Pet ownership is a commitment, and when you commit to something, you become emotionally engaged in its well-being, and your own sense of self expands to include it. Kim and I learned this, again, with the dozen pets we raised in our home.
Some people have dogs for pets. I’m told that dogs appeal to those who value their loyalty and unconditional love. Other people love their cats, which may reflect values of independence and hard-won affection. Birds are also popular, as are fish, perhaps for those who like to see wildness contained. Kids might baby their pet hamsters or guinea pigs. College students and guys with “size matters” issues might keep large snakes. Seems like there’s a pet for just about everyone’s psychological needs.
My wife raised caterpillars. Her friend Ronda phoned to say, “I have some extra Cecropia Moth eggs—do you want some?” Twenty of them soon arrived, in the form of pre-caterpillar eggs about the size of poppy seeds (though they don’t share that spicy taste).
I’m not sure what psychological needs are met by caterpillars.
Looking
after eggs is every bit as exciting as it sounds. Kim set up the eggs in
kitchen storage dishes, complete with moistened cotton balls to keep the
humidity right.
A
few days later, Kim became a caterpillar wrangler. Only thirteen of the twenty
hatched, which turned out to be plenty. Looking at the tiny caterpillars was,
for me, at least twice as exciting as looking at the eggs because I could now
see them with my naked eye.
My
job was to fetch lilac leaves for them to eat, and I felt a sense of pride when
I saw tiny notches in the edges of the leaves and tiny dots of poop left behind
as evidence of their feasting. (Note to Scrabble and crossword fans: their poop
is called “frass.”
Pet
ownership, as I said, is a commitment. Kim told me at breakfast that our travel
would be restricted for the next 6-8 weeks, as they required fresh leaves on a
daily basis. She thought Charlie, a retired Ford worker who lives next door,
could be trusted to “take care of” them if we wanted to go somewhere for a
weekend. I could hardly wait to see the look on Charlie’s face when we asked
him.
The
commitment would last for about a year, but fortunately, or not, most of that
year would find our pets in cocoons stationed in our unheated garage. We hoped
to open the garage door one day to find a flock of Cecropia Moths—the largest
moths in North America, with wingspans of 5-7 inches! The females would emit
pheromones, attracting males from as far away as seven miles. I wanted to
witness an orgy -- one that I had a part in creating.
After
the orgy would be a laying of eggs, and then the beautiful moths would die.
Nothing we could do about that, for the moths don’t even have mouth parts with
which to eat. It made me want to be zealous in supplying leaves for hungry
caterpillars.
I did understand about the commitment we were making. What I did not understand at the time was the level of emotional engagement that we had signed up for. Our caterpillar wrangling was more than observing and photographing a miracle. We would participate in it.
II. Herding Cats
You’re probably thinking, “Wait a minute – I didn’t think ‘ecdyse’ was a verb.” And true, the dictionaries have not kept up with the fast-changing world of caterpillar vocabulary. You might also wonder, as I did, why to emerge from an egg as a caterpillar, and then to emerge from its cocoon as a Cecropia Moth is to “eclose,” when it’s an opening, not a closing. And you might also be thinking, “How did you know that caterpillar was female?” Well, I knew because Kim always called her “she.” My guess is that she figured males would not put up with the long birth process: egg through five ecdyses, then the fifth instar pupates, then nine months later, she ecloses, emerging as a Cecropia Moth.
Day 16. The little black caterpillars have expanded, exposing yellow skin. |
What is involved in taking care of caterpillars? Mainly, feeding them, because caterpillars don’t do much besides eat. All that eating probably explains why they grew in size from that of a wingless mosquito after they eclosed into the first instar, to their length of more than five inches, even the smallest one. And just think, after their last meal as a caterpillar, they won’t eat again for nearly a year!
Our cats ate nothing but lilac leaves. The Internet suggests other leaves, including maples, but we started them on lilac leaves, and they don’t change what they eat. Fortunately, we have lilacs growing in our back yard. Unfortunately, by their 46th day they had eaten almost all the suitable leaves in our yard, so we’ve had to go to a nearby park, and we contacted friends with lilacs. And we only had twelve cats.
Let me correct that: In addition to leaves, the cats also ate their exuvia, said to be a good source of protein, but don’t tell that to the health food stores.
Our cats ate nothing but lilac leaves. The Internet suggests other leaves, including maples, but we started them on lilac leaves, and they don’t change what they eat. Fortunately, we have lilacs growing in our back yard. Unfortunately, by their 46th day they had eaten almost all the suitable leaves in our yard, so we’ve had to go to a nearby park, and we contacted friends with lilacs. And we only had twelve cats.
