if it’s my birthday twin’s…. And the on the 23rd, it's the third anniversary of this blog. Tomorrow is Lincoln’s 200 birthday, and Darwin’s. Neither Jim, Erica, nor myself are that old even if you add all our years together, thank you very much.
5 comments:
Wren told me that on Sunday, during our beekeeping meeting, a honeybee flew into our house. So yes, spring is a-popping. And I can confirm the snowdrop sightings: I saw them on Eastern Parkway about 3 weeks ago, and couldn't believe my eyes. They're inspiring.
I can't stop looking at the freakin' amazing picture. What are those things on the bees legs?
That's pollen. Protein rich and delish. They pack the stuff there mixed with a little honey. The rear legs have a sort of scooped out hollow shape for it.
That explains why they sort of look like honey cakes.
Hence the expression, "the bees knees"? You decide: http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/the-bees-knees.html
yours truly,
"the sardine's whiskers"
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