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Interrupted Love Affair on the Wildflower
More zebra pillbugs in progress!
Zebra Isopod Armadillidium maculatum
#641 - Polyphrades sp.
If I'm right in the ID, a serious agricultural pest, originally from South America. The larvae and adults are known to feed on almost 400 different species of plants, and can also damage subsurface irrigation. In this case, they were swarming on Jacksonia - the same tree as that brown Ancita earlier, in fact.
Baldivis, Perth
EDIT: I was wrong about the ID - a Polyphrades that only resembles Naupactus leucoloma, the White-fringed Weevil
May Theme Contest - Lovebugs
Last chance to submit a photo of romantically entangled invertebrates to the May Theme Contest at I Heart Bugs - be encouraged!
May Theme Contest - Insect Mating
After they won April's Theme Contest with a lovely mayfly shot, octopus_fool's suggestion for the May Theme Contest - Insect (and the other inverts, why not ) Reproduction. This should turn up some interesting photos - there's an old saw about the pleasure being fleeting, the position ridiculous, and the expense damnable, but ridiculous positions is certainly a feature of invertebrate reproduction. Consider spiders, or dragonflies, for example. And of course, that most acrobatic of animals, the slug.
http://youtu.be/ZWwCMivDO2Q As usual, post to the comments over at I Heart Bugs, with ID and locale where possible.
#442 - Signal Fly (or, rather, Flies)
Apart from them having Muscoid antennae, I was at a loss as to what these might be. Happily, servitude on Flickr came to the rescue, suggesting Platystomatid, and one of the genera that fold their wings down around their body, rather than along. On the basis of the brightly coloured heads, and metallic bodies, he was thinking they might be close to the genus Duomyia, which I'd compared them to myself, so I was on the right track for a while at least :)
Baldivis, Perth
#430 - Stiletto Fly
Stiletto flies - possibly Ectinorhynchus - mating in a swamp in Munster, Perth.
Despite the fact the larvae are voracious hunters of other larvae in dry sand and leaf litter, the adults are attracted to water, so I suppose finding them there makes sense.