Monthly Archives August 2010

European Mantis

White California Mantis?
Location:  San Fernando Valley, CA
August 18, 2010 1:17 pm
I find this bug about once a year here in Chatsworth, CA. Always in parking lots near where people are; grocery store parking lots near the shopping carts is common. Today, in a parking lot by the benches where people sit waiting for their car to be washed.
Sean in CA

european mantis sean 300x157 European Mantis

European Mantis

Hi Sean,
Your photograph clearly shows a dark spot on the underarm of this Mantis which inclines us to identify it as a European Mantis,
Mantis religiosa, based on this BugGuide identification tip:  “According to the Key to Florida Mantids: ‘Front coxa with a large black-ringed spot near base, beneath; green color of tegmen not sharply confined to costal area.’  The noted coxa black spots may, or may not, have a white center or bullseye. In some instances these spots are all dark.“  The spot is visible in this BugGuide image.

What's That Bug? does not endorse extermination

Toe-Biter

Help…WHAT is this bug?
Location:  Canton, Michigan
August 19, 2010 7:43 am
Found crawling in our parking lot, nearby woods – overall size was just over 2”.
Totally freaked out several of us.
’Ewwie

toebiter michigan 300x201 Toe Biter

Toe-Biter

Dear Ewwie,
This Giant Water Bug is also called a Toe-Biter.

African Bollworm imported to UK

Sugar Snap Hitchhiker
Location:  Maidenhead, UK
August 18, 2010 7:19 am
Greetings from the rainy UK, where we have discovered a hitchhiker from sunnier climes, smuggled in by a large supermarket chain inside a Sugar Snap pea pod. Now a few days old and finishing his third set of peas, Claudio is doing well. Any ideas whether he will become more interesting when he pupates?
Wil Mohr

african bollworm uk wil 300x140 African Bollworm imported to UK

African Bollworm

Update:  Sugar Snap Hitchkiker
August 19, 2010
Hi Bugman, after further investigation, have found it appears to be the dull
and unspectacular African Bollworm – Helicoverpa armigera (Synonym:
Heliothis armigera)
http://www.infonet-biovision.org/default/ct/76/pests
best regards – wil

Hi Wil,
Thank you so much for taking the time to write back after you self-identified your African Bollworm,
Helicoverpa armigera, also known as the Old World Bollworm.  The Center for Invasive Species and Ecosystem Health website provides this information:  “Old world bollworm is native to Europe and Asia. It is not known to be established in North America. Possible routes for introduction include imported cuttings, fruits, vegetables, and flowers, as well as hitchhiking on aircraft. This species is a general feeder and is highly resistant to pesticides. Hosts include a wide variety of fruits, vegetables, weeds, ornamental plants, and flowers. A partial list includes pine, larch, crab apple, artichoke, barley, carrot, coffee, mango, alfalfa, cotton, tobacco, tomatoes, okra, onion, peppers, leek, clover, potatoes, wheat, maize, flax, soybean, sorghum, rice, millet, lucerne, strawberry, chickpeas, crucifers, legumes, cucurbits, Prunus spp., citrus, Amaranth spp., and sow thistle. In summer, a life cycle can be completed in 5 to 7 weeks. Following generations feed on other plantings of the same crop or on other hosts. One female moth may lay up to 1,500 eggs. The dome-like eggs have a ribbed surface and are pearly white when laid, but change to brown as they develop. The young caterpillars are predominantly green but the colors vary through development. When mature, larvae may be up to 2 inches long and usually have striped patterns over a base color that ranges from light green to brown to black. Distinct hairs are visible when held up to the light. Larval development takes 2 to 3 weeks before pupation occurs in the soil. The reddish-brown pupa stays in the soil for 10 to 14 days when not overwintering. Adults have light fawn forewings with a kidney-shaped spot in the middle. Hindwings are grey to grey-brown. Both wings have a broad dark band on the outer third of the wing but the band on the hind wing has a pale patch in the middle of the dark band. When resting, the wings are held roof-like over the body. In the UK, it is known as the Scarce Bordered Straw and the UK Moths website has this information:  “An immigrant species to Britain, mainly around the southern coasts, and occurring most often in the autumn months.
It is also found as a larva from time to time on tomato plants, geraniums and other plants brought in from the Mediterranean region, where it can be a pest.

