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This bug was one of a number on our Acacia fimbriata. This shot and the one in the first comment box are obviously of different development stages. I have yet to see a mature specimen with wings fully developed. To give you an idea of their size, the diameter of the wattle flower is 5 mm.
I am still waiting for an ID. It is probably one of the Miridae family.
Dry Creek Pioneer Regional Park, Union City, CA
European Starling took care the bugs for the cow.
喜歡看美國職棒的人應該對"doubleheader" 這個字不陌生,那是一天比賽兩場的特別用語。這裡只是取字面的意思,兩隻小鳥跳到牛的頭上抓蟲為食,也幫牠解決蟲害的問題。因此牛不但不生氣,反而很樂意讓鳥兒服務呢!
Punaise des arbres et buissons que l'on rencontre du printemps à l'automne puis se cachent en hiver dans l'écorces des arbres.
Plant bug and bushes that are encountered from spring to autumn and then hides in winter in the tree' barks.
It is resting on a Yellowbell, a large Texas Native shrub. For Macro Mondays theme "Garden Macro". Many thanks to iofdi for the ID.
Not real ones, but made from wax. In Whitechapel Art Gallery, London. Still make you shiver though, don't they?!
Another phone pic of these Southern Green Shield Bug nymphs, taken at the same location 5 days after the earlier shot. At a rough guess there were at least 50 on this bush. They appear to all be 4th instar.
Dock Bug, Coreus Marginatus.
Brian Tomlinson photography:
Website: www.bt-photography.co.uk
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DPS365/268 found this little critter walking around the lip of a glass tonight ... perfect excuse to get out the tamron macro ! Beverages assignment?
Blogged here:
flyingblindonarocketcycle.blogspot.com/2011/09/bug-mug-ru...
Hope this meets your approval dear partner x
I think this is an adult Hawthorn Shield bug (on an Ivy leaf) if anyone could confirm the ID I'd be grateful. I can't wait for some better weather to get out & take new shots, for now I'm still raiding the archives. HGGT & HBBBT everyone!
Lygaeid Bugs
The Lygaeidae are a family in the Hemiptera (true bugs), with some 60 genera in six subfamilies. The family includes the insects commonly known as milkweed bugs, and also some of those known as seed bugs.
www.projectnoah.org/spottings/14686108
These bugs were on the leaf of a red Abutilon shrub.
Vitex trees attract all kinds of pollinators. From bumble bees to flea beetles.
American Bumble Bee (Bombus pensylvanicus)
Chasteberry Tree (Vitex agnus-castus)
Eight-spotted Flea Beetle (Omophoita cyanipennis)
My photos can also be found at kapturedbykala.com
A bit of a different subject for once. I found a colony of these bugs on a plant at the resort. They have a bit of a strange "trunk" in place of the mouth.
Temporary ID: Dysdercus sp. nymph
Pretty sure about the Genus now. Exact species still to be determined.
Even if I never know... I think they look cool 😊