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WATER BEETLE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MOREBARK BEETLEGROUND BEETLETIGER BEETLEWEEVILMETALLIC WOOD BORERCLICK BEETLE Water scavenger beetles do not swim as rapidly as the diving or whirligig beetles; most species are aquatic or amphibian, but a few are terrestrial. Scientific classification: Water beetles belong to the order Coleoptera. True, or diving, water beetles make up the family Dytiscidae. Whirligig beetles make up WHITEFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Whitefly. Whitefly, common name for any member of a family of plant-feeding insects that resemble tiny moths. Whiteflies actually are not flies; they have piercing-sucking mouthparts and are related to aphids, cicadas, and jumping plant lice. About 1200 species are known, mostly from tropical regions; about 100 of these inhabit NorthAmerica.
KATYDID: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Katydid. Katydid, any of several species of long-horned grasshoppers that are found in the western hemisphere. The name katydid is meant to represent the characteristic sound made by the male when it rubs its wings together to attract females. Katydids are tree-living insects that are most commonly heard at night during summer and early fall. BEES: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Bees range in size from tiny species only 2 mm (0.08 in) in length to rather large insects up to 4 cm (1.6 in) long. Many bees are black or gray, but others are bright yellow, red, or metallic green or blue. Social Structure and Nesting Habits. Bees have diverse nesting and social habits. This diversity has provided scientists with a natural STONEFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Adult stone flies range from 6 to 50 mm (0.25 to 2.0 inches) long. They are dull-colored, commonly gray, brown, green, or yellowish. Adult stoneflies have two pair of membranous wings that fold over the back when at rest. The wings have many veins, and the hind wing is broad at the base and fanlike. Adults of most stonefly species livefrom a
BLACK FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Black Fly. Black Fly, any of a number of species of small humpbacked flies, the females of which are bloodsucking. Black flies are typically dark in color with broad, transparent wings. Adults range in size from 2.5 to 3.5 mm (0.01 to 0.14 in). Black flies are sometimes SAWFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Sawfly, common name applied to four-winged insects, widely distributed in temperate countries. Female sawflies have ovipositors, or egg-laying organs, that are partially modified into sharp-toothed, sawlike instruments with which the insect incises leaves and plant stems to form a receptacle for eggs. SCREWWORM: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE The adult screwworm is a dark, shiny, bluish-green fly about 10 mm (0.4 in) long. It has a reddish-yellow face and three black stripes on its upper thorax between the wings. The fly lays eggs on the skin of the animal host near open wounds such as barbed-wire cuts, scratches from thorns or from fighting, sore eyes, or injuries from brand marks CHEESE SKIPPER: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Cheese Skipper. 2009. Ads. Cheese Skipper, a shiny black fly, 5 mm (0.2 in) in length, found throughout the world. It is best known for its problematic larvae (newly hatched wormlike forms) that live in human foods such as dried or processed meat, fish, and cheese. They are called cheese skippers not only for their habit of feeding oncheese
MITE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Mite, common name for some 30,000 species of minute, usually oval-bodied arachnids. They are worldwide in distribution. Mites resemble ticks in having the head, thorax, and abdomen fused into one unsegmented body, but they are usually much smaller. They often have three pairs of legs in the larval stage and four pairs of legs in thenymph and
WATER BEETLE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MOREBARK BEETLEGROUND BEETLETIGER BEETLEWEEVILMETALLIC WOOD BORERCLICK BEETLE Water scavenger beetles do not swim as rapidly as the diving or whirligig beetles; most species are aquatic or amphibian, but a few are terrestrial. Scientific classification: Water beetles belong to the order Coleoptera. True, or diving, water beetles make up the family Dytiscidae. Whirligig beetles make up WHITEFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Whitefly. Whitefly, common name for any member of a family of plant-feeding insects that resemble tiny moths. Whiteflies actually are not flies; they have piercing-sucking mouthparts and are related to aphids, cicadas, and jumping plant lice. About 1200 species are known, mostly from tropical regions; about 100 of these inhabit NorthAmerica.