What's That Bug? does not endorse extermination

Leaf Footed Bug Hatchlings

Mass of bright orange bugs protecting something?
Location:  Monterrey, Nuevo Leon, Mexico
August 18, 2010 1:41 pm
While having a smoke in my back yard i came across a brightly colored mass upon the white wall of my house. i realized it was a group of insects (six legs?) apparently protecting something. i have never seen anything like it before, they occasionally moved to rearrange their ”defensive”? structure other than that they just stay put. I live on a mountain and have tarantulas, black widows and scorpions. But the shape of these critters is quite strange i looked them up in all the bugs books i had and didn’t find anything like them wondering if you could help out, THanks a LOT!!!
David Chapa

leaf foot hatchlings  300x222 Leaf Footed Bug Hatchlings

Leaf Footed Bug Hatchlings

Dear David,
We found a match for these Leaf Footed Bug hatchlings on BugGuide, but the genus and species is not identified.  There is speculation they may be in the genus
Leptoglossus.

leaffoot hatchlings spyglass david 300x206 Leaf Footed Bug Hatchlings

Leaf Footed Bug Hatchlings

Hello,
I think this the one…
Leptoglossus phyllopus
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leptoglossus_phyllopus

Taro Hornworm from China

Chinese Spotted Caterpillar with one spine
Location:  Wuhan, (Hubei)China
August 18, 2010 11:07 pm
Found this walking back to my apt in Wuhan China! I almost stepped on him as he was crossing the street! Drawing the question why does the caterpillar cross the road?! I can’t seem to find any info that isn’t in Chinese! Any help would be appreciated in identifying the big guy =)!!
Erin Thompson

theretra oldenlandiae japan erin 300x199 Taro Hornworm from China

Taro Hornworm

Hi Erin,
We got lucky because when we quickly read your letter, we thought the Sphinx Moth Caterpillar was photographed in Japan, so we searched the subfamily Macroglossinae on a Japanese Sphingidae website because this caterpillar reminded us of some of the
Eumorpha caterpillars in North America.  After some searching, we believe this is a Taro Hornworm, Theretra oldenlandiae, セスジスズメ, or Yushuang tian-er, a highly variable caterpillar that is pictured on the Japanese Sphingidae website in many of its color morphs.  You may also find it on the Sphingidae of the Western Palaearctic website which indicates its range as China, Taiwan, South Korea, Japan and Russia and has this highly detailed description of the stages of the caterpillar:

LARVA: Full-fed 60–80mm, width 11mm, horn 8mm. According to Bell & Scott (1937), in the first instar pale yellowish-green, with a short straight black horn. In the second instar, head yellowish-green, body dark green; eye-spots on segments 5 to 11 black above, yellow below; horn short, black with base yellow. By the third instar, head and body slate-colour. There is a dorso-lateral line of yellow spots on 3 and 4 on a background of deep black. Eye-spots with a round yellow pupil edged broadly with black, decreasing in size backwards. Horn black, a yellow spot on each side of its base. In the fourth instar, head slate-colour, body black. There is a slaty-black saddle-shaped shield on segment 2, with a pale yellow dorso-lateral spot on the front edge; spots on 3 and 4 as in Third instar; eye-spot on 5 and 6 with a round black spot in the middle of the yellow, on 7 to 11 of a darker shade of yellow. Horn long, thin, straight, black with a white tip and a yellow ring near the base.
In the fifth and final instar, head small, dull and smooth. Body dull and smooth, tapering fist gently then more sharply forwards from 8 and gently backwards from 8; segments 4 and 5 not much swollen. Horn straight, of medium length, thin, nearly cylindrical, tip truncate with a minute, low tubercle at each lateral angle; surface shiny, covered with very minute tubercles (Bell & Scott, 1937).
Head black; labrum canary-yellow; ligula black; basal segment of antenna canary-yellow, other segments whitish; mandible black. Body velvety-blackish on segments 2 to 4, rest of body plumbeous with short black stripes around the secondary rings. There is a dorso-lateral line of spots on 2 to 4, some yellow, some orange, continuing as a stripe formed of small grey dots, interrupted by the eye-spots, to base of horn. A broad, soiled, pale yellow subspiracular stripe is also present from 2 to 12, dotted with small black rings on 6 to 12. Eye-spots on 5 and 6 with a round black pupil in which lie two narrow, irregularly concentric rings of electric blue; this pupil edged narrowly above, more broadly elsewhere with orange, at the top and bottom of which is a crescent of electric blue; the whole edged broadly with velvety-black. On 7 to 11 the eye-spots are rather larger, pupil deep purple above shading to reddish-brown below, edged above and below with a crescent of electric blue, the whole edged broadly with velvety-black; a broad yellow band, crossed by black lines, lying along the front margin of segments 5 to 11, and passing over the dorsum from the dorso-lateral stripe. Horn black with the tip narrowly yellow or white; legs red; protege and claspers black. Spiracles elongate-oval, white with a broad fuscous band across the middle, and a narrow black rim (Bell & Scott, 1937).
The thin horn is movable in a vertical plane in all instars.  The larvae are mainly diurnal and prefer younger leaves, seedpods and flowerheads, often stripping growing shoots, particularly in the final instar. Several of the gaudy larvae can often be found on one small plant.

