View allAll Photos Tagged stinkbug
This beetle was sitting on the balcony railing. He was moving off rapidly as soon as you got too close, so it wasn't easy to take his picture. Thanks to Sea Moon for the ID.
A green stinkbug. The adults and nymphs suck sap from leaves. Attract parasitic wasps and control weeds to keep this pest at bay.
Black Stinkbug - Proxys punctulatus (11 mm)
Location: Durham NC (USA)
Captured flying near some flowers.
References
- BugGuide bugguide.net/node/view/15346
- Univ. Florida--Featured Creatures entnemdept.ufl.edu/creatures/misc/bugs/black_stink_bug.htm
Chinavia hilaris
Susquehanna State Park Rock Run
Havre de Grace, MD Harford County
bugguide.net/node/view/1251027
I would love to know if anyone has any idea why there are a few stinkbugs that show a white pigmentation?
Beetles (NO! nymphs of some kind of stink bug, thanks, Speech path girl. www.flickr.com/photos/10080687@N04/) on the fruits of a Pittosporum, Palm Beach, NSW..
Photographed along road to Murphy's Pasture on 29 June. This stinkbug, with an anteater's nose, belongs to a small tribe of stinkbugs Aeliini that contains but two genera. They are fond of grasses, hence my "common name" of American Grass Stinkbug. Its range is from BC-AZ east to MB-MI-AR-AL (per BugGuide) and has a fondness for barley and rye, so maybe throw in a few hops.... There are but a few records in BugGuide and none from CO, though it is thought (known, probably) to occur here
I collected this anchor stink bug nymph as a 4th instar on 23 August 2018, at the Carroll County Extension Office, and the next day it molted. I caught a few photos as its new exoskeleton hardened.
I'm hoping to rear it to an adult, but it's proving a lot pickier about its prey than I expected. It's eaten a few mexican bean beetle larvae, but hasn't touched the Dimorphopteryx sawflies, clover worms, or orangstriped oakworms, or clavate tortoise beetle larvae I've put in with it.
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This was the first time I've seen a teneral S. anchorago before and I'm surprised that it's not dorsoventrally flattened like most other teneral nymphs. Instead, this species appears to become concave ventrally when starved, maintaining its overall globose body shape.
They were all outside, waiting to get in.With all of them flying back and forth , the warm side of the house was like a stinkbug airport.
Green stinkbug
Kingdom=Animalia
Phylum=Arthropoda
Class=Insecta
Order=Hemiptera
Family=Pentatomidae
Subfamily=Pentatominae
Tribe=Pentatomini
Genus=Acrosternum?
Species=A.hilare?
Binomial name=Acrosternum hilare?
Stinkbug (shield bug, カメムシ亜目) on red clover (Trifolium pratense, アカツメクサ, 赤詰草, [also ムラサキツメクサ, 紫詰草?]) along the road on the Yasugawa riverbank in Ichimiyake, Yasu City
Shield bug/stink bug. Pahang, Malaysia. 40D, tripod, natural light.
Pentatomoidea, Dinidoridae
How I do my natural light macro: orionmystery.blogspot.com/2010/10/tips-on-shooting-with-n...
This is a nickle-size Stink Bug in the family Pentatomidae of the Heteroptera, Hemiptera on a dead-looking shrub of native Prickly-Phlox (Leptodactylon californicum, Polemoniaceae) in the canyon. There are many different kinds, so I won't try to guess what it is. This one has five-segment antennae unlike the four-segment antennae of the bugs in my [Previous] photo, hence the family name Penta-tomidae. The shrub is alive but dormant - some plants are starting to show green buds. (San Marcos Pass, 29 October 2016)
My first flickr image is of a female stinkbug Diolcus chrysorrhoeus laying eggs on the trunk of an American Holly tree.
Stinkbug on a daisy fleabane flower (Erigeron annuus, ヒメジョオン) near the ground golf course in Deba, Ritto City
I missed a series of shots when the first stink bug flew away the day before after being spooked by me. This second one flew and stopped right in front of me at the Ixora bush...such gorgeous insect, my shutter went non-stop ....
These stinkbug eggs, each about 3mm across, were found on the underside of a leaf. The two parasitic wasps are laying their own eggs inside the stinkbug eggs - a hassle-free first meal for their progeny.
The eggs hatched today. I think they are stink bugs eggs. Not sure if they are the red and black stink bugs or the green stink bugs that are pretty common around here...
Two shield bug nymphs....
No you're not seeing double :)
I tested the Canon EF 100mm f/2.8 IS's effectiveness here: orionmystery.blogspot.com/2010/07/testing-is-of-canon-100...
.Shield bug with morning dew. Natural light, tripod, timer, live view: orionmystery.blogspot.com/2010/10/tips-on-shooting-wit...
ID: male specimen of Mucanum sp., most probably Mucanum patibulum Vollenhoven, 1868.