as a doctor i'm prescribing you 700mg of look at some bugs

seen from Malaysia
seen from Kazakhstan
seen from Italy
seen from China
seen from Russia
seen from South Korea

seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from Italy

seen from Malaysia

seen from Canada
seen from Spain
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Canada

seen from South Korea

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
as a doctor i'm prescribing you 700mg of look at some bugs
Sparkle Way as black witch moth (Ascalapha odorata - Arctiidae)
Bonus:
Crimson Tiger Moth by Martin Lagerway
Euplagia quadripunctaria | Les Papillons dans la Nature (1934) | Paul-André Robert (1901-1977)
[PHOTOS TAKEN: JULY 4TH, 2023 | Image IDs: Three photos of a white, grey, and brown tiger moth on a white woven tarp /End IDs.]
#1814 - Anestia ombrophanes - Clouded Footman (a family portrait)
I’ve posted a photo of the adult male, before, WAY back, but here’s a photo that includes most stages of their lifecycle.
Clouded Footman moths can have wings, if they’re male, or be big grey fuzzy sausages if they’re female. That’s the female at the left. She’s wingless, and will lay her eggs on the cage she built from her own hair, back when she was a caterpillar ready to pupate. That’s the cage the two adults are sitting on, and she’s already laid quite a few. Inside the cage you can not only see her cast-off caterpillar skin the shrivelled dark object at right), but also her empty pupal case.
The caterpillars are black with a complex pale yellow pattern on each segment, including two thin pale yellow lines running the length of the body. They also have a row of orange spots along each flank, and bundles of long fine hair pointing in most directions. It’s those hairs that the caterpillar will weave into a protective cage. They eat lichen, green single celled algae, and black cyanobacteria of the kind that grow of exposed rocks, roof shingles, and so on.
Spotted on the wall of my local games store. They certainly have drainage problems on their roof (it’s been the cause of repeated flooding inside the store itself) so I wouldn’t be surprised if that’s where the caterpillars were feeding.
An aposematically colored moth.