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Editor: Nelson Poirier    Proofreader: Louise Nichols

Saturday, 4 July 2015

July 4 2015

**There have been no reports yet for Saturday morning of the SCISSOR-TAILED FLYCATCHER [Tyran à longue queue] at Bouctouche as of 8 a.m., and some have asked if it could be reported if it is still there today. If it is spotted today, please post it to Nature NB or call Dave Christie at 882-2100.

**The giant Moths [Papillons nocturnes] of the season are coming on thick and fast. Jack Perry had a striking POLYPHEMUS Moth [Polyphème d'Amérique] arrive to his deck in Saint John on Thursday night. Brenda Ryan also had an AZALEA SPHINX Moth [Darapsa choerilus] visit her Moncton home this past week. Susan Richards got a photo of a GALIUM Moth [Sphinx du gaillet], a.k.a. BEDSTRAW HAWK-MOTH. This is not a commonly seen one as an adult, but the striking Caterpillars [Chenilles] are more frequently seen in the fall. Susan also got a photo of a surprisingly cooperative HUMMINGBIRD CLEARWING MOTH [Sphinx colibri], which is a Sphinx Moth, and a BLACK SWALLOWTAIL Butterfly [Papillon du céleri], all at her Taylor Village home yard.

**Susan also photographed a colourful display in the sky at 9:15 p.m. Thursday evening. Curt Nason explains it’s a RED RAINBOW. The camera was probably pointed southeast. The sun had just set, so mostly the red part of the spectrum was scattering through the atmosphere. The photo is attached.

**A comment yesterday on the toxicity of Milkweed [Herbe à coton] got appropriate attention to give some excellent exchange of thoughts that are best expressed by paraphrasing interesting comments from Jim Wilson, Jim Edsall, and Ron Arsenault. It’s good the topic was brought forward to allow these comments to reach a wide audience. Comments from Jim Wilson, Jim Edsall, and Ron Arsenault follow, and all thanks to Bruce Coates for bringing up the topic and the comments that it led to.

Comments courtesy of Jim Wilson
“Milkweed has long been considered by the agricultural industry as a noxious weed and has been listed as that in Ontario and other jurisdictions for a long time.
Because if its vital importance to Monarchs I understand that governments are being forced to take a more balanced viewpoint looking forward. In following developments in the US on the conservation of Monarchs, the growing of milkweeds in a wide variety of locations is now a priority after a Presidential order issued by Mr. Obama late last year.

In the past it was easy to condemn milkweed as a noxious weed when the only viewpoint being expressed about it came the agricultural sector. At that point, no one else really cared. That viewpoint was based on all the right reasons, of course, but when its importance to Monarchs and other pollinators is put on the table, a more balanced approach is needed. My understanding is that Ontario intends to remove milkweed from its noxious weed list in future.

Common milkweed does spread through rhizomes but its spread is nothing as rapid or as uncontrollable as Japanese Knotweed or some other problem plants. I see nothing wrong with planting it on one's property as long as you can mow around it or put it in a location where its spread doesn't affect a farmer's fields. In fact, I plan to transplant more this summer to our property. I moved some a few years ago but they eventually died out as they apparently couldn't compete with the native plants here in my field. I'll need to prepare and maintain a better bed for it this time until it gets established.

I do have about 40 Swamp Milkweed plants that I established three years ago and they're doing very well on the sunny south end of our house. That's where the seeds that gave rise to your seedlings at the FON came from, last fall.”

Comment from Jim Edsall
Nelson, just responding to the Milkweed toxicity discussion. From what I have read Common milkweed  would have to be eaten in quite a large amount in order to harm a large mammal, in fact I believe parts of the plant are edible. I know some species of milkweed are more toxic but syriaca not so much. Some of the western species and whorled milkweeds are quite toxic.


Courtesy of Ron Arsenault
Water Hemlock (Cicuta maculata) is common along the drainage ditches on the Tantramar marsh hay fields. This makes one wonder how much of it gets into the hay bales.
The link provided by Bruce suggests that it is problematic if grazed, but does it retain its toxicity after being dried as hay?
If I remember correctly, Water Hemlock is the most violently toxic plant to humans in this part of the world. I do not know if it is as potent to cattle, nor do I recall how the toxicity is affected after the plant is cut and dried.

