They cut millimetres of your hair while you're asleep and then skedaddle.
macklin celebrini has autism

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TVSTRANGERTHINGS
occasionally subtle
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

blake kathryn

Origami Around
Keni

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Monterey Bay Aquarium

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

Discoholic 🪩
NASA

roma★

titsay

@theartofmadeline
almost home
hello vonnie

if i look back, i am lost

Kaledo Art

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@attacus-atlas-moth
They cut millimetres of your hair while you're asleep and then skedaddle.
Sorry everybuggy pride month is over this next bug is straight. his name is harold
IM DISABLED HOW COULD I FORGET THAT
anygays harold has a fragile exoskeleton (bug osteoporosis)
Hello! My mom is newly obsessed with fairy shrimp; any cool facts about them?
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TODAY'S FACT IS
Did you know that the Holman Fairy Shrimp (Eubranchipus holmanii) is a found in clean, freshwater vernal pools in eastern Canada and the US? While it was officially described in 1879, records of it were sparse and inconclusive. A lifespan of 70 days doesn't help with this. The eggs of this species are drought resistant and laid in the substrate of the shallow pool and will hatch the next season it's sustainable.
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photo by Evan Feusi
posting this on twitter will get you put into witness protection
The magic of childhood is that you were constantly encountering new things. The best way to feel that way again is to fill your life with new experiences.
The magic of childhood is that you were constantly encountering new things. The best way to feel that way again is to fill your life with new experiences.
Learn to identify bugs 🫵
BIG LOBSTER NEWS apparently an orange lobster at the university of New England had babies and half of them are orange and half are normal
So the answer is yes. Weirdly colored lobsters do have weirdly colored babies.
Today's wasp of the day is Brachymeria minuta!
Credits: photo 1, photo 2
While there are many wasps who are hyper-specialized in using one type of host, there are also many wasps that seem to keep their options open. This minuscule rabbit right here is capable of using pupae from either lepidoptera (aka butterflies/moths) or from diptera (aka flies). Different types of hosts means different degrees of potential, though. Since lepidopteran pupae are often larger and meatier, B. minuta can jam pack more of her eggs in, earning her the status of a "gregarious" parasitoid; for diptera there's typically only enough room for one egg per pupa, thus making it a case of "solitary" parasitoidism. Obviously more eggs means more chances of species survival, but hey one is better than none.
I'm always a fan of when wasps use their hind legs to groom but its always especially silly when they have big ol gams like many chalcids do
Prairie Robber Fly (Diogmites angustipennis)
Those eyes are stunningly green!
Could we get a fact on an insect that went extinct relatively recently?
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TODAY'S FACT IS
Did you know that the Xerces Blue (Glaucopsyche xerces) is an extinct butterfly last seen in the early 1940s? It is believed to be the first American butterfly to become extinct due to loss of habitat for human urbanization. This butterfly lived in the sand dunes of the San Francisco peninsula in the US.
These butterflies fed on two different kinds of plants: lotus and lupine flowers. The adults fed on the lupines and the larvae fed on the lotus. The local lotus flowers were devastated by the urbanization, leaving the caterpillars without a food source and they never adapted.
Various organizations have reintroduced the closest living relative in order to try to revive this species via selective breeding and gene manipulation.
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Photo by Gayle Laird
good news. the things that used to upset me no longer upset me. bad news. i'm creating an army of bugs to hurt innocent bystanders
good news. the things that used to upset me no longer upset me. bad news. i'm creating an army of bugs to hurt innocent bystanders
Dailybugfacts! I have found a moth that I think you'll like!
It's the Macrocilix maia moth, and how it uses camouflage is so cool! It looks like it has bugs on its wings!!!
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TODAY'S FACT IS
Did you know that Macrocilix Maia is a moth found in parts of southeast Asia? They are mostly known for the patterns on their wings. The forewings depict flies pointed toward the abdomen. The hindwings have a splotch in the bottom corner that, when they converge, look like bird droppings. The fake flies are "eating" the fake droppings. The larvae are known to feed on the leaves of Chinese cork oak trees.
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Photo by Cheongweei Gan
Today's wasp of the day is Zagrammosoma multilineatum!
Credits: photo 1, photo 2
This wasp is so cool, its entire genus is referred to as the "tattooed wasps". They're known for being parasitoids of leafminers— be it beetle, moth, or fly. Basically if it lives and feeds between the layers of a leaf's tissue, it's all fair game to this sliver of caution tape.
The tiniest tattoo ever
HONEY BEE VS WASP VS YELLOW JACKET VS HORNET: A SIMPLE GUIDE 🐝
HONEY BEES
Honey bees are fuzzy to more easily carry pollen
Obviously, they produce honey! While most wasps do not
Usually a peachy yellow-orange color
Pointed faces with their eyes angled more outwards to the sides
Construct their nests out of wax, in whatever shape best suits their location
WASPS
While both yellow jackets and hornets are in fact just different subtypes of wasps, this guide will primarily focus on paper wasps when discussing the differences between the species
Paper wasps have triangular, upsidedown tear drop shaped heads
They've got skinny abdomens and long legs that dangle under them while they fly
Come in a wide variety of colors from pure black to red
Their nests are flared papery shapes constructed out of hexagons
YELLOW JACKETS
They differ from other wasps by having smaller, stumpier bodies and thick abdomens
Much shorter legs that tuck under their body while they fly
Almost always a very vibrant yellow and black
Nest underground!
HORNETS
Hornets, like yellow jackets, are also another species of wasp
Hornets are generally much larger then our other black and yellow girls, the largest being around 3 inches!
They've got big chunky builds with especially large abdomens
They have rounder more oval faces compared to wasps
They are usually much more dark orange/red in color then the previously mentioned bugs. Some even look like they have red/orange masks on!
Hornet nests are usually smooth and acorn shaped, made from a papery material. They're quite beautiful!
IMPORTANT NOTE! With such a wide variety of species, there will always be exceptions to these descriptors. This is merely a simple visual guide that applies to most cases
got any of the ever so beautiful theronia maculosa perhaps? :3
Today's wasp of the day is Theronia maculosa!
Credits: photo 1, photo 2
There are 4 species within the genus Theronia that share the range of Tasmania to Eastern Australia. T. maculosa is the only one of them with such distinctive colors, making it quite easy to identify! This toothpaste flavored butt goes after caterpillar cocoons, specifically those of tent caterpillars/lappet moths (Lasiocampidae). Theronia wasps are also known for having relatively large and extra sharp claws that may or may not be full of poison; so watch out for those toes!
Don't try to fight a baddie with nails, she'll maul you
happy pride, have some underwing moths (+ with folded wings, for my stealth, closeted, and questioning siblings <3) modeled after Ophelia Underwing (Catocala ophelia) and Drasteria howlandii
transparent versions under the cut so you can add your own identities flags if you want to + hq assets of the ones above here
Six-Spotted Tiger Beetle (Cicindela sexguttata)
From Koaw Nature on YouTube.
Today's wasp of the day Psenulus trimaculatus!
Credits: photo 1, photo 2
Currently considered the closest relative to bees, wasps within the genus Psenulus have the unique habit of lining their nests with silk. This is extra odd because most insects, especially hymenopterans, only are able to make silk as juveniles— but in this case it's the adult females who have special spinnerets! Psenulus wasps are the only known wasps to have evolved this ability!
The silker