Yesterday we got a break in the rain. We saw sunshine! So my rubber boots and I headed out to check our little piece of heaven, our woods and prairie.
And where the water was flowing into our pond, the mosquito larvae and centipede were taking advantage of their new habitat! If I had not stopped to take a close look at the mosquitoes I would not have noticed the other critter. Interesting how the centipede had a bubble on its head. And they used the plant as an anchor. Fascinating! I did not see them grab a mosquito larva. Certainly it was successful later. 🙂
I’m not sure what you mean about the size of the V on the emperor cat’s face. Do you mean 1/3 of the total length of what could be considered the head? Also the V is inverted, right?
Yes, the invert V. And yes, that is the general idea, what you would consider the face. It can be a judgement call if hard to tell because some are not always clear cut. Back in 2012 I raised a bunch of cats to see if the color of the face and body was any indication on which species it was. Many of cats had various amounts of black faces, “antlers” and body colors of stripes (white to almost not visible stripes). My conclusion you could not tell from the color. Then somewhere I read about the V was a better reliable indicator. Also I tend to find the Tawnys later in the season when the leaves are getting tougher and older. I tend to find the Tawny cats more often in the fall. If you find a group of small emperor cats feeding together then you also know that they are Tawnys. Hackberrys go separate ways once they hatch. To be absolutely certain though… raise it. Hope this helps answer your question.
I was surprised to see the centipede in the water. Never seen that before.
I’m not sure what you mean about the size of the V on the emperor cat’s face. Do you mean 1/3 of the total length of what could be considered the head? Also the V is inverted, right?
Yes, the invert V. And yes, that is the general idea, what you would consider the face. It can be a judgement call if hard to tell because some are not always clear cut. Back in 2012 I raised a bunch of cats to see if the color of the face and body was any indication on which species it was. Many of cats had various amounts of black faces, “antlers” and body colors of stripes (white to almost not visible stripes). My conclusion you could not tell from the color. Then somewhere I read about the V was a better reliable indicator. Also I tend to find the Tawnys later in the season when the leaves are getting tougher and older. I tend to find the Tawny cats more often in the fall. If you find a group of small emperor cats feeding together then you also know that they are Tawnys. Hackberrys go separate ways once they hatch. To be absolutely certain though… raise it. Hope this helps answer your question.
Wonderful info and very helpful! Thanks!
You always take me into a fascinating world. I love the “find the animal” pix and I can never find it until you ID it.
It is a very fascinating world! Glad to provide a little entertainment. 🙂
Huh what a clever centipede!!
bubble head centipede – looked like a black spot on the bubble too – ws something else there I wonder?
I wondered too but couldn’t tell.