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What Are Those Red And Black Bugs On Milkweed?

By Kathy Keatley Garvey
 
Got milkweed? Then you probably have milkweed bugs.
All summer and into fall, we spotted the familiar reddish, black and white bugs scurrying around on our showy milkweed, Asclepias speciosa, and tropical milkweed, Asclepias curassavica.
 
Monarch caterpillar munching on flowers of showy milkweed, Asclepias speciosa.
Showy bugs on showy milkweed.
 
The ones we saw: the Small Milkweed Bug,  Lygaeus kalmii. Like its name implies, it's small, about half an inch long.
 
They're primarily seed eaters, but they're opportunistic and generalists, says insect migration biologist Hugh Dingle, emeritus professor of the UC Davis Department of Entomology and Nematology, author of the popular textbook, Animal Migration: the Biology of Life on the Move. "They'll get protein from wherever they can find it," he said. Dingle, whose research includes migratory monarchs, said the milkweed bugs not only eat seeds, but they also eat monarch eggs and larvae and the immature stages of other butterflies. Forever the opportunists, they eat other small bugs as well--if the opportunity arises. And they feed on nectar, too.
 
Some scientists have seen them feeding on insects trapped in the sticky pollen of the showy milkweed.
 
The bugs, it seem, have few predators. They feed on the toxic milkweed, which makes them distasteful to predators, prey to avoid. Their warning colors (red and black) strike home that fact.
 
In the fall, as the seed pods burst open, it's a horticulture/culinary war between the milkweed growers and the milkweed bugs. Both want the seeds: the humans to plant them and the bugs to eat them.
 
 
 
 
 

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