Las Vegas Review-Journal

It’s tent season as caterpilla­rs signal spring

They’ll leave cocoons in summer as moths

- By Henry Brean Las Vegas Review-journal

Desert tortoise Mojave Max is great and all, but the real harbingers of spring in the desert are wispy clumps of what look like windblown trash caught in the brush around Las Vegas.

Look closely and you’ll see that these white, cottony blobs are teeming with western tent caterpilla­rs, a native species that hatches in March or April to spin silken colonies on the way to becoming moths.

“They’ll build these nests, and you’ll see them wiggling around inside and outside,” said Cody Dix, naturalist for the Southern Nevada Conservanc­y at Red Rock Canyon National Conservati­on Area. “Once we start see them, we know that spring is coming around soon.”

The caterpilla­rs prefer to pitch their tents in the spiky branches of desert almond bushes, where they feed on newly sprouted leaves.

They will live and feed as a colony, expanding their tent as they grow. The silken, softball-sized clumps serve as their shelter, protective shell and private molting room.

North America is home to several species of tent caterpilla­rs, including prolific varieties that can damage their host plants by devouring all the leaves.

Dix said the ones around Las

Vegas are kept in check by birds and lizards. Those that survive will grow to about 2 inches over the course of a month or two, then leave the tent colony to spin individual cocoons in the branches of their host plant.

Dix said the caterpilla­rs can be quite pretty, with bright-blue bodies flanked by orange stripes and hair.

After two or three weeks in their cocoons, they emerge in summer as plain brown moths. “There’s nothing too distinguis­hing about them,” Dix said.

Tent caterpilla­r season is well underway in Red Rock Canyon, he said.

“We’re seeing some nice-sized ones now,” Dix said.

But don’t wait too long to check them out. The show will be over soon enough, just like spring.

Contact Henry Brean at hbrean@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0350. Follow @Refriedbre­an on Twitter.

 ?? Patrick Connolly ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @Pconnpie Kevin Wilson, an aquatic ecologist for the National Park Service, descends toward the water of Devils Hole for a biannual count of the Devils Hole pupfish.
Patrick Connolly Las Vegas Review-journal @Pconnpie Kevin Wilson, an aquatic ecologist for the National Park Service, descends toward the water of Devils Hole for a biannual count of the Devils Hole pupfish.
 ??  ?? Brandon Senger, supervisor­y fisheries biologist for the Nevada Department of Wildlife, takes part in the April 7 count of the Devils Hole pupfish. The count is done twice a year, once in the spring and once in the fall.
Brandon Senger, supervisor­y fisheries biologist for the Nevada Department of Wildlife, takes part in the April 7 count of the Devils Hole pupfish. The count is done twice a year, once in the spring and once in the fall.
 ?? Henry Brean ?? Las Vegas Review-journal A nearly full-grown Western tent caterpilla­r crawls along a finger in the desert west of Searchligh­t on April 9.
Henry Brean Las Vegas Review-journal A nearly full-grown Western tent caterpilla­r crawls along a finger in the desert west of Searchligh­t on April 9.
 ??  ?? Devils Hole pupfish swim in their habitat in the Ash Meadows National Wildlife Refuge. The latest count tallied fewer than 90 of the critically endangered fish.
Devils Hole pupfish swim in their habitat in the Ash Meadows National Wildlife Refuge. The latest count tallied fewer than 90 of the critically endangered fish.

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