PA- white bug/scorpion?
Location: Eastern Pennsylvania, Lehigh County
July 25, 2011 2:00 am
This bug apparently bit my friends toddler on her toe. Hospital had no idea what it is. She took the bug yo Erlich(sp) exterminator who told her it’s in the kissing bug family. I think they were just trying to lie to her and make a sale to exterminate on her dime. It looks nothing like a kissing bug. White color, appears to only have 4 legs, a stinger/tail, and red antennae with black line. See pic
Signature: J.G.

Wheel Bug Nymph
Dear J.G.
This is an immature Wheel Bug, one of the Assassin Bugs in the family Reduviidae. Wheel Bugs will bite if carelessly handled, and the bite is reported to be painful, but it is not dangerous. The exterminator was actually correct that Kissing Bugs are in the family Reduviidae, but while Kissing Bugs spread pathogens and are frequently found indoors, Wheel Bugs are an outdoor species, so enlisting an exterminator would probably be throwing away money.
2
Large moth
Location: Hazyview, Mpumalanga, South Africa
July 25, 2011 10:21 am
Found this moth sitting next to the pool in Hazyview (outside Kruger National Park) in South Africa. Hope you guys can help identifying it.
Kind regards, Jan
Signature: Jan

Pseudobunaea irius
Hi Jan,
We believe we have identified your Giant Silkmoth at Pseudobunaea irius, but we are going to check with Bill Oehlke for verification. Bill may request the use of your photo on his own website as well. Here is a photo from Kirby Wolfe’s website that shows the underwings that are not visible in your image. Your individual is a male, so the points at the apex of the forewings are more hooked. We posted a similar photo in 2008.
Bill Oehlke confirms identification
Daniel,
Yes,
It is Pseudobunaea irius
Bill Oehlke
1
large moth
Location: Martha’sVineyard, MA
July 25, 2011 7:22 am
Hi,
Never saw this big moth around before.
Curious what it might be.
Thanks.
Signature: paperboy

Male Imperial Moth
Dear paperboy,
This stunning creature is a male Imperial Moth. The female has more yellow wings than the male.
Tasmanian Tiger Moth?
Location: Southport, Tasmania
July 24, 2011 9:34 pm
We found this beautiful fella down in Southport, Tasmania…about as far south as you can get. I really dont have much idea what it could be, but I was looking for pictures of Tigermoth aeroplanes recently and saw they look very much like North American Tiger Moths, complete with the vivid orange under the main wings…but nothing like any Tiger Moths I could find from Australia.
I have found some of the most beautiful moths in this location and have more to share! but would really like to clear up this mystery first.
Thanks
Signature: Dave

Tiger Moth
Hi Dave,
We are posting your Tiger Moth image prior to getting an identification. Perhaps one of our readers will be able to provide a comment. We are also contacting Julian Donahue, an expert in Tiger Moths, to see if he is able to provide any information.
Julian Donahue provides a species identification
Although very similar in appearance to some species of Hyphantria from Mexico, this Australian moth appears to be Spilosoma glatignyi. Like many arctiids, the extent of the black markings is highly variable; this is a relatively dark individual.
Julian
Fantastic! Thanks so much, I cant wait to go back there with an even keener eye and new knowledge to see what I can find!
Dave Scully
Why not consider a book?

The Curious World of Bugs
It has been nine months since Daniel’s book, The Curious World of Bugs was released by Penguin/Perigee, and sadly, it never hit #1 on any best sellers lists despite the numerous 5 star reviews on Amazon (honestly, none of our friends wrote them). If you know someone who is interested in things that crawl, consider this as a gift idea and get a copy for your own bookshelf as well. If you have read the book, consider posting a review on Amazon. We can’t understand why Martha has still not booked an appearance.
In The Sierra Foothills, A Bug.
Location: North Mariposa County, California
July 24, 2011 10:06 pm
I found two of these bugs in the past two days. One was floating in my teapot (which was full of water). The larger one’s body was about 4 inches long. They were both FULL of eggs. The eggs were the size of sesame seeds but looked like grains of rice. You can see them to the side of the squished bug. I have never seen anything like this before.
Signature: Squicked,