Hi,
WOW you guys identified that very quickly! I was very surprised to see a response back when I rechecked my email! Thank you so much! I knew it had to be a moth!!
Thank you so much again for all the information; I will definitely be giving a donation for such a wonderful site!
Thanks
Erin

Mating Buckeyes: Who’s On Top???

Buckeye Love
Location:  Central Maryland
August 18, 2010 11:23 pm
These buckeyes are everywhere on my aunt’s Maryland farm. I caught a pair mating. Any idea which gets to perch on the leaf and which is stuck dangling upside down?
Sara

mating buckeyes sara 300x283 Mating Buckeyes:  Whos On Top???

Mating Buckeyes

Hi Sara,
Your photo is so crisp and beautiful and it took absolutely no post-production level or curve control.  Your characteristic curve is perfectly fine.  The details are rendered nicely in the highlights, midtones and shadows.  We do not know the answer to your question, so we played the photography professor’s card.  We think our readership may have fun researching this one for us.

Scorpion

Scorpion in Glendale
Location:  Verdugo Woodlands, Glendale, CA
August 18, 2010 2:00 am
I found this on my daughter’s dress right before she was going to wear it in the morning (Thank God I found it!). We were staying at my parents’ house in the Verdugo Woodlands of Glendale. What type of scorpion is it? Is it harmful to kids 3 and younger? I have a 2 year old and a 7 month old. Very nervous to go back to their home and stay the night if they don’t get a pest controller to take care of the critters…if we found one in the house, would there be more? (This is the first time they have encountered scorpions after living there for 12 years).
Eva Cherrie

stripetailed scorpion eva 300x152 Scorpion

Stripe-Tailed Scorpion

Hi Eva,
First off, we are giving you a nonprofessional opinion based on a blurry photo.  Our opinion is in no way meant to imply that a sting from what we believe to be a Stripe-Tailed Scorpion according to Charles Hogue in Insects of the Los Angeles Basin, or according to BugGuide, the California Common Scorpion,
Paruroctonus silvestrii, would be perfectly harmless, but we also do not want to make you unnecessarily paranoid. According to Hogue, “The species stings readily but without doing lasting harm.”  Should any of your children get stung by a Scorpion, you should probably seek professional help though there is probably no cause for great concern.

Mating Annual Cicadas

Dogday Cicada Love
Location:  Trenton, NJ
August 17, 2010 9:21 pm
I was walking into work when behind me I heard the characteristic chatter of a cicada. I turned around to make sure I hadn’t stepped on him and saw this instead. I picked them up off the ground before I took the picture, so they could continue in peace without being squished.
Jen v

cicadas mating jen 300x282 Mating Annual Cicadas

Mating Annual Cicadas

Hi Jen,
Your photo of mating Annual Cicadas in the genus
Tibicen is a wonderful addition to our website.


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