KATYDID: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Katydid. Katydid, any of several species of long-horned grasshoppers that are found in the western hemisphere. The name katydid is meant to represent the characteristic sound made by the male when it rubs its wings together to attract females. Katydids are tree-living insects that are most commonly heard at night during summer and early fall. BEES: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Bees range in size from tiny species only 2 mm (0.08 in) in length to rather large insects up to 4 cm (1.6 in) long. Many bees are black or gray, but others are bright yellow, red, or metallic green or blue. Social Structure and Nesting Habits. Bees have diverse nesting and social habits. This diversity has provided scientists with a natural STONEFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Adult stone flies range from 6 to 50 mm (0.25 to 2.0 inches) long. They are dull-colored, commonly gray, brown, green, or yellowish. Adult stoneflies have two pair of membranous wings that fold over the back when at rest. The wings have many veins, and the hind wing is broad at the base and fanlike. Adults of most stonefly species livefrom a
BLACK FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Black Fly. Black Fly, any of a number of species of small humpbacked flies, the females of which are bloodsucking. Black flies are typically dark in color with broad, transparent wings. Adults range in size from 2.5 to 3.5 mm (0.01 to 0.14 in). Black flies are sometimes SAWFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Sawfly, common name applied to four-winged insects, widely distributed in temperate countries. Female sawflies have ovipositors, or egg-laying organs, that are partially modified into sharp-toothed, sawlike instruments with which the insect incises leaves and plant stems to form a receptacle for eggs. SCREWWORM: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE The adult screwworm is a dark, shiny, bluish-green fly about 10 mm (0.4 in) long. It has a reddish-yellow face and three black stripes on its upper thorax between the wings. The fly lays eggs on the skin of the animal host near open wounds such as barbed-wire cuts, scratches from thorns or from fighting, sore eyes, or injuries from brand marks CHEESE SKIPPER: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Cheese Skipper. 2009. Ads. Cheese Skipper, a shiny black fly, 5 mm (0.2 in) in length, found throughout the world. It is best known for its problematic larvae (newly hatched wormlike forms) that live in human foods such as dried or processed meat, fish, and cheese. They are called cheese skippers not only for their habit of feeding oncheese
KATYDID: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Katydid. Katydid, any of several species of long-horned grasshoppers that are found in the western hemisphere. The name katydid is meant to represent the characteristic sound made by the male when it rubs its wings together to attract females. Katydids are tree-living insects that are most commonly heard at night during summer and early fall. BEES: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Bees range in size from tiny species only 2 mm (0.08 in) in length to rather large insects up to 4 cm (1.6 in) long. Many bees are black or gray, but others are bright yellow, red, or metallic green or blue. Social Structure and Nesting Habits. Bees have diverse nesting and social habits. This diversity has provided scientists with a natural JUNE BUG: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE June Bug, common name for any of several beetles in the scarab family, also called June beetle. The adults are most common in June. In the northern United States, the name is applied to the numerous species that are known as May bugs in the southern United States, where theyemerge earlier.
STONEFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Adult stone flies range from 6 to 50 mm (0.25 to 2.0 inches) long. They are dull-colored, commonly gray, brown, green, or yellowish. Adult stoneflies have two pair of membranous wings that fold over the back when at rest. The wings have many veins, and the hind wing is broad at the base and fanlike. Adults of most stonefly species livefrom a
SAWFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Sawfly, common name applied to four-winged insects, widely distributed in temperate countries. Female sawflies have ovipositors, or egg-laying organs, that are partially modified into sharp-toothed, sawlike instruments with which the insect incises leaves and plant stems to form a receptacle for eggs. SPITTLEBUG: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Nymphs are dark greenish, brown, or black, sometimes with lighter spots or a pink abdomen. Adults are brownish orange to dark brown and may have an indistinct diagonal white line across the back. Scientific classification: Spittlebugs are in the insect family Aphrophoridae, order Homoptera. The meadow spittlebug is classified as Philaenus FRUIT FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Fruit Fly, common name for two families of true (two-winged) flies, the larvae of which feed on fresh or decaying vegetable matter. True fruit flies, such as the house fly-sized apple maggot, have intricate, often colorful wing patterns by which females recognize males of theirspecies.
