Monthly Archives June 2010

Plume Moth

Moth about 2 1/2 inch wide, and 1 1/2 long
June 14, 2010
I just found your site through a link. And find it very interesting. I will have other bugs, I will post for ID in the future. I found this off white moth on my window casing. Can you help me find it’s name?
Bern
NB. Canada

plume moth bern 300x237 Plume Moth

Plume Moth

Hi Bern,
This is a Plume Moth in the family Pterophoridae.  Most people who write to us wanting the “T Bug” identified don’t even realize it is a moth.

What's That Bug? does not endorse extermination

Blister Beetle

Is this a Blister Beetle?
June 14, 2010
This is a photo i took this weekend of just a couple of the beetles in out lupine patch, I was informed that they might be Blister Beetles. There were hundreds of them all over the flowers.
A Page-N-Thyme Farm Anson, Maine
Central Maine

blister beetles maine 274x300 Blister Beetle

Blister Beetles

Dear Page-N-Thyme Farmers,
You are correct.  These are Blister Beetles.  Alas, we cannot confirm their identification on BugGuide because the page is currently unavailable, but we matched it to a photo we posted recently from New Hampshire.  It appears it is Lytta sayi, a species with no common name.

Unknown Aquatic Creature is Sea Cucumber

Under water worm
June 14, 2010
Found in New Caledonia in river flooded with sea water during high tide, moving slow, length more than 2 meter, looks like a rusty chain in the water, tentacles like a anemone
under water worm
New Caledonia

aquatic worm new caledonia 300x161 Unknown Aquatic Creature is Sea Cucumber

Unknown Aquatic Worm

Though we are uncertain how to classify this creature, we will start with Worms and hope one of our readers is able to provide additional information.

aquatic worm head new caledonia 300x250 Unknown Aquatic Creature is Sea Cucumber

Unknown Aquatic Worm

Identified as Sea Cucumber
Identifying New Caledonian Sea Creature
June 15, 2010
In response to request for help identifying a sea creature posted on Monday, I believe this is a “sea cucumber” (a type of echinoderm) with the scientific name Synapta maculata. Doing a search of that name will bring up several sites where one can find more information about it.
Dee Warnock

Thanks Dee.  Now we can create an Echinoderm category.

What's That Bug? does not endorse extermination

Gone Fishing!!! … and Home again

June 14, 2010
Alas faithful readers, we are taking a brief holiday to visit relatives in Ohio.  We will not be answering any letters for the next week, however there will be daily postings that we postdated prior to our departure.  We will be gone from 15 June through 23 June.  Feel free to browse our extensive archives because chances are quite good the bug you want identified is already posted on our site.

June 23, 2010
We returned to Los Angeles just before midnight, and we haven’t even begun to look at all of the emails that arrived in our absence.  We are certain that we will only be able to respond to a tiny fraction of what we received.  We did, however, want to take a few minutes to provide an update on some Ohio sightings that we experienced that brought back some fond, and one not so fond, memories.
We were thrilled to have been lucky enough to witness the emergence of Lightning Bugs or Fireflies for the first time in decades.  Our yearly June trip to Ohio is usually a bit earlier, but this year it seems that Ohio sightings are also running a few weeks early.  We saw our first Lightning Bug the day of our arrival on June 15 at dusk, and by 9:30 PM, there were hundreds of blinking insects in the back yard.  Greater Fritillaries also seemed to be most numerous this year.  In Mom’s garden, they were attracted to blooming privet, queen of the prarie, and a white clematis.  In the fields along the Ohio/Pennsylvania border, they were nectaring from milkweed and enjoying the hot and humid sunny conditions.  On one wooded country road, we saw a dead opossum carcass in the road.  As we approached in the car, a butterfly took flight.  We patiently waited and were treated to a gorgeous Question Mark landing right next to the car.  There were many Question Marks flying about and sunning on the roads, their appearance coming shortly after a morning thunderstorm.
Finally, a few days before leaving Ohio, the first Japanese Beetles of the year began to appear on the clematis.  They increased in number each day, and they had a particular fondness for the queen of the prairie, primrose and roses as well as the clematis.  We put water in a bucket and added a few squirts of motor oil and a squirt of liquid dish detergent and hand picked the beetles.  The oily and soapy water quickly killed them when they were dropped into the bucket.  Mom says in a few weeks, many of the plants in her yard will look like lace doilies because of the ravenous invasive exotic Japanese Beetles.
We would love to get photos of Fireflies, Fritillaries, Question Marks and Japanese Beetles from our readers.

