It Might as Well Be...Spring

Mar 3, 2009

 

If you like to take nature walks and lean against an occasional tree,  you might rub shoulders with a red-eyed, red-shouldered bug.

On warm, springlike days, soapberry bugs are exploring their territories--and doing what comes naturally.

These predominately black-and-red bugs are seed feeders on plants but they're much more than that. Scientists consider them the evolutionary “canary in the coal mine.”

I captured these photos of soapberry bugs last Friday in the UC Davis Arboretum. UC Davis biologist Scott Carroll, biologist who studies basic and applied aspects of evolutionary biology, specifically soapberry bugs, considers them "good mothers and avid lovers." .

“Soapberry bugs are tame, pretty, good mothers, avid lovers, and among the best native guides to ongoing evolution on the planet," he writes on his under-construction Web site.

"They respond quicky to changes in the environment and can be good models for observing evolution in action."

 They're also good photographic models.


By Kathy Keatley Garvey
Author - Communications specialist

Attached Images:

SOLITARY SOAPBERRY BUG climbs a tree in the UC Davis Arboretum, a good place for nature walks and insect observations. (Photo by Kathy Keatley Garvey)

Up a tree

SOAPBERRY BUGS IN LOVE--These soapberry bugs are doing what comes naturally. UC Davis biologist Scott Carroll says soapberry bugs are

In love