HOUSE FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE It is a biting species that feeds on blood. The little house fly is another member of the family. It resembles the common house fly but is smaller. It is most abundant in late spring and early summer. Scientific classification: The house fly belongs to the family Muscidae. It is classified as Musca domestica. BLOW FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Blow Fly, any of a large family of flies known for the habit of the larvae, or immature flies of, infesting animal carcasses. They are found worldwide, occurring nearly every place inhabited by people. Blow flies are slightly larger than true house flies, and the bodies of many are metallic blue or green in color. ROBBER FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Robber flies are highly variable in size and body shape, ranging from 0.5 to 5.0 cm (0.2 to 2.0 in) in length. Most species are slender-bodied, with hunched backs and tapering abdomens; but some are stout-bodied and hairy, with rounded abdomens, resembling bees. They have large eyes that face toward the sides, and the top of the head is MITE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Mite, common name for some 30,000 species of minute, usually oval-bodied arachnids. They are worldwide in distribution. Mites resemble ticks in having the head, thorax, and abdomen fused into one unsegmented body, but they are usually much smaller. They often have three pairs of legs in the larval stage and four pairs of legs in thenymph and
WATER BEETLE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MOREBARK BEETLEGROUND BEETLETIGER BEETLEWEEVILMETALLIC WOOD BORERCLICK BEETLE Water scavenger beetles do not swim as rapidly as the diving or whirligig beetles; most species are aquatic or amphibian, but a few are terrestrial. Scientific classification: Water beetles belong to the order Coleoptera. True, or diving, water beetles make up the family Dytiscidae. Whirligig beetles make up WHITEFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Whitefly. Whitefly, common name for any member of a family of plant-feeding insects that resemble tiny moths. Whiteflies actually are not flies; they have piercing-sucking mouthparts and are related to aphids, cicadas, and jumping plant lice. About 1200 species are known, mostly from tropical regions; about 100 of these inhabit NorthAmerica.
KATYDID: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Katydid. Katydid, any of several species of long-horned grasshoppers that are found in the western hemisphere. The name katydid is meant to represent the characteristic sound made by the male when it rubs its wings together to attract females. Katydids are tree-living insects that are most commonly heard at night during summer and early fall. BEES: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Bees range in size from tiny species only 2 mm (0.08 in) in length to rather large insects up to 4 cm (1.6 in) long. Many bees are black or gray, but others are bright yellow, red, or metallic green or blue. Social Structure and Nesting Habits. Bees have diverse nesting and social habits. This diversity has provided scientists with a natural STONEFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Adult stone flies range from 6 to 50 mm (0.25 to 2.0 inches) long. They are dull-colored, commonly gray, brown, green, or yellowish. Adult stoneflies have two pair of membranous wings that fold over the back when at rest. The wings have many veins, and the hind wing is broad at the base and fanlike. Adults of most stonefly species livefrom a
SAWFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Sawfly, common name applied to four-winged insects, widely distributed in temperate countries. Female sawflies have ovipositors, or egg-laying organs, that are partially modified into sharp-toothed, sawlike instruments with which the insect incises leaves and plant stems to form a receptacle for eggs. BLACK FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Black Fly. Black Fly, any of a number of species of small humpbacked flies, the females of which are bloodsucking. Black flies are typically dark in color with broad, transparent wings. Adults range in size from 2.5 to 3.5 mm (0.01 to 0.14 in). Black flies are sometimes SCREWWORM: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE The adult screwworm is a dark, shiny, bluish-green fly about 10 mm (0.4 in) long. It has a reddish-yellow face and three black stripes on its upper thorax between the wings. The fly lays eggs on the skin of the animal host near open wounds such as barbed-wire cuts, scratches from thorns or from fighting, sore eyes, or injuries from brand marks CHEESE SKIPPER: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Cheese Skipper, a shiny black fly, 5 mm (0.2 in) in length, found throughout the world. It is best known for its problematic larvae (newly hatched wormlike forms) that live in human foods such as dried or processed meat, fish, and cheese. MITE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Mite, common name for some 30,000 species of minute, usually oval-bodied arachnids. They are worldwide in distribution. Mites resemble ticks in having the head, thorax, and abdomen fused into one unsegmented body, but they are usually much smaller. They often have three pairs of legs in the larval stage and four pairs of legs in thenymph and
