#1295 - Nymphes myrmeleonides - Giant Blue-eyed Lacewing
A large and distinctive Nymphid lacewing, that usually attracts attention whenever it turns up. Which is why the Amateur Entomology Australia Facegroup group has provided me with multiple adults, distinctive egg clusters, and a larva to ID.
Photo below by Natalie Woods, on the Gold Coast in Queensland.
Nymphes eggs are laid on stalks , like those of many lacewings, but for some reason they’re laid in a U, which each egg separated from the neighboring stalk by an additional egg. It’s not entirely clear why - lacewings are voracious cannibals from shortly after hatching, but even have a spare sibling to snack on right next door wouldn’t seem to protect who ever hatches from the egg after that.
Photo below by Michael Gee in Sydney
Nymphid larvae can be distinguished from ant-lions, owlflies, and other lacewing families by the jaws - in the Nymphids, they only have the single pre-apical tooth.
Photos below by Michele Mcleod, who found it in a house in Bentley, NSW, which is a bit odd.