View allAll Photos Tagged stinkbug
Left:glaucias subpunctatus(ツヤアオカメムシ),Nezara viridula(ミナミアオカメムシ)
Right:Plautia stali(チャバネアオカメムシ)
SANYO Xacti J4
I believe this is the invasive "Brown Marmorated Stink Bug," Halyomorpha halys. (njaes.rutgers.edu/stinkbug/identify.asp)
Anchor Stink bug.... not your average stinker :)
"Anchor stink bugs can be many different colors, from all steel blue to blue-black with red, orange and cream markings, to reddish brown with yellow markings. Others are red behind their head with a blue-black stripe down the middle. They also go through 5 stages of development before they become adults, and their colors change as they develop. Different parts of their bodies change between black, red, and yellow. Anchor stink bugs are easy to tell apart because part of their body called a scutellum is large and shaped like the letter "U", just like in a shield bug." Biokids
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?
.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.
A stinkbug lurks on the side of an Indian Blanket (Gaillardia pulchella) while a honeybee collects some pollen.
i call this 'red porno' (thinking of this). stinkbugs are born when my radiant heat warms the pots of my houseplants. find out more fascinating info about length of copulation, 'thoracic vibrations' and other fun.
as far as i can tell, these two stinkbugs have been at it for over ten hours now, and there's no end in sight.
Update: They separated at midnight. ~12 hours.
CHOMPED -- Example of brown stinkbug damage in corn in Phillips Co., Arkansas, taken June 2014. (U of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture photo by Robert Goodson)
Rice seed heads infested with stinkbugs are isolated in a research project to understand resistance to and damage caused by the insect pests in various rice varieties.
Interesting url, and two "bärfisar" on a wooden bridge at the nature park in Handen. Same glasspinne back in July.
These things are so fascinating. I have never known another insect to fly blindly into humans... constantly. -_-
We call these insects "Stinkbugs", but if anyone knows what they are really called, please share it here.
This image was taken with an S-M-C Takumar Macro 50mm f/4 on a K200D. The shot was handheld at f/11. I had to bump the ISO to 400 in order to get the necessary shutter speed for sharpness.
This shot was taken on Nov. 1st but this Magnolia Tree clearly thinks it is Spring as it is budding out again.
We went to the World's Largest Nachos event at SoMa Street Foods, which was put on by the folks at Chirps Chips. Chirps Chips are made with flour from ground up crickets, so there was a large "bug" theme at the event. Our favorite part was the Bug Zoo in the back. It was filled with hissing cockroaches, stinkbugs, blue death feigning beetles, and other insects.
Harsh lighting, but I didn't shoot him long. I did like the composition of this shot though.
April 2009.
Nikkor 60mm, homemade flash diffuser, lightroom.