
6 October 2023
In October we see woolly endure caterpillars (Pyrrharctia isabella) out within the open, crossing the paths. As a result of they overwinter as caterpillars, they’re busy searching for the very best position to spend the wintry weather in leaf muddle, beneath bark or underneath a fallen log.

Leaf muddle is vital wintry weather habitat for a large number of bugs together with springtails, millipedes, earthworms, butterflies and moths.

It additionally shelters salamanders and newts …

… and gives an insect looking flooring for birds together with jap towhees, dark-eyed juncos, robins and mockingbirds.

In the event you’ve been desirous about “wilding” your backyard — even just a bit bit — now is a smart time to start out. Depart the leaves. You don’t have to go away it messy. Right here’s recommendation on what to do.
Leaving the leaves and different plant particles doesn’t must imply sacrificing your backyard to the desert. The leaves don’t want to be left precisely the place they fall. You’ll rake them into lawn beds, round tree bases, or into different designated spaces. Too many leaves can kill grass, however in soil they may be able to suppress weeds, retain moisture, and spice up vitamin.
Steer clear of shredding leaves with a mower. Raking or blowing are choices that may stay leaves entire for the most productive duvet and offer protection to the bugs and eggs already dwelling there.
If you make a decision you want to blank up the leaves and particles in spring, be sure you wait till overdue within the season in order to not spoil all of the lifestyles you’ve labored to give protection to.
— Xerxes Society: Depart the Leaves: Wintry weather Habitat Coverage
Take a spoil this weekend. Don’t bag the ones leaves! Simply push them apart for flora and fauna. 🙂
(pictures by way of Kate St. John and from Wikimedia Commons)
(*) p.s. The millipede used to be simple to {photograph} as it used to be useless, more than likely the sufferer of a parasitic fungus that activates the millipede to climb top on a sprig ahead of it dies. I wrote down the identify of the fungus once I took the image however can not learn my writing. Possibly it’s Anthrophaga myriapodia.