Nelson Poirier

Nature Moncton
AZALIA SPHINX MOTH. JUNE 30 2015.BRENDA RYAN.

BLACK SWALLOWTAIL BUTTERFLY.JULY 2, 2015.SUSAN RICHARDS

GALLIUM SPRINX MOTH.JULY 2, 2015.SUSAN RICHARDS

HUMMINGBIRD CLEARWING MOTH.JULY 3, 2015.SUSAN RICHARDS

POLYPHEMUS MOTH.JULY 3, 2015.JACK PERRY

RED ADMIRAL BUTTERFLY.JULY 2, 2015.SUSAN RICHARDS

RED RAINBOW.JULY 2, 2015.SUSAN RICHARDS
  

Friday, 3 July 2015

July 3 2015

** Tracy Redmond found a beautiful fresh LUNA MOTH [Papillon lune] day-perching on her Moncton deck on Thursday morning.  It's the time to watch for the large striking giant silkworm moths and sphinxes.
** Dave Miller also had a visit from a TWIN-SPOTTED SPHINX MOTH to his Salisbury home on Thursday.  As indicated, it's that time for all these striking moths to be on their adult flights.
** Gloria Chase has a DOWNY WOODPECKER [Pic mineur] that has taken a liking to the Hummingbird nectar and quite able to partake.
** Bruce Coates brings up some very interesting comments on MILKWEED [Asclépiades] propagation in that it may cause a conflict between naturalists and farmers.  As this plant can be toxic to horses, cattle and sheep, we need to be cautious where we propagate it.  I was surprised to see the long list of other plants toxic to livestock as well in the URL that Bruce refers to.  Many of these plants listed are very commonly occurring plants depending upon the habitat.  Bruce's comments are copied below withthe URL.
The issue of growing milkweed puts my farmer background and my naturalist interests in direct conflict. For generations, farmers have attempted to eradicate all types of milkweed with good reason. It is toxic to domestic farm animals. Normally, animals will not graze on milkweed but small amounts in hay or eaten when other food sources are scarce in pastures will kill cattle, sheep and horses. It should be pointed out that it is vitally important that milkweed not be allowed to spread into any areas where hay is made or that horses, sheep or cattle could graze. The very fact that naturalists are growing milkweed will strain the relationship between the naturalist community and the agricultural industry.

This link is to the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture site:  http://www.omafra.gov.on.ca/english/livestock/dairy/facts/poisonousweeds.htm.

Courtesy of Bruce Coates
** The male REDHEAD [Fuligule à tête rouge] duck David Miller found at the Salisbury Government Rd. lagoons was still present on Thursday morning.  Brian Stone and I saw it mid-morning, just on the first lagoon to the left on Government Rd.  It then flew over to the lagoons at the back part of the mini-home park.  It was diving frequently.  There were many other ducks with broods there and a KILLDEER [Pluvier kildir] issued its unwelcome mat.
** A stop to a bog adjacent to the Irishtown Nature Park found the orchids that were in full bloom at this time last year had not appeared yet.  A BALTIMORE CHECKERSPOT [Baltimore] butterfly was very co-operative, lots of HARRIS'S CHECKERSPOTS [Darnier de Harris], NORTHERN CRESCENTS [Croissant nordique], COMMON RINGLETS [satyre fauve], and a few VICEROYS [Vice-roi], WHITE ADMIRALS [Amiral] and the first SILVER-BORDERED FRITILLARIES [Argynne de l'Atlantique] that we've encountered, as well as a QUESTION MARK [Polygone à queue violacée] butterfly.  One photo shows the question mark on the hind wing clearly that gives this butterfly its name.  HUMMINGBIRD CLEARWING MOTHS were most interested in vetch, and a blooming VIPER'S BUGLOSS [Vipérine commune] was noted as well.
This week’s sky at a glance is attached below courtesy of Curt Nason
This Week’s Sky at a Glance, July 4 – July 11 courtesy of
Curt Nason

With turkey vultures becoming more prominent in the province, you might be interested in knowing a vulture once flew with the swan and the eagle in the sky. The bright star Vega can be seen high in the east in evening twilight. Soon after its appearance you can spot Deneb to the lower left and Altair even lower to the right. Deneb is the tail of Cygnus the Swan and Altair is the head of Aquila the Eagle. These three stars, the brightest of their respective constellations, form the isosceles Summer Triangle, an asterism popularized by the late Patrick Moore in England more than 50 years ago. It was mentioned in James Michener’s 1982 novel “Space,” where mention was also made of the Great Summer Triangle composed of Vega, Arcturus and Antares. 

