Identify this bug.
- Gawdzilla Sama
- Stabsobermaschinist
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Re: Identify this bug.
It's a type of iknuman wasp. The long tube coming out of the abdomen is the ovipositor so that's a female. Can't tell from the photo but the egg would be laid deep inside the food plant OR parasitically in a grub of the target host.Gawdzilla wrote:We have these running around.
http://tinylittlelife.org/content/image ... .thumb.jpg[/imgc]
- Gawdzilla Sama
- Stabsobermaschinist
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Re: Identify this bug.
They like climbing into and out of our tubular bells windchimes. Strange to look at.CJ wrote:It's a type of iknuman wasp. The long tube coming out of the abdomen is the ovipositor so that's a female. Can't tell from the photo but the egg would be laid deep inside the food plant OR parasitically in a grub of the target host.Gawdzilla wrote:We have these running around.
http://tinylittlelife.org/content/image ... .thumb.jpg[/imgc]

- Cwazy Cat Lady
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Re: Identify this bug.
Good Job, CJ... BTW I think it's Ichneumon and a parasitoid...CJ wrote:It's a type of iknuman wasp. The long tube coming out of the abdomen is the ovipositor so that's a female. Can't tell from the photo but the egg would be laid deep inside the food plant OR parasitically in a grub of the target host.Gawdzilla wrote:We have these running around.
http://tinylittlelife.org/content/image ... .thumb.jpg[/imgc]
- Gawdzilla Sama
- Stabsobermaschinist
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Re: Identify this bug.
Where's a good WTF site for bugs? I had one show up on my desk last night and, despite me having seen a bunch of weird shit in my time, it is no longer recognizable.
- cowiz
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Re: Identify this bug.
It is a bug.
Not too tricky people
Not too tricky people

- Calilasseia
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Re: Identify this bug.
You rang?
This one is quite a large site, covering all insect orders, though it tends to specialise in American insect fauna. It does sometimes illustrate insects from other countries though.
Anyone looking for some sites specialising in UK insects, here's a brace of them:
UK Moths ... complete with Systematic List
UK Butterflies
Species List for Odonata (Dragonflies and Damselflies)
British Dragonfly society
Dragonflies & Damselflies from my locality
Since there's an upper limit of 10 URLs per post, I'll have to put the next set of links in another post ...
This one is quite a large site, covering all insect orders, though it tends to specialise in American insect fauna. It does sometimes illustrate insects from other countries though.

Anyone looking for some sites specialising in UK insects, here's a brace of them:
UK Moths ... complete with Systematic List
UK Butterflies
Species List for Odonata (Dragonflies and Damselflies)
British Dragonfly society
Dragonflies & Damselflies from my locality
Since there's an upper limit of 10 URLs per post, I'll have to put the next set of links in another post ...
- Calilasseia
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Re: Identify this bug.
Some more UK insect related websites:
British Hemiptera - comprehensively illustrated, includes full checklists for Heteroptera, Auchenorrhyncha and Psylloidea, click on any name with a link to be taken to an illustrated page for that species
UK Ladybird Survey with species checklists, including downloadable PDF identification sheet
Diptera Information Site (actually covers world Diptera, but has an extensive UK section)
British Hemiptera - comprehensively illustrated, includes full checklists for Heteroptera, Auchenorrhyncha and Psylloidea, click on any name with a link to be taken to an illustrated page for that species
UK Ladybird Survey with species checklists, including downloadable PDF identification sheet
Diptera Information Site (actually covers world Diptera, but has an extensive UK section)
- Calilasseia
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Re: Identify this bug.
Some more sites of interest include:
Jumping spiders of the World - a project to provide full taxonomic, ecological and identification information on the entire world's known species of Salticidae (jumping spiders) ... these are the tiny cute ones, by the way, that have "faces"
Jumping Spiders of North-West Europe (illustrated)
List of every spider Genus on the planet
Solifugids of the World (yes, its' the infamous Camel Spiders!)
And for the Australians here, how about a page devoted to Huntsman Spiders of Brisbane?
Jumping spiders of the World - a project to provide full taxonomic, ecological and identification information on the entire world's known species of Salticidae (jumping spiders) ... these are the tiny cute ones, by the way, that have "faces"

Jumping Spiders of North-West Europe (illustrated)
List of every spider Genus on the planet
Solifugids of the World (yes, its' the infamous Camel Spiders!)
And for the Australians here, how about a page devoted to Huntsman Spiders of Brisbane?
- Gawdzilla Sama
- Stabsobermaschinist
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Re: Identify this bug.
Okay, now you're starting to bug me. 

Re: Identify this bug.
anyone know what my moth is?
Her hobbies include perspicacity and building models of the soul in lego.
Re: Identify this bug.
Cybermoth?
Libertarianism: The belief that out of all the terrible things governments can do, helping people is the absolute worst.
Re: Identify this bug.
eh...nope, just traveled the entire entomology cyberworld with that moth and they all screamed with gusto that it wasn't a cybermoth. that was my first guess too. :pAnimavore wrote:Cybermoth?
Her hobbies include perspicacity and building models of the soul in lego.
Re: Identify this bug.
It looks mental.
What is it?
What is it?
Libertarianism: The belief that out of all the terrible things governments can do, helping people is the absolute worst.
Re: Identify this bug.
I don't know!Animavore wrote:It looks mental.
What is it?
it's a visitor to my porch, but all of my googling has done nothing to define it.
Her hobbies include perspicacity and building models of the soul in lego.
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