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Kenilworth Park and Aquatic GardensDinner plate sized flowers seem to float among four foot diameter leaves.
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Kenilworth Park and Aquatic Gardens
Insects, Spiders, Centipedes, Millipedes
 
mosquito larvae
Mosquito larvae get eaten before they mature.

It's a bug eat bug eat plant world here. Mosquitoes in the park get eaten by pond beetles, and dragon and damsel fly larvae, and also by frogs and birds. In addition, the ponds have bladder weed, a carnivorous plant. 

The ponds maintain water for predators, like dragon flies, to mature. The marsh is tidal with moving water where mosquitoes can't survive. Our hours of 7:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. put visitors in the park between the dawn and dusk feeding times of mosquitos.

The small bits of water that collect in street litter, however, are ideal for mosquito females to lay eggs safe from longer developing predators.  

This is why you are more likely to get bit by a mosquito in your neighborhood than at the park.

 

 

 
sketch of nuphar
park volunteer
nuphar leaf and flower

Each summer a native insect larvae of the Galerucidaea family tunnel through the leaf tissue of the native nuphar in the marsh and ponds. After a few weeks, the larvae leave and the nuphar puts out new growth. If you are here when the nuphar is brown, be assured the plants are not dead, and are just playing their part in a relationship that is older than the park, or maybe people.

 

 
Monarch butterfly seeking nectar from a milkweed flower
Ian Lothian
A monarch butterfly. View the life cycle.
Click here for a slide program by ranger Ian Lothian that track a monarch butterfly, one of our frequent summer visitors from egg to adult.
Wreath  

Did You Know?
The tops of the columns are adorned with two types of wreaths that alternate in their facing. Wreaths of wheat represent the agricultural strength of the nation; while wreaths of Oak represent the industrial dynamism of the nation, supplying not only our own troops but also our friends and allies.

Last Updated: October 06, 2008 at 10:51 EST