jeunets-foutaises - Things I Like, Things I Don’t Like
Things I Like, Things I Don’t Like

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5-10 Min Nightjar Studies To Help Me With A Book Illustration I Was Working On. Such Beautiful And Weird

5-10 Min Nightjar Studies To Help Me With A Book Illustration I Was Working On. Such Beautiful And Weird
5-10 Min Nightjar Studies To Help Me With A Book Illustration I Was Working On. Such Beautiful And Weird
5-10 Min Nightjar Studies To Help Me With A Book Illustration I Was Working On. Such Beautiful And Weird

5-10 min nightjar studies to help me with a book illustration i was working on. Such beautiful and weird birds!

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More Posts from Jeunets-foutaises

2 years ago
Hes Seen Some Shit

hes seen some shit

2 years ago
 .

Гунибский район. Республика Дагестан


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2 years ago

I see at least one cool bug a day, and usually many more, but it’s not because I live anywhere particularly rich in strange, wonderful creatures (I live in an unremarkable corner of Pennsylvania, USA) or spend all of my free time looking for bugs (well, just *most* of it). in my experience, finding interesting bugs is less about actually locating them and more about looking closely at tiny things you’d otherwise ignore!

this very long post was compiled over a couple days in late July, although I spent less than 10 minutes at a time searching. there’s a lot of fun creatures just out in the open.

I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly

plants are always a good place to start when looking for bugs, and I chose this small fig tree (Ficus carica) with a mulberry sapling friend. feeding on the sap of the fig and mulberry is the first group I’ll take a look at, the planthoppers:

I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly

these two are flatid bugs, Metcalfa pruinosa and Flatormenis proxima. flatids are slow-moving bugs that can be approached closely, but once they get tired of circling around stems to avoid you they may launch themselves into a fluttering flight with spring-loaded rear legs.

I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly

Aplos simplex, a member of the related family Issidae, also likes fig sap. its “tail” is actually a tuft of waxy secretions, which get shed along with the bright colors when it assumes a lumpy, bean-shaped adult form.

cicadellids, or leafhoppers, are just about everywhere on plants, but can be hard to approach without scaring them.

I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly
I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly

Agallia constricta on the left is a tiny species that feeds on grass, but many were scared up onto the fig by my footsteps. Jikradia olitoria is a much larger species that does feed on the fig; juveniles like this are curled, creeping goblins while adults’ rounded wings give them a pill-shaped appearance.

I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly

this big, pale leafhopper belongs to genus Gyponana. it’s tricky to get to species ID with these.

Graphocephala are striking little hoppers that eat a variety of native and nonnative plants. G. coccinea is the larger, more boldly colored one and G. versuta is smaller but more common locally. they’ll sit on the tops of leaves but take flight if you get too close quickly.

I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly
I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly

another group you’re almost guaranteed to encounter are flies (Diptera). these are a very diverse group, so much more than houseflies and mosquitoes (though I did run into both)

where I live, any plant with broad leaves is almost guaranteed to have a few Condylostylus, long-legged flies that come in shades of blue, green, and red. despite their dainty physique, they’re agile predators, typically feeding on other small flies.

I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly

next, a few hoverflies: the ubiquitous Toxomerus geminatus and a Eumerus that I’ve been seeing a lot of this year (but maybe I’ve just noticed them for the first time). syrphids have varied life histories, but most adults drink nectar and many of the larvae are predaceous on aphids.

I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly
I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly

the metallic green soldier fly is Microchrysa flaviventris, nonnative here. Coenosia is a fun example of a “fly that looks like a fly,” with big red eyes and a gray body, and you might think they’re just another dung-sucking pest, but they’re actually aggressive predators! this one seemed to have nabbed itself some sort of nematoceran fly, maybe a fungus gnat.

I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly
I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly

many flies are very tiny, just millimeters long. the first two little fellows are lauxaniids, while the last one, an agromyzid leafminer Cerodontha dorsalis, burrows through grass leaves as a larva.

I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly
I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly
I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly

while moths and butterflies (Lepidoptera) are drawn to plants for their flowers or to lay eggs, many small moths can easily be found resting on or under leaves during the day.

these first two are tortricids, many of which are flat, rectangular moths resembling chips of bark or dead leaves. the apple bud moth, Platynota idaeusalis, feeds on a wide variety of hosts, while this beat-up old Argyrotaenia pinatubana would have developed in an edible tube nest of pine needles.

I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly
I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly
I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly
I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly

Callima argenticinctella feeds in bark and dead wood (a resource used by more caterpillars than you’d realize!) while the last moth, possibly an Aspilanta, is a leafminer.

although beetles (Coleoptera) are famous for their diversity, I didn’t find too many on the fig. the invasive Oriental beetle Exomala orientalis resting here can be found in a wide range of colors, from this common tan to to deep iridescent black. the other beetle is a Photinus pyralis firefly, sleeping under leaves as fireflies do.

I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly
I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly
I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly

a few spare hemipterans: a Kleidocerys resedae that blew in on a wind, and below, the mulberry whitefly Tetraleurodes mori feeds on its namesake host. as for Hymenoptera, I saw manny tiny parasitic braconid wasps and various ants attracted to the planthoppers’ honeydew excretions—always worth checking underneath roosting hoppers for things having a drink.

I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly
I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly
I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly
I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly
I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly

a couple handsome spider boys were scrambling through the fig seeking females, a jumping spider Paraphidippus aurantius and an orbweaver, Mecynogea lemniscata.

I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly
I See At Least One Cool Bug A Day, And Usually Many More, But Its Not Because I Live Anywhere Particularly

and to round it off, a young Conocephalus meadow katydid and a Carolina mantis, Stagmomantis carolina.

there’s 31 species of arthropod in this post, and I probably saw some 45, not all of which stayed for photos. if you walk slowly and look closely, you can see a sizeable chunk of your local biodiversity in under fifteen minutes! of course this will depend on where you live and what time of year it is, but there’s almost always more cool bugs out there than you’d expect, even on just a single plant.


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2 years ago
"The Nighttime" (1900) -Vladimir Dmitrievich Vucichevich- Sibirsky (1869-1919)-russian Artist

"The Nighttime" (1900) -Vladimir Dmitrievich Vucichevich- Sibirsky (1869-1919)-russian artist


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