Let me correct that: In addition to leaves, the cats also ate their exuvia, said to be a good source of protein, but don’t tell that to the health food stores.
Two cats with exuvia (the old skin tissue) |
What constitutes
suitable leaves? Not the ones I first brought in. What makes them suitable, I
learned, was not just the size and tenderness of the leaves (like a lot of
females, they like them big and tough), but also the length and straightness of
the stems. You see, Kim constructed two containers out of Folger’s coffee cans,
perfect because the double lids gave some stability to the stems when you feed
them down through the holes Kim has drilled. She changed these leaves on a
daily basis, replacing the stripped branches with fresh ones.
Sometimes
a caterpillar stubbornly hung onto a stem it had stripped, so Kim had to coax
it onto one of the fresh ones. She found that what works best was a combination
of sweet-talking, threats, and exhortations not to be stupid. Shoving fresh
leaves into the hungry caterpillar’s face also worked. So went the wrangling.
These
are not free-range caterpillars. We had a local carpenter construct cages for
them so they would not escape to roam the house to be stepped on or eaten as a
pizza topping. We stacked their two cages in our breakfast room, and
caterpillar maintenance became part of our breakfast ritual.
Herding
cats was not all fun and games, for they produced what is called “frass,” which
is inside terminology for caterpillar poop. While the first instar frass was
smaller than the head of a pin, each dropping soon became the size of a raisin.
For this reason, we learned to move our cereal bowls to the side when we placed
the coffee cans on the breakfast table to observe and photograph the cats. I
liked the term “frass” because it allows me to say things like, “That’s a nice
piece of frass!” At breakfast we could hear the frass dropping onto the floor
of the cages.
Kim
is more than a cat rancher. She’s a photographer. Her interests, as measured by
shots taken, have evolved from birds to butterflies to caterpillars. (I’m not
sure “evolved” is the right word.) So in addition to all the cat-care, our
activities also involved the camera. And lights. Backdrops for the photos.
Props to coax them onto. Computer time to get the images just right. The
creatures are stunning to look at and even more stunning when Kim photographs
them. She coined a term for the array of the beautiful creatures clinging to
the lilacs in their coffee can: “a bouquet of caterpillars.”
She said it just right.
III. Menopause
Eventually
all twelve of our critters stopped their wild behavior and constructed what would
be their homes for the next nine months.
But
it was wild for a while. All that eating and growing! Hard to remember that when
they hatched - excuse me, eclosed - they were the size of wingless mosquitoes.
After about 60 days, they measured about five
inches as they stretched out to explore the little indoor lilac forest that Kim
created. (For those of you challenged by measurement, look at your longest finger.
It’s longer than that.)
And
their appetites grew as fast as their bodies.
When
they were in their 5th instar we’d see how they’d stripped almost all of the
leaves we’d given them the night before, so while I drank my coffee and
watched, Kim would coax them from their bare twig onto the luscious leaves
she’d gathered in her pajamas, now damp from the dew. Sometimes the coaxing
would take 20 minutes. And the whole process would have to be repeated in
mid-afternoon, except for the part about Kim’s damp pajamas.
Then
it really got crazy. As the time for cocoon spinning approached, the cats
started roaming their cages, pausing to wave wildly in the air, anchored to
their twigs only by the rearmost sets of tiny velcro feet.
Kim mentioned that they looked like excited
penises, though I wouldn’t know anything about that. (I did, however, get some
ideas for condom designs . . .). She also noted that this wild behavior before
the big change was a lot like menopause. (No comment - though Kim does always
refer to them as female.)
Then
one morning we broke from our breakfast routine of leaf-gathering, cat-herding
and frass-dumping. We noticed wet stains on the paper towels Kim used as a
drop-cloth in their cages. A phone call to Ronda told us that we were
experiencing “gut evacuation,” which they do prior to cocoon construction. I’m
not sure exactly what was being evacuated, and I’m not sure I want to know. But
somehow the DNA in these creatures was telling them that this was the right
thing to do. Much the way a drunken college student may experience a gut
evacuation before a resolution to make some big changes in his life.
The
next step was their thorough exploration of the cages to find the best spot for
the cocoon. We’d been advised that they like to wrap themselves in a leaf or
two and then, once cozy (my unscientific term), proceed to create their cocoon.
