Isn’t it striking how the bronze-colored blow fly matches the nasturtium?
Category: Bug of the Week (Page 99 of 219)
Most of us recognize the life stages of butterflies, but what about beetles?
For example, would you know this larva would turn into a beetle?
Although the head capsule may look a bit like a caterpillar, this is a beetle larva commonly called a white grub. It lives in the soil and will turn into a type of scarab beetles called a “June beetle.”
Here’s an odd one. I found this in a mesquite seed pod. It is about the size of a small grain of rice.
Turning it over, it has two dark spots, which are the developing eyes. This is the pupal stage of a seed beetle or bruchid.
The seed beetles lay their eggs on seeds of legumes like mesquites, within the seed pod. Can you see the white eggs that look like sesame seeds attached to the larger brown mesquite seeds?
The larvae, which look like small versions of the white grub above, feed inside the seeds and then cut their way out to pupate. You can see the holes in the seeds and the round caps on the left of the photograph where the larvae cut their way out.
Soon the seed beetle pupa will become an adult like this one and go look for a place to lay its eggs.
Have you ever found beetle immatures before? Where did you find them?
Isn’t it amazing how some insects show up every year at the same time?
Each spring we have the tiny yellow thrips in our flowers,
and each year the equally tiny black-and-white minute pirate bugs (Orius tristicolor) arrive to feed on them.
If you look closely, you can see their beaks stuck into the thrips like tiny pirate swords.
This bug caught two thrips in the short time I was watching it and was hunting a third.
Go, minute pirate bug, go!
Have you ever seen a minute pirate bug? When are they active where you live?