Ponderous Borer: Why was it squished???
Dear Squicked (does that rhyme with wicked?),
We run a free website and we reserve the right to exert our First Amendment right to free speech and voice our opinions when we feel justified. Anyone who has spent more than five minutes on our website knows that we do not give extermination advice and that we promote tolerance with regards to the lower beasts. We have a portion of our website that is devoted to Unnecessary Carnage, and we frequently come under attack because we believe that people do not need to kill things that they perceive might harm their children. We have been called bleeding-heart hippies because we feel that sparing the lives of insects, including wasps that might sting if provoked, does not necessarily endanger the lives of children. Everything that might sting, or might bite, or might scratch, or might annoy cannot be eliminated from our planet without drastically altering the world as we know it because there really wouldn’t be much left, including humans. Threats abound, and children should be taught while they are young that certain things might hurt them, and those things should be treated with respect. Now that we have made our position perfectly clear, we can address your question.
This is some species of Root Borer in the subfamily Prioninae, and we believe it is a Ponderous Borer, Trichocnemis spiculatus, which you may read about on BugGuide. We cannot fathom what provoked this senseless slaughter. All we have to base this feeling upon is the information you provided, and we suppose this Ponderous Borer might have been accidentally stepped on, but we somehow believe that there was intent behind the squishing. There was no mention of children being endangered, and we are left with the opinion that this is probably one of the most egregious cases of Unnecessary Carnage we have ever encountered. What we find especially troubling is the location you provided, the Sierra Foothills in Mendocino County. We wonder if this was a state park. State parks have rules and regulations about the preservation of natural resources, and that includes the lowly bugs. Generally people who spend time camping have an appreciation of the natural world. We sincerely hope we are wrong in our assumptions and that there is a justified reason behind this sad occurrence, but since your email indicates that two individuals “were both FULL of eggs” we can only surmise that the unfortunate creature that fell into your teapot met a similar end.
Readers, please provide comments. Are we being too sensitive and too judgmental?
12
Green Bug
Location: FL
July 24, 2011 3:49 pm
I moved to FL not too long ago and saw this green bug. Nobody I’ve talked to knows what it is. Do you?
Signature: Patti

Conehead
Hi Patti,
This Katydid is commonly called a Conehead. We believe it is an immature nymph as it does not have wings. We will contact Katydid expert Piotr Naskrecki to see if he can provide a species identification.
Piotr Naskrecki provides an ID
Hi Daniel,
This is a male of Belocephalus, possibly B. davisi, but impossible to say for sure without examining its genitalia and the stridulatory apparatus (there are 13 very similar species in the genus).
Cheers,
Piotr
UPDATE ON CATERPILLARS
Location: Guam
July 24, 2011 9:54 pm
Update from previous question to ID a caterpillar
They’re moths, not sure what kind?!
Signature: Holly

Tiger Moth: Argina astrea
Hi Holly,
Thanks for the update, but we cannot find your original identification request. We believe we have correctly identified your moth as Argina astrea on the Moths of Borneo website. We are very interested in posting the photos of the caterpillars if you are able to resend them by attaching the images to this response. We also want to commend you on successfully raising a caterpillar to maturity and taking photographs of the metamorphosis process. The James Cook University website indicates that the common name, taken from the food plant, is the Crotalaria Pod Borer.

Tiger Moth Pupa: Argina astrea
Thank you! Wonderful information, I really appreciate it, I will be making a donation for your time! I have attached the photos of the plant we found them on as well as the caterpillars. Thank you again.
Thanks,
Holly Hutson

Crotalaria Pod Borer
Hi Again Holly,
We are most excited to be receiving your caterpillar photos, and you are most kind to make a donation even though we missed your first request.

Crotalaria Pod Borer
The plant you submitted is definitely a Crotalaria based on the Virginia Tech Weed Identification Guide website.

Crotalaria