Vega’s constellation is Lyra the Lyre or Harp, with the main part of the instrument being formed by a parallelogram of stars. If you point a spotting scope between the two brighter stars of the parallelogram, opposite Vega, you might notice a fat, blurry star. A moderate-sized telescope will show it as a smoke ring or doughnut. This is the Ring Nebula or M57, the remnants of a Sun-sized star that puffed off its layers of gas when it ran out of nuclear fuel. Near Vega is a dimmer but naked-eye star that binoculars will show as two stars. A larger scope at high power reveals each of those as a pair of stars, prompting its common name of the Double-Double. Lyra is the Celestial Tim Hortons.

In mythology, the lyre was made from a tortoise shell by the god Hermes, who gave it to Apollo. It was mastered by Apollo’s son Orpheus, who soothed all around him when he played. After his bride was killed tragically on their wedding night, he spurned the advances of the many young ladies vying for his attention. They schemed revenge, screaming loudly so as not to be affected by his music, and then beat him to death and tossed the lyre into the river. Zeus sent a vulture to retrieve the lyre and had it placed in the sky to commemorate Orpheus and his music. Star maps from a few centuries ago depicted the lyre in the talons of a vulture.

This Week in the Solar System

Today sunrise in Moncton was at 5:34 am and sunset will occur at 9:13 pm, giving 15 hours, 39 minutes of daylight. Next Saturday the Sun will rise at 5:39 am and set at 9:10, giving 15 hours, 31 minutes of daylight. (To counter Nelson’s comments in January: The days are getting shorter! This means longer nights for stargazing.)

The Moon is at Third Quarter on Wednesday, July 8, rising around 12:30 am that day and around 1 am the next day.

Mercury continues to brighten and rise more than an hour before the Sun, but binoculars are recommended and you should be looking before 4:45 am.

Venus pulls away to the left and slightly downward from Jupiter over the week as they both approach the star Regulus. Approaching Earth, Venus appears as a larger, thinner crescent over the month. It shows its greatest illuminated area in a scope on Friday, July 10, reaching maximum brightness.

Earth is at aphelion, its greatest distance from the Sun, on late Monday afternoon. Please do not stare at the Sun to see if it looks smaller. We are about 3% farther from the Sun in July than we are in January.

Mars is very low in the east at sunrise, too close to the Sun to be visible.

Saturn is highest in the sky during late twilight. Its rings are at their best viewing in a decade so give them a try with your spotting scope, and look for its brightest moon Titan nearby.