They tended to prefer the upper corners of the cage, and we could see them
busily bending leaves and spinning silk. An occasional problem: sometimes they
would choose a corner where the cage door joined the frame, making it
impossible to open the door.
And
since they did not all go through these steps at the same time, we did have to
keep opening the door to feed the eaters and clean their frass. Kim noticed
that some of the cats wanted to construct their winter home on top of their
sibling’s winter home. She reasoned that this probably would not be any better
for caterpillars than it is for human beings, so she would herd the crowders
onto a leaf and guide them away. Not always successfully.
There
followed another photo-shoot when we could see the cats at work within their
shelters, where the leaves acted as roof and walls and the silk as windows
curtained with gauzy silk.
This sight of them is not as spectacular as
their colorful instar plumage, but in another way, it’s even more spectacular.
The final structure consists of an outer not-quite covering of leaves, which
the caterpillars fold and sew into place with their silk. After that, it’s
difficult to see what they are doing, but the result is an outer surface of the
cocoon with an inner cocoon suspended in a network of silk. And inside the
inner cocoon is the gut-evacuated caterpillar goes through is slow and
miraculous secret transformation.
We
eventually got them all settled into their cocoon construction, the eating and
frass-bombing having ceased. All but one of them. Reilly continued to move at
her own pace, eating when she felt like it. Hard to think of a caterpillar as a
free spirit, but there she was. Or maybe she was just having a hard time
getting her shit together. Sometimes it’s hard to tell the difference.
Reilly
spent hours going from corner to corner of her cage. She’d start to spin a
shelter against the screen walls of the cage, but without any leaves. Then she
would move on. Kim tried to assist Reilly, taping lilac leaves to the side of
the screen in order to give her the materials to do the job right. (In
dysfunctional families this is known as “enabling.”) Finally Kim abandoned her
efforts and went to bed. I figured that getting 12 out of 13 safely stashed is
a higher success rate then we would find in nature, where most of the
caterpillars end up digested. And it’s better than most families, where kids
are not safely stashed for years, if at all.
But
we awoke to find Reilly nestled in a corner with her sibs, enshrouded in silk.
We watched her all day just to make sure she was really through fooling around,
and then Kim sealed the edges of the cages with duct tape so that spiders and
other predators couldn’t squeeze in and cause harm.
Our
breakfast nook felt empty with the cats stashed in the garage for the winter .
. ..
IV.
Eclose
It
was a long winter. We spent much of it in Michigan, with Kim healing from her
surgeries and me shoveling snow and building snowmen. Our extended family was
secure in the garage. We waited. We spritzed them with water from time to time
because Ronda advised it. And we waited some more. Then, when Kim was
sufficiently healed in late February, we went to Florida.
Where
we worried. We worried that the below-zero nights would be too much for our
babies. We worried, when we saw the rare spike in Michigan temperatures, that
they would eclose too soon and we would arrive back in Michigan in early May to
find cages full of dead moths. We worried that we worried too much. The amount
of worry indicates how much we were emotionally engaged with our family.
When
we returned to Michigan we found the cocoons in the garage just as we had left
them. So we worried that they would never eclose, that the winter had gotten
them, or we had done something wrong. To ease our worry, Kim photographed them.
We’d
been in Michigan for about two weeks when the intermission ended and the show
resumed. Eclosure! Kim came up from her studio in the basement to discover a
large beautiful Cecropia Moth clinging to the side of the screen. Examination
of the antennae told her it was a male. Time of eclose estimated at 10:30 a.m.
This, of course, meant it was photo-time. Care to see our baby pictures?
The
next day led to another male, also emerging when we were in another room. Kim
was hoping to photograph the actual eclosure process, an event that took place only
once while she was watching. (I wanted her to photograph it so I could caption
the photo, “Eclose Captioned.”)
Several
days went by with no further births. The males were getting restless, flapping
against the screen walls of the cages. Since Cecropia Moths have such short
life spans—about a week—we did not want to waste their reproductive time, so
one by one we let them go. We took them out to the backyard lilac tree—the host
plant from which we had been clipping leaves to feed them and use for their
cocoons—and Kim carefully placed them on the twigs. And they immediately took
off, perhaps sensing female pheromones somewhere in Ohio.
Succeeding
days led to more eclosures, all females. Were we ever going to witness the
mating orgy we had imagined? We opened a window on the front porch hoping to
attract some males, but the insects that came in did not include moths. Kim
took some more photos, a process that involved various backgrounds, surfaces to
reflect the light, angles at which the flash was projected, shutter speeds,
apertures, etc.
