View allAll Photos Tagged firebug
EOS 650D2319-w.jpg
« fire bug » Le gendarme ou cherche-midi
Pyrrhocoris = punaise couleur de feu et apterus = sans ailes
La piqure vraiment très douloureuse, peut s'infecter et nécessiter un traitement antibiotique.
The really painful sting, can infect itself and require antibiotic treatment..
Another shot of yesterday's Cinnamon Bug! Isn't it wonderful when your own garden plays host to an amazing looking bug like this one?!
Two pairs of firebugs (Pyrrhocoris apterus) copulating on a tree trunk.
Dwie pary kowali bezskrzydłych (Pyrrhocoris apterus) kopulujących na pniu drzewa.
Or Gendarme, or even Fire bugs! Pyrrhocoris apterus is their proper name though!
Fonterland - Indre - France
Hundreds of these everywhere, especially on Malvaceae, but it's the first time I've found a macropterus form (fully winged)! Not that unusual, but certainly less of these than the standard brachypterous form.
Very excited to find a Cinnamon Bug (Corizus hyoscyami) in our garden today! The Cinnamon Bug, also known as the Black and Red Squash Bug or the Spotted Firebug, is a red and black Rhopalid bug. Like other rhopalids, its wing membrane has strongly visible veins. The Cinnamon Bug is also noticeably hairy!
Cinnamon Bugs are found in dry habitats and associated with a range of plants. They overwinter as an adult, with the new generation appearing in August-September. They're brownish in colour and covered in fine hairs like the adults. Although historically confined to the coasts of southern Britain, Cinnamon Bugs are now found inland throughout England and Wales as far north as Yorkshire.
The firebug, Pyrrhocoris apterus, is a common insect of the family Pyrrhocoridae. Easily recognizable due to its striking red and black coloration, but may be confused with the similarly coloured though unrelated Corizus hyoscyami (cinnamon bug, squash bug) (see comparison). Pyrrhocoris apterus is distributed throughout the Palaearctic from the Atlantic coast of Europe to northwest China. It has also been reported from the US, Central America and India. It has been reported as recently expanding its distribution northwards into mainland UK and eastward on to the coast of the Mediterranean sea. [3They are frequently observed to form aggregations, especially as immature forms, with from tens to perhaps a hundred individuals.
De vuurwants is een bontgekleurde soort die een overwegend helder rode kleur heeft met een karakteristiek patroon van zwarte lichaamsdelen en vlekken en hieraan is te herkennen. De wants komt in grote delen van Europa voor en is ook in België en Nederland te vinden. De wants is voornamelijk een planteneter die soms dode of levende insecten eet. De wants kan niet vliegen en is soms massaal aan te treffen bij lindebomen en andere favoriete voedselbronnen, vaak in bewoond gebied. Hij kan, in het nauw gedreven, steken en een onaangename geur verspreiden.
Omdat de wants algemeen voorkomt en eenvoudig in een laboratorium in leven is te houden, zijn er verschillende studies naar gedaan, zoals onderzoek naar de lange duur van de paring, de ontwikkeling van de vleugels en de tolerantie voor vorst.
Firebug (Pyrrhocoris apterus) perched on tree bark.
Kowal bezskrzydły (Pyrrhocoris apterus) siedzący na korze drzewa.
A Fire Bug - Shield Bug on a wall.
It's OK Julie I don't mind calling it a Butt on a Fire Bug!!
Better viewed large and thank you for your favourites. :O)
remark: While the first version of this photo was stacked by Photoshop CC 2015.5, the current image has been rendered by HeliconFocus stacking software.
Pyrrhocoridae -Dysdercus sp.
Pyrrhocoridae is a family of insects with more than 300 species world-wide. any are red coloured and are known as red bugs and some species are called cotton stainers because their feeding activities leave an indelible brownish-yellow stain on cotton crops. A common species in parts of Europe is the firebug, and its genus name Pyrrhocoris and the family name are derived from the Greek roots for fire "pyrrho-" and bug "coris". Members of this family can be quickly separated from the Lygaeidae by the lack of ocelli (simple eyes).