Category: Bug of the Week (Page 144 of 219)

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?

Bug of the Week: Amberwing Dragonfly

I had a lot of interesting bugs to choose from this week.

The winner was this tiny, orange-winged dragonfly. It is only about an inch long.

It is a Mexican amberwing, Perithemis intensa.

This one was hovering in the air and then darting away.

It was hovering over a manmade waterfall.

Maybe someday soon I’ll get to go back and get a photograph of one sitting still.

Do you have amberwings where you live?

Bug of the Week: Pallid-winged Grasshoppers

Grasshoppers are moving in Arizona right now.

One of the most common species is the native pallid-winged grasshopper, Trimerotropis pallidipennis.

It can be difficult to identify grasshoppers because members of a single species vary a lot in color. The two grasshoppers in the photographs are within a few feet of each other, but notice how much darker the top one’s wing bands are (it isn’t just the lighting). Grasshoppers often blend into the background so well that you don’t see them until they jump and fly.

Pallid grasshoppers feed on desert grasses and when the grasses dry up, they move or “disperse” to areas with more food. According to this article, pallid grasshoppers have been found flying at altitudes of 3000-5000 feet for long distances. In one record in 1966 pallid grasshoppers from the western United States were found in Hawaii. That’s a long flight!

Are grasshoppers still active where you live? What colors do you see?

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