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Metamorphosis of a Bordered Plant Bug

Big red bugs crawl out of tiny blue/black bugs!
Location: Douglas, southeast Arizona
September 23, 2011 2:12 pm
Howdy, I’ve gotten lots of rolling eyes, and shouts of ”that’s impossible!” when I try to tell people about these bugs. Long story short: maybe 2 years ago, I was taking photos of this group of tiny, shiny-bodied blue/black bugs that had been crawling on my fence. I noticed they were slowing down and eventually came to a stop, in different places. Next thing I knew, this red head and body starting coming out of the body of one of the tiny bug!! Could not believe what I was seeing! The size difference, and the fact that the tiny bugs were mobile just a few minutes earlier, creeped me out. So, of course, I got off a few shots…have absolutely no idea why I didn’t take more. I know a couple came out blurry.
I’ve seen these tiny bugs this year in my garden, but they disappeared before I could collect some to see if they would pull an ”Alien” for me and my camera this time:)
I didn’t know what size the pics should be…they were sent in jpeg; let me know if that needs changing. I hope this is a really rare, but known, sight so I can know I was truly seeing what I thought I was seeing. Thanks! Love your site!
Signature: Lori – Arizona

bordered plant bug nymphs lori 300x212 Metamorphosis of a Bordered Plant Bug

Bordered Plant Bug Nymphs

Hi Lori,
What you witnessed is amazing, but not at all unusual or rare.  You witnessed insect metamorphosis.  We believe the blue-black bugs are immature Bordered Plant Bugs in the genus
Largus, a conclusion we reached upon comparing your photo to this image on BugGuide.  Often when a true bug molts, the newly emerged insect is a reddish color, but that will soon darken as the exoskeleton hardens.

bordered plant bug metamorphosis lori 300x223 Metamorphosis of a Bordered Plant Bug

Molting Bordered Plant Bug

What's That Bug? does not endorse extermination

Bed Bug, Carpet Beetle Larva or other???

Bug I have never seen before
Location: Ohio
September 24, 2011 4:06 pm
I first found this bug last night when I got some bedding out of my daughter’s closet. Only saw one, but then I saw two more this afternoon in a laundry basket in the basement. Any idea what this is?
Signature: Megan

bed bug megan 300x268 Bed Bug, Carpet Beetle Larva or other???

Bed Bug, Carpet Beetle Larva or other???

Hi Megan,
There is not enough detail in your photo for us to say with any certainty what the identity of your insect might be, but two possibilities are a Bed Bug or a Carpet Beetle Larva.  A better photograph would help.

I know for a fact that it isn’t a bed bug.  Have too much experience with those so I know exactly what those look like!  I looked up carpet beetle larva and found this picture (attached).  It looks like the bug on the left.  Now to research these things and find out more about them.  Thank you!

Water Striders from Ireland

mystery insect
Location: South of Ireland
September 23, 2011 7:16 pm
Could you please identify the insect in the attaced photo. There are many of them in a river near my home in Ireland.
Signature: David

water strider ireland david 300x186 Water Striders from Ireland

Water Striders

Hi David,
Water Striders are such common insects on ponds, lakes, streams and slow moving rivers, that we cannot understand why they are so underrepresented on our site.  Because the spread of their legs distributes their weight evenly across a greater surface area, Water Striders are able to skate across the water without breaking the surface.  Water Striders feed on small insects that fall onto the water’s surface.  One group of ocean dwelling Water Striders contains the only true pelagic insects that are found far out to sea on the open ocean.

What's That Bug? does not endorse extermination

Three Wheel Bugs Mating

Rarest looking bug I’ve seen
Location: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
September 23, 2011 12:18 am
PLEASE help me identify this crazy looking bug. I have asked a lot of people and noone has ever seen it before we would all like to know what it is.
Signature: Britt

3 wheelbugs mating britt 2 300x240 Three Wheel Bugs Mating

Trio of Wheel Bugs Mating

Hi Britt,
We aren’t sure if one or both of the male Wheel Bugswill seal the deal with this female, and we don’t believe trios are the norm for mating activity.

