Thursday, 19 May 2016

Caterpillars


Caterpillars


The first photo taken last week at Tupah shows a tree of about 2 ft in diameter with a patch of rotten tree bark at the base of the trunk.  Looking close, they are in fact hairy and eerie caterpillars of up to 3 inches in length. I was able to spot and identify them because this is the second time I have seen such caterpillars. The first time I saw them at the base of my jambu air tree trunk in front of my house. They camouflaged themselves by blending with the tree bark so well that no one saw them until many days later despite that we walked past them within a few feet every day.

Then one evening after dark we saw them missing from the area they usually stayed. But in the following morning, we saw them appeared again in the same spot. The following night, they disappeared again and reappeared on the same spot next day. One day, we decided to wait to see what happened when night bega to fall. At about 7:30pm, one of the caterpillars started to crawl up the tree along a trunk. The others then followed the leader in a line, a long line (Last Photo). On the top, we saw them chewing up leaves. Next morning, before 7am, they were already down on the same spot again, although we did know what time they started coming back down. After a few weeks, they disappeared altogether. They were likely the caterpillars of a certain type of moths.

Insects do exhibit intelligence in organization.

(May 2016, Tupah, Kedah)





Wednesday, 18 May 2016

Grasshoppers


These grasshoppers were gnawing up a piece of leave from a toxic elephant ear plant which we sometimes call “wild yam”. The sap from the leaf-stalks can irritate our skin on contact. Grasshoppers congregate to eat together is quite an unusual sight for me.


(May 2016, Air Hitam Dalam)