WATER BEETLE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MOREBARK BEETLEGROUND BEETLETIGER BEETLEWEEVILMETALLIC WOOD BORERCLICK BEETLE Water scavenger beetles do not swim as rapidly as the diving or whirligig beetles; most species are aquatic or amphibian, but a few are terrestrial. Scientific classification: Water beetles belong to the order Coleoptera. True, or diving, water beetles make up the family Dytiscidae. Whirligig beetles make up WHITEFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Whitefly. Whitefly, common name for any member of a family of plant-feeding insects that resemble tiny moths. Whiteflies actually are not flies; they have piercing-sucking mouthparts and are related to aphids, cicadas, and jumping plant lice. About 1200 species are known, mostly from tropical regions; about 100 of these inhabit NorthAmerica.
KATYDID: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Katydid. Katydid, any of several species of long-horned grasshoppers that are found in the western hemisphere. The name katydid is meant to represent the characteristic sound made by the male when it rubs its wings together to attract females. Katydids are tree-living insects that are most commonly heard at night during summer and early fall. BEES: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Bees range in size from tiny species only 2 mm (0.08 in) in length to rather large insects up to 4 cm (1.6 in) long. Many bees are black or gray, but others are bright yellow, red, or metallic green or blue. Social Structure and Nesting Habits. Bees have diverse nesting and social habits. This diversity has provided scientists with a natural STONEFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Adult stone flies range from 6 to 50 mm (0.25 to 2.0 inches) long. They are dull-colored, commonly gray, brown, green, or yellowish. Adult stoneflies have two pair of membranous wings that fold over the back when at rest. The wings have many veins, and the hind wing is broad at the base and fanlike. Adults of most stonefly species livefrom a
SAWFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Sawfly, common name applied to four-winged insects, widely distributed in temperate countries. Female sawflies have ovipositors, or egg-laying organs, that are partially modified into sharp-toothed, sawlike instruments with which the insect incises leaves and plant stems to form a receptacle for eggs. BLACK FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Black Fly. Black Fly, any of a number of species of small humpbacked flies, the females of which are bloodsucking. Black flies are typically dark in color with broad, transparent wings. Adults range in size from 2.5 to 3.5 mm (0.01 to 0.14 in). Black flies are sometimes SCREWWORM: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE The adult screwworm is a dark, shiny, bluish-green fly about 10 mm (0.4 in) long. It has a reddish-yellow face and three black stripes on its upper thorax between the wings. The fly lays eggs on the skin of the animal host near open wounds such as barbed-wire cuts, scratches from thorns or from fighting, sore eyes, or injuries from brand marks CHEESE SKIPPER: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Cheese Skipper, a shiny black fly, 5 mm (0.2 in) in length, found throughout the world. It is best known for its problematic larvae (newly hatched wormlike forms) that live in human foods such as dried or processed meat, fish, and cheese. KATYDID: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Katydid. Katydid, any of several species of long-horned grasshoppers that are found in the western hemisphere. The name katydid is meant to represent the characteristic sound made by the male when it rubs its wings together to attract females. Katydids are tree-living insects that are most commonly heard at night during summer and early fall. BEES: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Bees range in size from tiny species only 2 mm (0.08 in) in length to rather large insects up to 4 cm (1.6 in) long. Many bees are black or gray, but others are bright yellow, red, or metallic green or blue. Social Structure and Nesting Habits. Bees have diverse nesting and social habits. This diversity has provided scientists with a natural JUNE BUG: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE June Bug, common name for any of several beetles in the scarab family, also called June beetle. The adults are most common in June. In the northern United States, the name is applied to the numerous species that are known as May bugs in the southern United States, where theyemerge earlier.
STONEFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Adult stone flies range from 6 to 50 mm (0.25 to 2.0 inches) long. They are dull-colored, commonly gray, brown, green, or yellowish. Adult stoneflies have two pair of membranous wings that fold over the back when at rest. The wings have many veins, and the hind wing is broad at the base and fanlike. Adults of most stonefly species livefrom a
SAWFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Sawfly, common name applied to four-winged insects, widely distributed in temperate countries. Female sawflies have ovipositors, or egg-laying organs, that are partially modified into sharp-toothed, sawlike instruments with which the insect incises leaves and plant stems to form a receptacle for eggs. SPITTLEBUG: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Nymphs are dark greenish, brown, or black, sometimes with lighter spots or a pink abdomen. Adults are brownish orange to dark brown and may have an indistinct diagonal white line across the back. Scientific classification: Spittlebugs are in the insect family Aphrophoridae, order Homoptera. The meadow spittlebug is classified as Philaenus FRUIT FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Fruit Fly, common name for two families of true (two-winged) flies, the larvae of which feed on fresh or decaying vegetable matter. True fruit flies, such as the house fly-sized apple maggot, have intricate, often colorful wing patterns by which females recognize males of theirspecies.
HOUSE FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE It is a biting species that feeds on blood. The little house fly is another member of the family. It resembles the common house fly but is smaller. It is most abundant in late spring and early summer. Scientific classification: The house fly belongs to the family Muscidae. It is classified as Musca domestica. BLOW FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Blow Fly, any of a large family of flies known for the habit of the larvae, or immature flies of, infesting animal carcasses. They are found worldwide, occurring nearly every place inhabited by people. Blow flies are slightly larger than true house flies, and the bodies of many are metallic blue or green in color. ROBBER FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Robber flies are highly variable in size and body shape, ranging from 0.5 to 5.0 cm (0.2 to 2.0 in) in length. Most species are slender-bodied, with hunched backs and tapering abdomens; but some are stout-bodied and hairy, with rounded abdomens, resembling bees. They have large eyes that face toward the sides, and the top of the head is MITE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Mite, common name for some 30,000 species of minute, usually oval-bodied arachnids. They are worldwide in distribution. Mites resemble ticks in having the head, thorax, and abdomen fused into one unsegmented body, but they are usually much smaller. They often have three pairs of legs in the larval stage and four pairs of legs in thenymph and
WATER BEETLE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MOREBARK BEETLEGROUND BEETLETIGER BEETLEWEEVILMETALLIC WOOD BORERCLICK BEETLE Water scavenger beetles do not swim as rapidly as the diving or whirligig beetles; most species are aquatic or amphibian, but a few are terrestrial. Scientific classification: Water beetles belong to the order Coleoptera. True, or diving, water beetles make up the family Dytiscidae. Whirligig beetles make up GALL MIDGE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Gall Midge, any member of a family of small plant-feeding flies that cause swellings or distortions of plant tissue, called galls. They are also called gall gnats, gall flies, and cecidomyiids. Over 1200 species of gall midges are found in North America. Adult gall midges are tiny flies that look like small mosquitoes. SAWFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Sawfly, common name applied to four-winged insects, widely distributed in temperate countries. Female sawflies have ovipositors, or egg-laying organs, that are partially modified into sharp-toothed, sawlike instruments with which the insect incises leaves and plant stems to form a receptacle for eggs. SCREWWORM: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE The adult screwworm is a dark, shiny, bluish-green fly about 10 mm (0.4 in) long. It has a reddish-yellow face and three black stripes on its upper thorax between the wings. The fly lays eggs on the skin of the animal host near open wounds such as barbed-wire cuts, scratches from thorns or from fighting, sore eyes, or injuries from brand marks BLACK FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Black Fly. Black Fly, any of a number of species of small humpbacked flies, the females of which are bloodsucking. Black flies are typically dark in color with broad, transparent wings. Adults range in size from 2.5 to 3.5 mm (0.01 to 0.14 in). Black flies are sometimes ZORAPTERAN: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Zorapteran, common name for minute, rarely seen insects that live in organic debris and sawdust. These obscure creatures are sometimes called angel insects; Zorapterans occur in small to relatively large colonies under bark, in moist leaf litter or rotting logs, and BLOW FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Blow Fly, any of a large family of flies known for the habit of the larvae, or immature flies of, infesting animal carcasses. They are found worldwide, occurring nearly every place inhabited by people. Blow flies are slightly larger than true house flies, and the bodies of many are metallic blue or green in color. KATYDID: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Katydid. Katydid, any of several species of long-horned grasshoppers that are found in the western hemisphere. The name katydid is meant to represent the characteristic sound made by the male when it rubs its wings together to attract females. Katydids are tree-living insects that are most commonly heard at night during summer and early fall. CHEESE SKIPPER: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Cheese Skipper. 2009. Ads. Cheese Skipper, a shiny black fly, 5 mm (0.2 in) in length, found throughout the world. It is best known for its problematic larvae (newly hatched wormlike forms) that live in human foods such as dried or processed meat, fish, and cheese. They are called cheese skippers not only for their habit of feeding oncheese
MITE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Mite, common name for some 30,000 species of minute, usually oval-bodied arachnids. They are worldwide in distribution. Mites resemble ticks in having the head, thorax, and abdomen fused into one unsegmented body, but they are usually much smaller. They often have three pairs of legs in the larval stage and four pairs of legs in thenymph and
WATER BEETLE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MOREBARK BEETLEGROUND BEETLETIGER BEETLEWEEVILMETALLIC WOOD BORERCLICK BEETLE Water scavenger beetles do not swim as rapidly as the diving or whirligig beetles; most species are aquatic or amphibian, but a few are terrestrial. Scientific classification: Water beetles belong to the order Coleoptera. True, or diving, water beetles make up the family Dytiscidae. Whirligig beetles make up GALL MIDGE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Gall Midge, any member of a family of small plant-feeding flies that cause swellings or distortions of plant tissue, called galls. They are also called gall gnats, gall flies, and cecidomyiids. Over 1200 species of gall midges are found in North America. Adult gall midges are tiny flies that look like small mosquitoes. SAWFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Sawfly, common name applied to four-winged insects, widely distributed in temperate countries. Female sawflies have ovipositors, or egg-laying organs, that are partially modified into sharp-toothed, sawlike instruments with which the insect incises leaves and plant stems to form a receptacle for eggs. SCREWWORM: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE The adult screwworm is a dark, shiny, bluish-green fly about 10 mm (0.4 in) long. It has a reddish-yellow face and three black stripes on its upper thorax between the wings. The fly lays eggs on the skin of the animal host near open wounds such as barbed-wire cuts, scratches from thorns or from fighting, sore eyes, or injuries from brand marks BLACK FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Black Fly. Black Fly, any of a number of species of small humpbacked flies, the females of which are bloodsucking. Black flies are typically dark in color with broad, transparent wings. Adults range in size from 2.5 to 3.5 mm (0.01 to 0.14 in). Black flies are sometimes ZORAPTERAN: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Zorapteran, common name for minute, rarely seen insects that live in organic debris and sawdust. These obscure creatures are sometimes called angel insects; Zorapterans occur in small to relatively large colonies under bark, in moist leaf litter or rotting logs, and BLOW FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Blow Fly, any of a large family of flies known for the habit of the larvae, or immature flies of, infesting animal carcasses. They are found worldwide, occurring nearly every place inhabited by people. Blow flies are slightly larger than true house flies, and the bodies of many are metallic blue or green in color. KATYDID: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Katydid. Katydid, any of several species of long-horned grasshoppers that are found in the western hemisphere. The name katydid is meant to represent the characteristic sound made by the male when it rubs its wings together to attract females. Katydids are tree-living insects that are most commonly heard at night during summer and early fall. CHEESE SKIPPER: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Cheese Skipper. 