Questions?
nasonc@nbnet.nb.ca

Nelson Poirier,

Nature Moncton
SILVER-BORDERED FRITILLARY BUTTERFLY 01. JULY 02, 2015. BRIAN STONE

SILVER-BORDERED FRITILLARY BUTTERFLY 01. JULY 02, 2015. BRIAN STONE

BALTIMORE CHECKERSPOT BUTTERFLY.JULY 2, 2015.NELSON POIRIER

BALTIMORE CHECKERSPOT BUTTERFLY.JULY 2, 2015.NELSON POIRIER

CEDAR WAXWINGS. JULY 02, 2015. BRIAN STONE

DOWNY WOODPECKER TO HUMMINGBIRD FEEDER.JULY, 2015.VIA GLORIA CHASE

DUSKY CLUBTAIL DRAGONFLY 02. JULY 02, 2015. BRIAN STONE

HUMMINGBIRDD CLEARWING MOTH 01. JULY 02, 2015. BRIAN STONE

KILDEER 03. JULY 02, 2015. BRIAN STONE

LUNA MOTH.JULY 2, 2015.TRACY REDMOND

QUESTION MARK BUTTERFLY 03. JULY 02, 2015. BRIAN STONE


QUESTION MARK BUTTERFLY.JULY 2, 2015.NELSON POIRIER

REDHEAD DUCK.JULY 2, 2015.NELSON POIRIER

TWIN-SPOTTED SPHINX MOTH.JULY 2, 2015.DAVID MILLER

VIPERS BUGLOSS 02. JULY 02, 2015. BRIAN STONE

WHITE ADMIRAL BUTTERFLY 01. JULY 02, 2015. BRIAN STONE

WOOD DUCK ON LEFT. JULY 02, 2015. BRIAN STONE

Thursday, 2 July 2015

July 2 2015

** Aldo Dorio photographed a WHITE ADMIRAL BUTTERFLY and a NELSON’S SHARP-TAILED SPARROW [Bruant de Nelson] at Hay Island on Wednesday. He got a lot closer than I did on a brief visit to the park a few days ago with the Nelson’s Sparrow. There were a surprising number of vocalizing Nelson’s Sparrows in the salt marsh there.
**Brian Stone came across his first EBONY JEWELWING DAMSELFLIES this season at Mapleton Park on Wednesday, also a first observation of the soon to be very numerous EUROPEAN SKIPPER BUTTERFLY.
** I’d like to share some experience with growing COMMON MILKWEED in my own yard to attract pollinators and butterflies. I’ve tried to plant it from seed using winter stratification as recommended. I always had lots of seeds develop  but could never get them to take hold and form a colony. On a suggestion from Rhéal Vienneau and Anne Marsch, I dug up the rhizomes last fall, after the numerous plants at the CN rail-yards in Moncton died back. The rhizomes have white structures on them, they are buds from which new plants arise. All five sites that were placed last fall now have COMMON MILKWEED plants growing which are going to set flower heads this season. These plants are approximately a metre in height at the moment. The rhizomes placed this spring are just barely emerging  and some plants transplanted just as they were appearing this spring are taking off very slowly. The fall re-planting of the rhizome seems to be very effective. This may be a technique many are aware of but for those who are not, as I was, it is a sure way to get them established in your yard. Anne has advised me that I will be sorry as they will take over. Let it happen!
Apparently SWAMP MILKWEED takes well from seedlings. I planted several that Jim Wilson donated to the Festival of Nature Weekend and it looks like these are going to join the milkweed plantation.
Nelson Poirier
Nature Moncton


COMMON MILKWEED FROM FALL PLANTED RHIZOMES.JULY 2, 2015.NELSON POIRIER

EBONY JEWELWING DAMSELFLY.JULY 2, 2015..BRIAN STONE

EBONY JEWELWING DAMSELFLY.JULY 2, 2015..BRIAN STONE

EUROPEAN SKIPPER BUTTERFLY.JULY 2, 2015..BRIAN STONE

MILKWEED RHIZOME SECTIONS FOR TRANSPLANTING SHOWING WHITE BUDS.SEPT 3,2014.NELSON POIRIER 

NELSON'S SPARROW.JULY 2, 2015.ALDO DORIO

SWAMP MILKWEED FROM SPRING PLANTED SEEDLINGS.JULY 2, 2015.NELSON POIRIER

WHITE ADMIRAL BUTTERFLY.JULY 2, 2015.ALDO DORIO

Wednesday, 1 July 2015

July 1 2015

**  Don and Dorcia Pellerin found an immature SCISSOR-TAILED FLYCATCHER at the west end of the Bouctouche lagoon on Tuesday morning just beside Louis-Emile Cormier's earthen mound. They got the word out quickly and many were able to get to see and enjoy the bird as it actively did its fly catching to admiring eyes. Lots of photos but at an appropriate distance which the bird seemed to pay no attention to. The bird stayed all day and into the evening. 


** David Miller found a REDHEAD duck in the lagoons at Salisbury at the end of Government Road just behind the trailer park and shares a nice photo.
 
** Aldo Dorio got photos of a VICEROY butterfly, a HUMMINGBIRD CLEARWING moth, and another SHORT-TAILED SWALLOWTAIL BUTTERFLY at Hay Island Park on Tuesday. 
 