3 wheelbugs mating britt 300x261 Three Wheel Bugs Mating

Three Wheel Bugs Mate

Giant Mesquite Bug from Mexico

Found in Mexico, Satelite: Aug 27, 2011
Location: Mexico, Satelite
September 19, 2011 9:31 pm
Can you tell me the name of this bug and what family it belongs to. Also, does this bug have a stinger?
Signature: Rosa Maravillas

giant mesquite bug mexico rosa 300x231 Giant Mesquite Bug from Mexico

Giant Mesquite Bug

Hi Rosa,
This is a Giant Mesquite Bug or a close relative in the genus
Thasus.  Giant Mesquite Bugs are in the family Coreidae, the Leaf Footed Bugs or Big Legged Bugs and they do not have stingers.  We frequently get requests to identify the brightly colored nymphs of the Giant Mesquite Bug, and you can see photos of the entire life cycle on Colin L. Miller’s wildlife website.

Firebugs in Sweden

Unidentified bug living in rotten wood
Location: Stockholm, Sweden
September 19, 2011 8:03 am
Dear sir/madam,
I’m renovating my house here in Sweden and found this insect living all over the garden in rotten timber. It is red and black and the adult has two distinct black spots. It’s clearly no ladybug! So what is it? Even the local exterminator didn’t have a clue.
Kind regards,
Matt
Signature: Matt

firebugs sweden matt 269x300 Firebugs in Sweden

Firebugs

Hi Matt,
These are Firebugs,
Pyrrhocoris apterus, and they are a benign species.  We were not previously aware that they ranged as far north as Sweden.  Firebugs can form large aggregations containing both adults and nymphs.  For additional information, you can see this Guernsey website or the British Bugs website which indicates:  “This common European bug is on the northernmost edge of its range in Britain and is the sole member of its family to occur here.”  Global Twitter indicates this is not the first sighting from Sweden.   

Thanks for the answer, so it’s rare then? Cool. I’m just glad it’s not after my foundations and only eating the lime seeds (we have a huge 100 year old lime in the garden). Should I let the local university know about it? Do you know which one in Stockholm would be most receptive to this?
Perhaps I could get a grant to save my lime tree from demolishing my foundations through it’s root system (and therefore pay for my house to be under pinned hehe, )… Joking, of course…
Thanks again,
Matt

Hi Matt,
They are not rare.  In our previous response, we indicated that they are a “common European bug” but we do not know how frequently they are encountered in Sweden.  If you desire more local information, we would suggest contacting the nearest university with an entomology department.

Lace Bugs reported to bite gardener

Bugs in our bushes
Location: Chattanooga, TN
September 17, 2011 12:26 pm
My wife found these bugs when she was trimming our bushes. They bit her and were very painful. I have never seen these insects before. To me, they look like tiny formula 1 racecars. They were very small.
Signature: RalphyZ

lace bug ralphy 300x232 Lace Bugs reported to bite gardener

Lace Bug

Dear RalphyZ,
You have Lace Bugs in the family Tingidae.  There are many similar looking species, but your individual looks close to the Hawthorn Lace Bug,
Corythucha cydoniae pictured on bugGuide.  The information page for the family on BugGuidesays nothing about them biting, but it does indicate they “Feed mainly on leaves of trees and shrubs, causing yellow spotting and sometimes browning and death of the leaves.”  Many plant feeding Hemipterans are capable of biting humans since they have mouths designed for piercing and sucking, however, most of these True Bugs and other Hemipterans do not feed off of humans.

lace bugs ralphy 300x186 Lace Bugs reported to bite gardener

Lace Bugs

 