And
we studied (and photographed) the cocoons left behind. With the help of some
delicate scissor work, we cut open some of the abandoned cocoons and marveled
at the construction: leaves folded over as an outside cover that helps hide the
pupa from predators, then a silk cocoon, then an inner pupal chamber, and inside
that, the pupa. Anyone who thinks that nature always finds the simplest way to
accomplish things should examine the life-cycle and architecture of Cecropia
Moths!
Kim
learned that moths moisten the silk of the cocoon with a fluid that contains an
acid to dissolve the silk so the moth can easily push his way out of the
cocoon. Sometimes.
But
sometimes this fluid is not secreted in sufficient quantity, and the moth is
held prisoner in the cocoon until it dies. Kim saw one moth struggling to
eclose, but it could not get out of the inner chamber, usually a soft dark
fabric.
In this case it was
hard, so Kim performed delicate surgery, first opening the outer cocoon and
then cutting silk strands that she thought might be impeding the moth’s exit.
She saw a dark stain at one end of the inner cocoon—the acid—and she noticed
that the cocoon was made of a more rigid material than the other ones she had examined.
She pried the small hole to make it wide enough for the moth, and it used its
front two legs to work its way out. But when this moth finally emerged from the
c-section, it was unable to pump out its wings, instead hanging like a wet rag
from the outside of the cocoon.
After a couple of days
with no progress we decided to “let it go,” which meant placing it in the garden
under some protective leaves where is struggled for a few days before entering
the food chain.
More
waiting. One of the ladies laid some unfertilized eggs, which did not bode well
for the Cecropia Moth population. So before departing for a 4-day birding trip
we took the five females out to the lilac tree and, one by one, Kim carefully
placed them on the twigs. Two of them stayed for a while, two flew into nearby
trees and bushes, and one just flew away. That left four cocoons, looking
pretty much the same as they looked nine months ago.
We
returned from our trip to find no further action. We figured that most of our
caterpillars had successfully worked their way through to moths, so we were
pretty good caretakers. Kim took off the leaves and the outer and inner cocoons
from one, just to have a look.
But they must have been
waiting for us, for we’d only been back a couple of days when we came in from
weeding the garden to see that a moth was hanging from the screen of the cage,
slowly flapping her wings, possibly to help them harden. And then a second one.
But
somehow we had never seen one eclose, possibly because we are usually doing our
chores during the mid-morning period when the action takes place. But we did
come upon #12 (we’d given up naming them, though Anna, our granddaughter, did
name four of them) immediately after eclosure, and we got to witness, which
means photograph, the process of pumping the new wings full of fluid and then
hardening them for flight.
And
a day later, the last of our babies was born: lucky #13. Now we had only one
step in the process left to witness, completing the life-cycle: mating. We
peered at the antennae to see if we had a mix of males and females, for the
accident of birth order and the short breeding time meant we’d never had both
sexes in the cage at the same time. But this time we had two males and two
females, and they soon hooked up.
Imagine
that you’ve been waiting a year to have sex, and that you have no equipment
except what is required to locate a sex partner, fly to her, and mate. Wouldn’t
you want that mating event to last as long as possible? Kim checked our
twosomes at 3:30 a.m. – no action. But when she looked again at 5:30, they were
joined together in a practical side-by-side position. (Try it with wings and
see if you can come up with a better position.) This lasted until 8 p.m.
A
day later the second pair joined together for about 15 hours. During this
period the thoraxes of the males appeared to get smaller and somewhat
shriveled. I can hardly blame them!
Once
all this business was over and the laying of eggs was completed, we released
the exhausted moths into the summer night. Kim collected some eggs to take out
to the lilac tree so the miraculous process could begin again.
Or
perhaps we would save a few (we saved 50) to watch them eclose as tiny
caterpillars in about 10 days.
We
have come full circle in a year and 1 month. Kim’s cancer was diagnosed
shortly after we received the eggs from Ronda, and now, a year later, life is
continuing, for us and for our beautiful works-in-progress.
We
have a few extra eggs—does anyone want to raise Cecropia Moths????
Hi,
ReplyDeleteI am intrigued by your photographs. I am a Canadian artist, I discovered your site when researching for my art. I would like to borrow from your images, Thank you. I am also a cancer survivor. I don't want to raise moths, but I would like to continue viewing your work. Thank you, Cherie Wardle - see my work on Face Book.