View allAll Photos Tagged stinkbug
8/21/2010
Boulevard Park, Seattle, Washington, U.S.A.
Banasa species, tentative.
Found on Western Hemlock, Tsuga heterophylla cone.
Kingdom: Animalia (Animals)
Phylum: Arthropoda (Arthropods)
Class: Insecta (Insects)
Order: Hemiptera (True Bugs, Cicadas, Hoppers, Aphids & Allies)
Suborder: Heteroptera (True Bugs)
Superfamily: Pentatomoidea
Family: Pentatomidae (Stink Bugs)
Subfamily: Pentatominae?
Tribe: Pentatomini?
Genus: Banasa?
Sorry for the quality of this one. I had to shoot through the kitchen window for fear of destroying the web!
As far as things to drive you completely buggy go, trying to ID shield bugs is proving difficult to beat. Mostly because their isn't that much variety in their shape, and the problem only becomes worse when you're trying to ID them from Nymphs.
Waikiki, Western Australia
I forgot to stop down (manual aperture along with manual focus) and at this distance f/3.5 is just plain useless. Another reason why the EF upgrade of this lens to f/3.5 is silly and the 60mm EF f/2.8 and 100mm f/2.8 macro lenses also need to be stopped down for macro. f/2.8 is great to find optimal focus, to use the high precision AF points but to get much more than the snout of a stinkbug in focus, you need more DOF...
View Large On Black if you dare ;-)
A stinkbug on the path that just had to be photographed according to the 6yo daughter and 8yo son of my friend at their home in Australind
Cosmopepla decorata. S. Pinery Canyon Road, Chiricahua National Monument, Cochise County, Arizona, USA.
Stink bugs (Euschistus sp.?) on a Gray-headed Coneflower. Photographed in the prairie restoration area at Afton State Park, Minnesota.
These four insect studies will be shown at the Rocket Science Salon's 5th annual Art Show on September 22, 2007.
This little stink bug had successfully captured a caterpillar much bigger than itself. It appeared as though the caterpillar dropped off the leaf on a thread of silk in an attempt to throw off the predator however this little guy held on!
Residents all over Northern Kentucky and Greater Cincinnati are complaining of invasions from hundreds of the brown, smelly insects, and these are not your father's stink bugs. The brown marmorated stink bugs are Asian invaders sweeping across the country and taking residence in area homes, taking residence with another pest, the bed bug that has seen a resurgence in area homes and hotels over the past few years.
Photos: AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File
This was taken in my local park, The Millennium Green, at about 11am in the morning in Cricklewood, London - UK. It was a pure accident I captured this as I was following the Hover Fly and I did not even see the Stinkbug until I uploaded my photos.
This is the most common stinkbug in Colorado. Photographed at Neenoshe Reservoir.
Rough stinkbugs feed primarily on leaves and developing seeds of trees and have been recorded from ash, walnut, willow, boxelder and many other species. However, they do not appear to be associated with any significant plant injuries. In addition,
they are occasional predators and have been found feeding on caterpillars and leaf beetle larvae. For more info on Rough Stinkbugs in CO, see the CSU website webdoc.agsci.colostate.edu/bspm/Hexapoda%20%28Insects%29/...