Category: Bug of the Week (Page 124 of 219)

Bug of the Week: Flatid Planthopper

One from the archives:

This little insect might not have ever caught my eye if it had been on a plant.

Of course, against the brown twig and soil you can really see it.

This is a flatid planthopper, Family Flatidae.

The adults and nymphs suck fluids from plants.

Planthoppers can hop, as their name implies, but often they simply shuffle to the other side of a stem when approached.

You can see the citrus flatid planthopper move in a characteristic way at the end of this short video.

The flatid planthoppers appear to have a soft white glaze, which is actually a powder of wax they produce themselves. Some scientists have suggested that the wax helps the insects escape from predators. The white wax may make the insects look moldy, so birds think they are unpalatable.

I wonder if anyone has looked into the properties of those waxes. Are flatid planthoppers easily overlooked insects with overlooked potential?

Bug of the Week: More Butterflies for November

This has been an unbelievable month for butterflies in our yard.

Of course many of them are like this panted lady, way up in a tree.

Can’t see it?

The magic of Photoshop brings it closer.

Some of the butterflies are easier to observe.

Take this American snout butterfly from a few weeks ago.

I was able to find one sunning on a bush at ground level. Turns out that they are quite colorful with their wings open.

This white butterfly might be a checkered white.

Dainty sulphurs are active in the Southwest throughout the winter months.

They are the smallest of the sulphur butterflies.

The queen butterflies steal the show, however.

These are homegrown, as you can see from the caterpillar.

Yes, November is a great time to observe butterflies in the Sonoran Desert.

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