San Francisco Lacewing

Sluggish insect near pond
June 13, 2010
Saw this guy on a blade of grass, near a small pond, on 4/11/2009. 1/2 inch or more, I think. Didn’t move at all. Came back later and it was gone.
Is this a lacewing?
Dave
Mountains between San Jose and Santa Cruz CA

san francisco lacewing dave 300x179 San Francisco Lacewing

San Francisco Lacewing

Dear Dave,
First we want to congratulate you on a wonderful photograph, and we want to acknowledge your skill with the suspected identity of this creature.  It is a Lacewing, but a species that we were totally unfamiliar with.  We quickly identified the San Francisco Lacewing, Nothochrysa californica, by matching your superior photo to the few images posted to BugGuide for this species.

Unknown Hover Fly

Bug ID Please
June 13, 2010
I work at the Conservancy on Bald Head Island (a Barrier Island off the coast of NC) and I am an avid photographer. I am contemplating creating a field guide for the island so i’d love positive id’s on some of these bugs. I took these pictures this summer. I feel bad sending so many seperate questions so this one has three different bugs including a spider and some sort of stick bug.
Andrew Niccum
Bald Head Island, NC

syrphid andrew 300x167 Unknown Hover Fly

Hover Fly

Dear Andrew,
Your multiple letters with multiple identification requests each have arrived on the cusp of our preparations to leave the offices for a week to visit with family in Ohio.  Alas, we are unable to comply with your numerous requests at this time.  We are posting your photo of a Hover Fly in the family Syrphidae, though we haven’t the time right now for researching a conclusive identification.  Perhaps one of our readers will be able to supply an answer.  Since we will be away, we will not be answering any emails, but you are free to peruse our archives for your identification requests.  You can also browse the Syrphidae images on BugGuide to try to identify this species.  This angle of view may make identification difficult.  A dorsal view is generally preferred, though some insects are more easily identified with a lateral view.  The spider image attached to this email is a Nursery Web Spider, Pisaurina mira.

Dobsonfly

A Dobsonfly
June 14, 2010
Hello, We adopted this beautiful bug over the weekend camping trip. It looked like he was just coming out of a cocoon or ground. his wings were still moist and he could not fly yet. My daughter named him Larry the Lacewing. I checked your site today only to discover he was not a lacewing but a Dobsonfly. This one has a yellow head and mandibles. We found another the next day with brown head and mandibles. Feel free to use the images to show scale. They’re huge!
• How you want your letter signed    camping along the Delaware
Barryville, NY

dobsonfly delaware 300x211 Dobsonfly

Dobsonfly

Your photos are awesome.

dobsonfly delaware 2 300x284 Dobsonfly

Dobsonfly

Comment:  For the Love of Dobsonflies
June 14, 2010
Dobson Flies!!!
I am SO excited to see all the dobson fly images being posted recently! About 5 years ago while I lived in Ohio, I came across a male dobsonfly which, not knowing what it was at the time, sparked my interest in the bug world! I have not seen one in person since my sighting 5 years ago, and look forward to the day I come across this magnificent creature again! Since there seem to be SO MANY sightings this year, maybe this is a good sign that I will get my chance! I live in Cleveland Mississippi now, about 2 hours south of Memphis, TN. Do you think I will be able to find one around these parts? Thank you for all the wonderful images, and the great work you do on this site!
Cassie Shaw

Hi Cassie,
Thanks for your enthusiastic letter.  Various species of Dobsonflies are found around the world.  According to BugGuide, sightings in Mississippi occur …  .  Hold that thought since BugGuide is not currently available online.

Wheel Bug Nymph

Assassin Bug Nymph ?
June 14, 2010
Assassin Bug Nymph ?
Or a space alien sent suck out the brains of Washington politicians. (If so, the bug is much larger than necessary.)
John W
Cape Charles, Virginia (eastern shore)

wheel bug nymph john 285x300 Wheel Bug Nymph

Immature Wheel Bug

Dear John,
Your awesome Assassin Bug nymph is a Wheel Bug, North America’s largest Assassin Bug.  Your sarcasm is refreshing.


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