** Marlene Hickman reports COMMON GRACKLES are very busy feeding youngsters from the suet feeder. An adult picks off pieces and drops them into a circle of waiting beaks on the ground. Marlene also comments that the LOON that seems to be staying in the wetland park behind the Tantramar High school, that can be seen from the Trans Canada Highway, is still present. 
 
** Bob Blake keeps a record of daily morning low temperatures, daily highs and precipitation from his Second North River home and leaves a comparison between June 2014 and June 2015. There were nine mornings recorded  at 10°C or below for the low for June of 2014 with a low morning of 4°C. There were 12 mornings recorded at 10°C or below for June of 2015 with a low morning of 2°C. There were 17 mornings recorded above 10°C for June of 2014 and the high morning was 16°C. There were 9 mornings recorded at below 10° for June 2015 and the high morning was 16°C. One noticeable difference was the daily highs being much higher for 2014 than 2015. There were 8 days with high temperatures of 30°+ in June of 2014 with 2 of those at 36 and 1 at 35. There were no days that were higher than 30 in June 2015 and highest was 28 and 29. Rainfall for June of 2014 was 153mm, rainfall for June 2015 was 203mm. Summation note is that more rainfall in June 2015 and lower daytime highs for June of 2015 than June 2014. 
 
** Brian Stone and I paid a visit to the PEREGRINE FALCON nest box on the summit of Assumption Place (from 20 floors down in the parking lot) on Tuesday morning following Georges Brun's report of earlier Tuesday morning. Georges's photo seemed to show an adult. We saw a young bird perched on the railing of the nest box and two birds were flying in the air around the box and going in and out that appeared to us to be one of the juvenile birds we were able to photograph and suspected both of the birds we saw while we were there were juveniles, possibly on an inaugural flights. 
Brian also got some nice images of an EASTERN KINGBIRD, SAVANNAH SPARROW and GRAY CATBIRD on travels on Tuesday. 
 

Nature Moncton
nelson@nb.sympatico.ca

Nelson Poirier
 BIRD WATCHERS (SCISSOR-TAILED FLYCATCHER). JUNE 30, 2015. BRIAN STONE

CATBIRD. JUNE 30, 2015. BRIAN STONE

EASTERN KINGBIRD. JUNE 30, 2015. BRIAN STONE

HUMMINGBIRD CLEARWING MOTH.JUNE 30, 2015.ALDO DORIO

PEREGRINE FALCON (JUVENILE) JUNE 30, 2015.NELSON POIRIER (2)

PEREGRINE FALCON 01. JUNE 30, 2015. BRIAN STONE

PEREGRINE FALCON (JUVENILE) JUNE 30, 2015.NELSON POIRIER

PEREGRINE FALCON (JUVENILE) JUNE 30, 2015.NELSON POIRIER

REDHEAD DUCK.JUNE 29, 2015.DAVE MILLER

SAVANNAH SPARROW 01. JUNE 30, 2015. BRIAN STONE

SCISSOR-TAILED FLYCATCHER (IMMATURE).JUNE 30, 2015.NELSON POIRIER (2)

SCISSOR-TAILED FLYCATCHER (IMMATURE).JUNE 30, 2015.NELSON POIRIER (2)

SHORT-TAILED SWALLOWTAIL.JUNE 30, 2015.ALDO DORIO

VICEROY BUTTERFLY..JUNE 30, 2015.ALDO DORIO

VICEROY BUTTERFLY..JUNE 30, 2015.ALDO DORIO

Tuesday, 30 June 2015

June 30 2015

** Georges Brun got a distant photo of an adult  PEREGRINE FALCON [Faucon pèlerin]  perched outside the nest box on the summit of Assumption Place on Tuesday morning.
 
** We’ve had lots of damp weather recently; I came across several large HORSE MUSHROOMS on Monday on a grassed area just off Vaughan Harvey Blvd in Moncton.  There were large and obviously fresh from the night before as no insect infestation.  They will be heading to the griddle today !  Horse Mushrooms are far more prevalent in the fall, but wet conditions can bring them to life anytime in the spring and summer period.
 
