Black oil blister beetle - The strangest beetle I have ever photographed.
Black oil blister beetle eating spring whitlow grass. Kelowna, early April. Our daughter was visiting us, and it seemed like a good idea to walk along the trails in the upper section of Mission Creek Park in Kelowna. It was a banner day, both for enjoying the outdoors and finding insects that emerge early in the spring. I photographed a half dozen of these 6-legged invertebrates, and the oddest of the bunch was the black oil blister beetle. It was hard to miss; the beetle's enormous abdomen was comical in proportion to the rest of its body. Our youngest thought it must be a gravid queen ant. I thought about picking it up, but there was a good chance it may have contained Cantharidin, that nasty chemical that blister beetles possess. I have caught a good many beetles in my time, and my beetle senses (similar to spider senses, but less fun) proved me right. It was, in fact, a blister beetle. Part of the reason for my daughter's pronouncement...