Blood Sucking Conenose Bugs and the transmission of Chagas Disease

Assassin bug bite
September 14, 2011 7:21 pm
I looked up assassin bugs on your site and the info was helpful.  I just wonder why you do not warn people who get bitten that they require medical testing to make sure they did not get Chaga’s disease. It is a disease that can be fatal if not treated quickly. It is rare in the US only because few people get bitten but about 50% of the bugs carry the disease.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chagas_disease

http://insectsinthecity.blogspot.com/2009/03/study-on-risks-of-chagas-disease-in.html

Signature: Ralph Unger

Ralph,
Check your facts.  Blood Sucking Conenose Bugs are in the genus
Tritoma, the genus that carries the pathogens that cause Chagas Disease, and it is only one genus in a large and diverse family of insectsNot even half of the bugs in the genus, much less half of the bugs in the family, carry the pathogen that causes Chagas Disease.   The University of Texas at Arlington calls the insect bite the Kiss of Death, an allusion to the common name for these Triatomine Bugs.  The members of the genus Triatoma,  are commonly called Kissing Bugs in English and by a variety of colorful names in Spanish, and they can spread Chagas Disease.  The name Kissing Bug refers to their habit of biting people on or near the lips.   Though there are many Assassin Bugs that will bite humans if  they are carelessly handled or provoked, they are not interested in sucking blood, and they do not spread Chagas Disease.
Here are just a few of our previous postings that mention Chagas Disease:
http://www.whatsthatbug.com/2011/08/13/immature-kissing-bug/
http://www.whatsthatbug.com/2011/04/16/immature-blood-sucking-conenose/
http://www.whatsthatbug.com/2011/02/02/assassin-bug-possibly-bloodsucking-conenose/
http://www.whatsthatbug.com/2011/02/01/assassin-bug-from-guyana/
http://www.whatsthatbug.com/2010/12/15/eastern-bloodsucking-conenose-bug/
http://www.whatsthatbug.com/2010/04/05/immature-bloodsucking-conenose-bug/
http://www.whatsthatbug.com/2009/07/29/eastern-blood-sucking-conenose-bug-3/

conenose bug michael 300x157 Blood Sucking Conenose Bugs and the transmission of Chagas Disease

Blood Sucking Conenose Bug from our archive


Thank you for the reply. If you do get bitten, There is a good chance that you can get the disease in Texas and the SW of the US.  This is a new problem that has recently surfaced because of the immigration from the south into the US.
From “Infection of Kissing Bugs with Trypanosoma cruzi, Tucson, Arizona,USA
“To our knowledge, almost no information has been collected during the last half-century on the incidence of infection by T. cruzi in triatomine bugs from Arizona (but see below). We found that 41.5% of the 164 collected bugs, most of which were T. rubida, were infected with T. cruzi, and that 63% of houses or sites where insects were collected had at least 1 specimen infected(in Arizona).  … For instance, 51% of triatomines (mostly T. gerstaeckeri) collected from several areas in Texas were infected (n = 241), with many insects found near human dwellings. ..Many cases of Chagas disease in the United States, however, may be overlooked because the early phase of the infection is often asymptomatic (9,16), and health professionals are largely unaware of this disease. In Arizona, humans may be at a greater risk for vectorial transmission of the disease than previously thought because human populations are rapidly expanding into habitats where infected triatomines (20–22) and wild mammalian reservoirs such as packrats, mice, armadillos, raccoons, and opossums (23–27) are plentiful. Chagas disease is actively transmitted in domestic cycles involving dogs in southern Texas (20,28), where >50% of triatomines collected inside or near the homes of persons were found to be infected with T. cruzi (19,20). Studies conducted many decades ago found that triatomines in California, Arizona, and New Mexico were also infected with T. cruzi (22–25,29).

Thanks for the followup Ralph.  It would also seem possible that a person might acquire Chagas Disease after being bitten in Central America.  Once infected, subsequent bites by Kissing Bugs not carrying the pathogen will infect the insects who might then pass the pathogen on to additional humans it bites. 


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