Category: Bug of the Week (Page 143 of 218)

Bug of the Week: Skipper

One great thing about living in Phoenix is that you can still see butterflies in November.

Who is this enjoying nectar from a lantana flower?

Why, it’s a skipper!

Don’t skippers hold their wings in an interesting way? The forewings are over the back like a butterfly, and hindwings are down like a moth. Maybe that is one reason people think they are butterflies that are closely related to moths.

The larvae often feed on grasses. Many build themselves shelters by tying the leaf blades together with silk, like this one.


Have you ever seen a skipper larva?

Bug of the Week: Carpet Beetle Larva

It is winter gardening time here in the desert and so I’ve been pulling out seeds saved from previous years. One container had more than just seeds:

This larva isn’t much bigger than a seed, but I knew right away what it was.

I could tell it was a so-called carpet beetle larva (Family Dermestidae) because of the bands of bristly hairs on it. Doesn’t it look like a walking carpet?

If you look closely at the end of the abdomen (left side in this photograph), you can see long bristles trailing behind it.

In this photograph the bristles are raised so you can see they are almost as long as the larva itself.

This larva will pupate when it gets big enough. Eventually it will become a small, oval beetle like this one.

(Photograph by Alvesgaspar at Wikimedia)

The beetle’s wings or elytra are covered with tiny scales like a butterfly’s wing, giving it the patterned appearance.

Carpet beetle larvae are generally scavengers. They feed on dead plant parts, seeds, and various animal bits. They are nature’s recyclers, but can be a nuisance if they are recycling something of value, such as seeds. Most entomologists have experience with carpet beetles or dermestids because the larvae often try to recycle the preserved insects in insect collections.

The life stages:

a. Eggs

b. Carpet beetle larva

c. Molting larva (you will often see the empty or “cast” exoskeletons left behind)

d. Pupa

e. Adult – The adult lays eggs that will hatch into more larvae.

Edit:  Mike at Slugyard has a great photo of a carpet beetle.

Bug of the Week: Assassin Bug Nymph on Yellow Bells

Can you spot the insect hiding in the yellow bells flowers?

It is probably waiting for an insect to stop by the flowers to gather nectar and pollen.

It is an assassin bug nymph…

…waiting for its next meal.

It is a nymph rather than an adult because its wings are not fully formed yet. You can see the wing buds along the sides of the thorax (midsection).

Photograph of adult

(Assassin Bug Egg Mass by Jim Kalisch, UNL Entomology)

The adult will lay eggs similar to these to start the cycle all over again.

Are insects still active where you live?

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