i thought i made it abundantly clear already but āradfemsā arenāt allowed to follow me :)
trying on a metaphor
I'd rather be in outer space šø
Three Goblin Art

Discoholic šŖ©
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Cosimo Galluzzi
RMH

ā
NASA
cherry valley forever
Claire Keane
Cosmic Funnies

ellievsbear
tumblr dot com
Sade Olutola
Xuebing Du
i don't do bad sauce passes
Sweet Seals For You, Always
styofa doing anything
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
seen from T1
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Uruguay

seen from Finland

seen from Canada

seen from France

seen from United States
seen from United States
@saturniidays
i thought i made it abundantly clear already but āradfemsā arenāt allowed to follow me :)
ćRippi/ćŖććć
fuzzy bugs series
w140Ćh130xd90mm
@shiba0607
you know when you get the urge to rearrange your furniture? I love that tarantulas get that same urge.
you know when you get the urge to rearrange your furniture? I love that tarantulas get that same urge.
Photo by Carmen Chase
@badaxefamily you suggested the japanese beetle! I have just discovered that Bugs Are Hard To Draw. As in, it's easy to draw a beetle, that you can recognise as a generic beetle in general, but if you have to distinctly make it a specific species of beetle, that's recognisable as such, that's a whole other thing.
Also fun fact: There are plenty of very good quality reference pictures of these ittle fellows. However, most of them are of them shagging.
Sonoran bumble bee, Bombus sonorus, Apidae
Photos 1-3 by kbbutler, 4-5 (female with two males) by mhedin, and 6-7 by tcouncil
Official bumblebee post! š
A green huntsman (Micrommata virescens) with her spiderlings in Dorset, England
by Will Atkins
Check out Acutalis tartarea! A trehopper with a bright green abdomen covered by transparent wings! The pronotum is black with white edges, very pretty lad!
Taken in Guatavita, Colombia
Orthopteran spotted!
Macroshot of a Wasp
Chrysididae; Cuckoo Wasp.
Pseudoscorpion world with @i-draws-dinosaurs at Onkaparinga NP yesterday...
Fossil Caddisfly (Trichoptera) In Baltic Amber
One of the things I really like about Tumblr is there seems to be a healthy appreciation for invertebrate biology here, which I donāt always see as much on other social media websites. Tumblr users overall seem to love bugs, and itās important to me that every person who loves bugs knows the name Charles Henry Turner. If youāre not yet familiar with this man, Iām delighted to introduce you to one of the most remarkable minds ever born of this earth, and a true pioneer in the field of entomology and animal behavior.
Charles Turner was born in the United States just a few years after the end of the civil war. His brilliance was evident from the start, and after graduating valedictorian of his high school class he quickly went on to earn his Bachelorās and Masterās degrees in short order. While in school, Turnerās relentless curiosity became his greatest advantage. He was drawn to and fascinated by topics that were largely ignored by modern science at the time, namely the cognitive behaviors of insects and other invertebrates. While many of his colleagues believed insects to be mindless automata acting on instinct alone, Turner felt deeply that the brains of these oft overlooked animals were far more complex than the scientific community suspected. He performed extensive experiments to test his theories and found overwhelming evidence of problem solving and individualism among organisms as small as ants and spiders.
By the time Turner earned his zoology pHD in 1907 he had published dozens of papers in highly esteemed journals and had even co-authored a book. It is likely that Turner was the first African American to earn a pHD from the University of Chicago. With such a sparkling academic reputation and enormous body of research, one would expect this candidate to have no issues obtaining a professorship at a prestigious school. Though by every right Turner should have been head of science department at a top university, the systemic racism that permeated academia meant that doors a white man would have walked through were locked and bolted shut for Charles Henry Turner.
Turner did not allow this prejudice to dim in any way his blindingly bright passion for knowledge. He took a job as a high school teacher, and continued to perform and publish research on his own all while he instilled his students with a love for zoology. He published more than 70 papers in extremely respected journals and he remained passionately curious for the entirety of his life. If I tried to list here all of the incredible discoveries Turner made in his lifetime it would take me days to sufficiently express the impact he had on the field of invertebrate behavior. His experiments were so ahead of their time that entomologists today marvel at his research and wonder how much more we would know if Turnerās work had been given the attention and respect of other scientists working at the time. Turnerās mind was about a century ahead of those entomological contemporaries who had no interest in giving him a seat at the table. His tombstone simply reads āscientistā
Like many people of color throughout history, Turnerās exceptional contributions to our world have been unfairly overlooked by many. His name has historically been left out of entomology textbooks and courses, despite laying down groundwork that is still used today. I really recommend that anyone interested in entomology or even biology in general read up on Charles Henry Turner and his works. This is an excellent article that discusses his many challenges and triumphs in the field.
I like it when people commit to the bit