Forest Preserve District of Cook County (Illinois)
Nature Bulletin No. 468 October 27, 1956
Forest Preserve District of Cook County
Daniel Ryan, President
Roberts Mann, Conservation Editor
David H. Thompson, Senior Naturalist
****:COCOONS
From now until early spring is the time to hunt for cocoons. There are
many kinds to be found in various places: attached to branches or twigs,
under loose bark of dead trees, among fallen loaves, beneath stones and
rotting logs, on the bottom edges of window sills and overlapping
siding on houses, or inside outbuildings such as garages and sheds. A
board lying on the ground is likely to hide a cocoon or the papery
cocoon-like egg sacs of spiders. Cocoons should be kept in a cool moist
place. It will be interesting to see the kinds of adult insects that emerge
from them in spring or early summer.
Adult female insects lay eggs. Wormlike larvae hatch from the eggs of
most kinds of land insects and these, when full-grown, become helpless
pupae. By one of the most mysterious and wonderful processes in
nature, a pupa is transformed into au adult. This four-stage life cycle is
called complete metamorphosis.
The larvae of many species merely retreat to some secluded place, or
bury themselves in the ground, where they become pupae. With the
exception of the Skipper butterflies, all butterfly pupae -- often called
chrysalides -- are not enclosed in a cocoon but are attached to a leaf or
twig by a silken disk or a band of silk. The larvae of the well-known
Monarch butterfly feed on milkweeds and you may find one of the
exquisitely beautiful pupae dangling, "like a green house with golden
nails", from a milkweed leaf. Such chrysalides, too, may be collected
and kept until the adults emerge.
The larvae of most moths and many other kinds of insects, including
ants and fleas, build cocoons around themselves and it is in those
chambers that the changes, from larva to pupa and from pupa to adult,
take place. Cocoons are usually made of silk spun from two glands
filled with a thick glue-like material. This is pressed out in two slender
threads that stick together as they emerge from an opening or
"spinneret" on the larva's lower lip. In the air they harden into a tough
silk fiber. It is fun to watch a larva spin its cocoon, weaving its head
back and forth in a comical figure-eight looping motion.
Hairy caterpillars, such as the familiar Woolly Bear which is a larva of
the Isabella tiger moth, merely use silk as a woof to hold together a
warp of hairs from their bodies. Some caterpillars roll up in a leaf and
fasten the edges together with silk. Many wood-boring larvae make
cocoons largely of chips, and those which undergo transformation in the
ground may include earth in the walls of their cocoons. The ant-lion
larva uses grains of sand. The shells of many cocoons are fibrous and
dense; others, like those of saw-flies, are like parchment or even tissue
paper; and a few kinds are lacelike in texture.
The conspicuous cocoon of the Cecropia, largest of our giant silkworm
moths, is shaped like a hammock and fastened, lengthwise, close to the
underside of a branch or twig. It has two walls of silk with an insulating
mat of loose silk between them. Youngsters frequently find that one and
also the long slim cocoon, wrapped in a leaf, of the Promethea -- most
common of the giant silkworm moths. The leaf stem is fastened to a
branch by a band of silk and this cocoon is commonly mistaken for a
dead leaf.
Adult insects escape from cocoons in various ways. Those with biting
mouthparts can gnaw their way out. Others must soften one end with
"spit" and push through the fibers. But the Cecropia and Promethea
larvae provide an "escape hatch" -- a conical valve-like arrangement at
one end of the cocoon.
That instinct is almost as miraculous as the change from pupa into
adult.
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