Nebraskaland

June2022SinglesForWeb

NEBRASKAland Magazine is dedicated to outstanding photography and informative writing with an engaging mix of articles and photos highlighting Nebraska’s outdoor activities, parklands, wildlife, history and people.

Issue link: http://mag.outdoornebraska.gov/i/1469065

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June 2022 • Nebraskaland 25 fl owers, catching insects as they moved from blossom to blossom. The whole circle of life was playing out in front of me on this "worthless weed." Eventually, I had to get back to my real job, but I returned to the same patch of gumweed in the early evening to continue photographing the incredible diversity and abundance of invertebrates. Between the 10 minutes earlier in the day and about 45 minutes in the evening, I ended up with reasonable photos of 14 species of animals. The actual diversity of species using the fl owers was much higher, though, since most hopped, dropped or fl ew away before I could take their picture. My photographic inventory included two types of fl ies, two beetles, two butterfl ies, a moth, a grasshopper and a tree cricket that were all feeding on pollen and nectar. I also photographed three kinds of wild bees, including one kleptoparasitic species that lays its eggs in the nest of other bees. In addition, I got photos of two types of spiders, one using a web to catch prey and the other — a crab spider — ambushing anything that came within range of its long front legs. When I found the crab spider, it was feeding on a wasp it had just caught, which became the 15th species on my list. As all this was happening, I was surrounded by gorgeous Sandhills prairie that stretched to the horizon in three directions and the stunning Niobrara Valley just to the north. The light was wonderful, and the wind was nearly calm. It was a perfect opportunity to explore and photograph a huge and spectacular place. Instead, I spent my time crawling around in a patch of "weeds" the size of a couple of pickup trucks and was completely enraptured. If you turn the page, you can see the 14 invertebrate species I photographed that day. N Chris Helzer is the director of science for the Nature Conservancy in Nebraska. A gray hairstreak butterfl y visits a patch of gumweed at Chris Helzer's family prairie south of Aurora. nanza! Photos and story by Chris Helzer

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