** There have been several reports this year of  BLACK-BILLED CUCKOO [Coulicou à bec noir].  I very distinctly heard the call of one from Mount Royal Blvd in Moncton’s West End at 7 am Tuesday.  I followed the call hoping for an observation for a half hour, but it would not produce a visual observation.
Nelson Poirier,
Nature Moncton

HORSE MUSHROOMS.JUNE 29, 2015.NELSON POIRIER
PEREGRINE FALCON JUNE 30 2015 GEORGES BRUN

Monday, 29 June 2015

June 29 2015

**  Louise Nichols reports that she is noting more odonates [dragonflies and damselflies] around her Sackville yard pond this spring. She’s not sure whether she is really seeing more or recent reports have all of us looking for more. Two species she was able to photograph are DOT-TAILED WHITEFACE [Leucorrhine mouchetée] and DUSKY CLUBTAIL [Gomphe pointu], two species that many of us are getting to know from Gilles Belliveau’s excellent commentary. Gilles has been updating his very helpful website, Dragonflies and Damselflies of New Brunswick at http://odonatanb.com a highly recommended site to visit; you’ll soon be hooked on these fascinating flying machines  if you’re not hooked already. With some ode photo series, I have sent them out on Blogspot only, as this does not use recipients’ mailbox space.
 
**  Clarence Cormier reported an adult male PINE GROSBEAK [Durbec des sapins] at Grande-Digue approximately two weeks ago. Clarence now feels that he was in error and suspects that he possibly mistook a bright male PURPLE FINCH [Roselin pourpré].
 
**  A bit more from the New Scotland Road butterfly expedition on Saturday. Brian Stone got a photo of a HARRIS’S CHECKERSPOT [Damier de Harris] caterpillar. This larva is very similar to the BALTIMORE CHECKERSPOT [Baltimore] caterpillar. Some of the photos taken while exploring for Silvery Checkerspots showed that some fresh Harris’s Checkerspot butterflies were flying as well that day. The differences are surprisingly clear when photos are displayed on a computer screen.  Also on that day, Brian photographed a CRAB SPIDER attacking a WEEVIL [charançon], a SAWFLY [cèphe], a FALSE CROCUS GEOMETER [Géomètre safran] moth, which is a yellow, mid-sized moth that flies some by day.
 
**  On bird-feeder activity, I mentioned a few days ago that I had not seen woodpeckers using the Starling-resistant Suet Palace from underneath. They must have overheard and one given the others the idea, as a pair of DOWNY WOODPECKERS [Pic mineur] and several BLACK-CAPPED CHICKADEES [Mésange à tête noire] are now feeding upside-down quite steadily.
 
 
We have only one pair of HOUSE FINCHES [Roselin familier] at the moment and they posed for a photo; AMERICAN GOLDFINCHES [Chardonneret jaune] are the most numerous patrons, with a few PINE SISKINS [Tarin des pins]. RED-WINGED BLACKBIRDS [Carouge à épaulettes]  and COMMON GRACKLES [Quiscale bronzé] are swelling in numbers again, as well as MOURNING DOVES [Tourterelle triste] that we assume are bringing young.
 
Nelson Poirier
Nature Moncton

 
CIMBICID SAWFLY. JUNE 27, 2015. BRIAN STONE

CRAB SPIDER AND IRIS WEEVIL. JUNE 27, 2015. BRIAN STONE

D0T-TAILED WHITEFACE (MALE) (b). LOUISE NICHOLS. JUNE 25, 2015

DUSKY CLUBTAIL DRAGONFLY. LOUISE NICHOLS. JUNE 27, 2015

FALSE CROCUS GEOMETER MOTH 01. JUNE 27, 2015. BRIAN STONE

HARRIS'S CHECKERSPOT BUTTERFLY CATERPILLAR. JUNE 27, 2015. BRIAN STONE

HARRIS'S CHECKERSPOT.JUNE 27, 2015.NELSON POIRIER

HOUSE FINCH (FEMALE).JUNE 28, 2015.NELSON POIRIER

HOUSE FINCH (MALE).JUNE 28, 2015.NELSON POIRIER
SILVERY CHECKERSPOT.JUNE 27, 2015.NELSON POIRIER