Well, I've joined the inner circle of Mantis 2009 members as I discovered this past week while searching for Creepy Crawlers for the weekly challenge, that I do in fact have some little mantids in my yard. My first sighting was on a Joe Pye Weed leaf, a spot where I've never seen mantises before.
Although I had only this solo sighting on June 9th, I discovered more on the 10th....some in a nearby Southernwood Artemisia shrub, and more about 15 feet away in the Abelia Grandiflora, a holly bush, and a spirea bush.
I've got a very active and voracious bird population in my yard, so I'm just hoping they allow me the pleasure of watching a few of the little ones mature to adulthood so I can enjoy them and get some great pics as well.
Nice shots of these little guys, TW. I suspect the birds are their most dangerous enemy at this stage.
I've spotted a couple this past week on the Japanese Yews in the front of the house. They must be the ones from the Rose bush hatch. The ones in the back yard landed in the strawberry patch, a favored feeding area for birds.
On the second day of sightings I saw two molted mantis skins and meant to come back to take a shot of them. I forgot to do it and heavy rains overnight must has washed them away as I can no longer see them.
Even with the ones that I'm seeing there is a difference in size. I'm guessing two main factors can be at play here: date of emergence and how well they've been eating. Actually, I think the two in my pics photograph larger than they really are.
I've never seen the birds eat one of the little ones, but once the mantises get older and bigger and I've bonded with them for a few months, it really hurts to see a 'friend' get gobbled up by a bird. That's happened only once or twice, and it was out of my control.
Mother Nature is such a wonder. When she wants to, she can cram more beauty into a given area than a human would ever conceive. You have caught a microcosm of the entire area in one spot. 5
Know the piece well. You must have been a good student. This can't be sold with a mechanical rendition. Very well conceived and constructed collage. As a retired music teacher, I love the attention to the counting and the H.T. 5 all the way.