Saturday, 16 August 2025

Local wetland explorations

 I've been to Rondeau a few times, but have spent more time exploring some of the wetland habitats along the Lake St. Clair shoreline. The openness and the photo opportunities are great, not to mention the gentle breezes mean fewer annoying insects!

St. Clair NWA is close to home, which is another advantage.

View from the tower, looking E 

 On the way to the tower, there are things along the way. A few Great Egrets can be seen, including some opportunistic ones if one is ready.

No, it didn't have a line attached to its foot :-), and fortunately I was out of range. It did swing by heading in the other direction, enabling me to get a closer photo.
There is a constant variety of wildflowers along the trail, which adds to the likelihood of finding butterflies.

Monarch on Joe-pye-weed

Black Swallowtail on Milkweed

Some other plants include:

Blue Vervain

Buttonbush

Water-willow

Water-willow close-up

Giant Foxtail
This next one is probably Grass-leaved Arrowhead, but it is similar to other members of the Sagittaria genus, so may be another one. At any rate, it is abundant.


Next is Missouri Ironweed, a tallgrass prairie species at risk. Of course tallgrass prairie dominated the area adjacent to the Lake St. Clair wetlands, so some species like this have lingered, or have been augmented through planting.
The flowers of this species has around 40 individual florets, which can help separate it from another species which usually has less than 30. Also the bracts at the base of the flower head are pointed, but do not have an extended tip, as other ironweed species do.

 A few birds may cooperate for the camera.

Backlit Eastern Kingbird

Green Heron    

Sandhill Cranes are usually somewhere around, and sometimes are only heard as they are hidden by the tall wetland vegetation, and don't often stick close by when hikers are within view. Flybys are much more common.





Dragonflies are frequent, but typically in flight. On occasion one may catch one resting for a better view, as this Halloween Pennant is doing.

Double-crested Cormorants are usually somewhere around, and typically in a dead tree closer to the lake.
This photo from the tower, looking towards the lake, shows the above tree at the extreme left edge of the photo. You may have to click on the photo to get it larger before you can see them!

I've also been to the Mitchell's Bay North Shore Trail on occasion. At the end of the trail which goes through the Cadotte wetland, there are always some things to enjoy. An immature Bald Eagle is in a tree at the edge of the wetland...

...and after a short time, decided it was time to move on.
This Belted Kingfisher stopped by for a few moments.
Along another edge of the trail, the section that goes towards the village of Mitchell's Bay, provides a good spot for a family of Common Gallinules to search for a meal. There are two adults and at least 4 young in this photo.
 Along the trail one can find a lot of wildflowers. Again, this area at the time of settlement was partly wetland and partly tallgrass prairie, which would have varied depending on the naturally fluctuation of the Lake St. Clair water levels. While the wetlands have been retained in part, the presence of the tallgrass prairie plants is less certain due to the changes. However some representative species, such as this American Senna, have been planted, as have a multitude of grasses.

In some of the dead trees, Great Egrets will hang out....
...until they decide to come to the wetlands in search for food. Of course no one who reads Nature Nuggets very often would have any idea that I enjoy photographing Great Egrets.....:-).
With the shallow and somewhat muddy shoreline, it has attracted shorebirds, such as this Greater Yellowlegs.
In another dead tree, there are typically a lot of swallows resting in between feeding flights. Sometimes there may be several hundred of them, and at times, mostly Purple Martins.
  

 

 Another shorebird, this Short-billed Dowitcher, is using the shoreline edge.

And as is typical along the marshes of Lake St. Clair, Swamp Rose Mallow is widely scattered, and sometimes quite abundant. It is a species at risk, but one wouldn't know it by their abundance here.

 Sooo many things to see and photograph. The next post will likely feature some recent findings at Rondeau!

 

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Friday, 8 August 2025

Lots of cool little creatures!

 Insects seldom get their due. Sure, they are tiny, often times hard to see clearly enough to know what they are, and there are so, so many of them! And some are annoying, but they all have a purpose, and some are quite beautiful! Some are important pollinators, others are food for other, larger creatures. 

I enjoy looking for them, and trying to photograph them, even though they are constantly on the move and don't seem to appreciate me trying to capture their activities. Here are some that I have photographed recently. I'll start off with a large and easily identifiable one, the American Snout butterfly, which came to my yard.

Brown-belted Bumblebee

Bicolored Striped Sweat Bee
These next two are photos of a rare species, and it was in my yard. It is a Beebalm Shortface.

Ailanthus Webworm Moth
A type of Long-legged Fly

Eastern Comma

Great Golden Digger Wasp
These next three photos show a Hickory Tiger Moth caterpillar. I first encountered it suspended on a long silken thread at about eye level, and it was slowly dropping to the ground. The second photo here shows it in suspension. But as it got to the ground vegetation, it latched onto a leaf stem, then crawled onto the leaf.


Lunate Longhorn-cuckoo Bee
Margined Leatherwing Beetle
Marsh Greenbottle Fly
There have been quite a few Monarch butterflies around, and occasionally a female will stop by and quickly deposit an egg on the underside of a Common Milkweed. The eggs are very tiny!
Unfortunately some don't make it. This Monarch caterpillar got caught up in a spider web, and that was the end.
Fortunately some do make it to adult hood.
Another butterfly is this Mourning Cloak.

Pennsylvania Ambush Bug

Potter's Grass Spider
Question Mark
Red-spotted Purple
I go out along the grassy beach dunes on occasion, as Marie enjoyed walking along the beach, so I have memories of her. And I keep a lookout for something, such as this Seaside Grasshopper.

I also came across this American Sand Wasp, busily digging into the sand.

Resting on a milkweed leaf was this Small Bird-dropping Moth...

...and on another occasion I came across this caterpillar of the Spotted Apatelodes Moth.
On a railing along the boardwalk was this Striped Horse Fly...
...and a Swamp Milkweed Beetle....
...on a Swamp Milkweed.

Two-spotted Longhorn Bee
And finally, for this post, a Viceroy, looking much the same as a Monarch, except for its slightly smaller size, and the black median stripe on the hind wing is fairly straight, not a u-shape.

Lots more creatures of various types to photograph and show!

 

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