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Bug of Week: Cicada Nymph

Here’s a bug you don’t see much this time of year.

My son dug up this pea-sized grub when trying to fix an irrigation leak.

When it is upside down you can see the beak it uses to feed on tree roots. It is so tiny, that is a bit of acacia flower next to it.

In this view you can see the claws on the front legs that it uses to dig through the soil.

Perhaps next summer it will crawl from the earth, attach to the side of a tree, emerge as an adult, and leave its exoskeleton behind like this one did.

For more information on cicadas:

Another sequence of cicada nymphs

Adult cicada

Cicada wasp with adult cicada photograph from this species

Seed of the Week: Peppers

Perhaps if I had used this photograph, you might have been able to guess the mystery seeds from last week.

The seeds were from a chili pepper plant, Capsicum annuum. Varieties of this pepper include the bell, the jalapeno and the poblano pepper.

The plant originated in the New World, although now it popular almost everywhere.

The flowers are white. Peppers are self-pollinating plants.

The fruit, in this case a jalapeno, may contain capsaicin and some related compounds that burn the mouth when consumed.

Because they are self-pollinated, you can grow peppers from seeds you gather from the store or save from plants you grow yourself.

Peppers are warm season plants. Here in Arizona that means planting in the spring after the danger of frost has past.

What is your favorite kind of pepper plant?

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