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Otto: Nature Nerds gather at Wild Things

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Also, for those who keep track of such things, the common name of the eastern pipistrelle bat (Perimyotis subflavus) has been changed to a somewhat more descriptive tri-colored bat. (The species’ fur is black at the base, followed by a band of lighter brown, and dark at the tips.)

Singing insects, that group of songsters consisting primarily of crickets, grasshoppers and cicadas, are expanding their ranges. Naturalist Carl Strang of the Forest Preserve District of DuPage County presented overviews of some eight different species of singing insects that can now be found well beyond what was considered their “natural” range. Although it would be easy to ascribe these shifts to climate change, Strang pointed out that there may well be other factors at work. He noted that one insect, the broad-winged tree cricket, Oecanthus latipennis, is expanding its range southward as well as north.

I was excited to learn that insects with what could be the best bug names ever, the slightly musical conehead (Neoconocephalus exiliscanorus) and the handsome trig (Phyllopalpus pulchellus) are slowly heading in our direction. Though not yet present in Kane County, they are now in northern Indiana, an easy road trip away.

If this is the sort of information you find endlessly fascinating, get out your calendar and start X’ing off the days between now and 2015, when Wild Things will return. And to fill in the void, pick a day – pick many days! – to visit our area’s outstanding natural areas with your own favorite Wild Thing.

• Pam Otto is the manager of nature programs and interpretive services for the St. Charles Park District. She can be reached at 630-513-4346 or potto@stcparks.org.

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