This is a record of the main bugs and insects that I encounter in Japan.
Hi everybody,
Because 360 yahoo blogs is finally shutting down, I have uploaded all my bug boy pages onto a new site. It is called Nature in Japan URL: http://natureinjapan.wordpress.com/
I hope to find all of you visiting me there again. Thanks for your friendship these past years.
Bug Boy
I recently asked the Grape Guy from My Grape Vine Blog about the Japanese beetle problem I had on my grape vines and this was his response...
Adult Japanese Beetle
The Japanese beetle (Popillia japonica, also known as the jitterbug) is one of the most visible and most destructive feeders of grape vine foliage out there.
The Japanese beetle attacks most green parts of the grape vine, but mostly feeds on young leaves in the upper part of the canopy. Occasionally, they will feed on fruit also, making it unusable for export or table grapes.
When Japanese beetles feed on the leaves of the grape vine, they will eat the foliage surface material between the veins, leaving only the veins in place, which will look like they were skeletonized. Although mature, vigorous growing grape vines can tolerate quite a bit of defoliation, this insect can cause some serious damage to a grape crop.
The life cycle of the Japanese beetle:
Japanese beetles overwinter as larvae in the soil. They will feed on the roots of grass and other plant material. Adult beetles will become visible in late spring and may be present in vineyards until mid in summer. The adult Japanese beetle (as seen in the picture), has a distinctive, shiny green body and head, with copper-coloured wings. The sides and back of the body is covered with small white hair. The female Japanese beetle is bigger than the male and is approximately ½ inch long.
After mating, the female Japanese beetle will temporarily leave the grape vine, to lay up to sixty eggs in the soil of your vineyard or if you have a backyard vineyard, in your lawn. In midsummer, the eggs will hatch and will reveal small, white grubs or larva, where they will feed and hide up to 8 inches deep into the soil, to wait out the cold of winter.
Japanese beetle control:
Strange enough, in Japan
, where the Japanese beetle originally comes from, this insect is not a big problem! Why? The answer is; natural enemies that feed on the grubs.
For the organic grape grower, you can control Japanese beetle by putting out traps with a pheromone that attracts the female and a floral lure, that will attract the male. The disadvantage of using these traps are that you can lure more Japanese beetles to your vineyard, as they can fly quite long distances in a short amount of time.
A program with physical and biological control of the grabs is a more effective method of controlling Japanese beetle. The two nematodes that are most effective against Japanese beetle grubs are Steinernema glaseri and Heterorhabditis bacteriophora. Both these nematodes are commercially available.
Milky Spore (Bacillus popilliae), a naturally occurring host specific bacterium, will also attack the destructive white grubs.
It seems no one really knows why the two predominant varieties of hotaru (firefly) in Japan are known as genji-botaru and heike-botaru.
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| Bug's life: Heike-botaru fireflies go into their glowing season around Tokyo soon. ITABASHI HOTARU BREEDING FACILITY |
Perhaps it is a purely literary thing — with the larger (and brighter) genji variety (Luciola cruciata) named after the character from the 11th-century novel "The Tale of Genji" by Murasaki Shikibu, and the smaller heike variety (Luciola lateralis) named after the almost-as-famous 14th-century "The Tale of Heike."
On the other hand, it may be that the names are military references, with the descriptor "genji" awarded to the larger bug because it was the Genji clan who defeated the Heike clan in the 12th-century Genpei Wars. The fact that the fighting ended around early summer gives this explanation credence, because in Japan, early summer is firefly season.
Despite the warlike nature of their possible namesakes, the genji and heike fireflies are delicate creatures. Their larvae need clean rivers or rice paddies with mineral-rich water to grow, meaning the chances to enjoy their delightful glow in urban environments are rare.
Still, that hasn't stopped generations of Japan's city-dwellers from romanticizing the insects and, in recent years, even engineering events in which they can be seen in the capital's concrete jungle.
Tokyo's Itabashi Hotaru Breeding Facility, near Shintakashimadaira Station on the Mita subway line, is dedicated to the insects' breeding and study.
Usually the facility is open to the public during the day, with exhibits explaining how enzymes in the insects' lower abdomens react to generate light. But to celebrate hotaru season, when the larvae emerge from their watery homes as fireflies, they are put in a glasshouse and visitors are allowed to see them in the evening.
According to the facility's Web site, 7,700 genji-botaru will be on display between 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. from June 20 to 22. And from July 19 to 21, about 14,300 heike-botaru will be displayed between the same times.
Admission for both events is free. For details call (03) 5970-3426 . (Note: between June 16 and July 26, the facility will not be open during the day — presumably to give the fireflies time to rest.)
Meanwhile, for those wishing to see hotaru in the "wild," a group of citizens in Tokyo's Fussa City spend weeks each year breeding genji-botaru, which they release around Hotaru Koen and Tamagawa Josui at Omebashi Bridge.
This year around 500 will be released between June 12 and 22.
The Fussa Hotaru Festival will be held Saturday, June 14, from 1 to 9 p.m. In addition to the sparkling insects, there will be stalls selling food and souvenirs. Call Fussa City at (042) 551-1699 or check the Fussa Web site www.city.fussa.tokyo.jp for details.

My friend, Christian Searle, took a picture, and when we showed it to Mr. Matsuki, the forester, he said that it was a "fun damashi." That translates as a "false or fake turd or dropping." I thought it was his personal nickname for the beast, but when our staff looked it up on the Internet, we found that the spider's real name in Japanese is otori fun damashi — a heck of a mouthful, whose translation comes out as "greater false bird poo." I kid you not. I couldn't find the English name for this spider, but the Latin name is Cyratarachne inaequalis.
There are several species of these strange-looking spiders, and they often sit out on the top of leaves, not at all shy and, according to Mr. Matsuki, well protected because they look like unappetizing bird droppings to birds and hornets. To me, though, this one looked more like a mantis head. What do you think?
Excerpt from "FROM CICADAS TO POO SPIDERS: 'Stoopid ninja' keeps on learning" By C.W. NICOL