2009. Ads. Cheese Skipper, a shiny black fly, 5 mm (0.2 in) in length, found throughout the world. It is best known for its problematic larvae (newly hatched wormlike forms) that live in human foods such as dried or processed meat, fish, and cheese. They are called cheese skippers not only for their habit of feeding oncheese
ZORAPTERAN: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Zorapteran, common name for minute, rarely seen insects that live in organic debris and sawdust. These obscure creatures are sometimes called angel insects; Zorapterans occur in small to relatively large colonies under bark, in moist leaf litter or rotting logs, and KATYDID: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Katydid. Katydid, any of several species of long-horned grasshoppers that are found in the western hemisphere. The name katydid is meant to represent the characteristic sound made by the male when it rubs its wings together to attract females. Katydids are tree-living insects that are most commonly heard at night during summer and early fall. WHITEFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Whitefly. Whitefly, common name for any member of a family of plant-feeding insects that resemble tiny moths. Whiteflies actually are not flies; they have piercing-sucking mouthparts and are related to aphids, cicadas, and jumping plant lice. About 1200 species are known, mostly from tropical regions; about 100 of these inhabit NorthAmerica.
FLEA: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Information on Flea - pictures, articles, classification and more. Flea, common name for small, bloodsucking, wingless insects. Adult fleas, which feed on the blood of their hosts, are surface parasites on the skin of humans and other mammals and, less often, on birds. TSETSE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Tsetse, also tsetse fly, common name for any of several African bloodsucking insects. Tsetses are found abundantly in forests and along the edges of lakes and rivers in central Africa. The adult flies, which are about 2.5 cm (about 1 in) long, are brown above and brown with yellow stripes or spots below. They have biting mouthparts,and a large
BLOW FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Blow Fly, any of a large family of flies known for the habit of the larvae, or immature flies of, infesting animal carcasses. They are found worldwide, occurring nearly every place inhabited by people. Blow flies are slightly larger than true house flies, and the bodies of many are metallic blue or green in color. DIGGER BEE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE The Pacific sand dune bee is a digger bee that nests in coastal sand dunes in California, Oregon, and Washington. The females dig nests 0.9 m (3 ft) deep in compacted dune sand. Scientific classification: The digger bees comprise the subfamily Anthophorinae, family Anthophoridae, order Hymenoptera. The southeastern blueberry bee isHabropoda
TICK: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Ticks are actually a specialized group of mites and share many features with other mites. In general, they are larger than most mites, ranging from about 0.2 to 0.6 cm (about 0.08 to 0.24 in) in length, although females may be 1 cm (0.4 in) or more in diameter when fully engorged with blood. The adult tick has a mitelike body with atough skin
CHIGOE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Information on Chigoe - pictures, articles, classification and more. Chigoe, common name for a burrowing, biting, tropical American flea. It is sometimes also called jigger, jigger flea, or, improperly, chigger, although a chigger is a mite, a different kind of animalpest.
ROBBER FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Robber flies are highly variable in size and body shape, ranging from 0.5 to 5.0 cm (0.2 to 2.0 in) in length. Most species are slender-bodied, with hunched backs and tapering abdomens; but some are stout-bodied and hairy, with rounded abdomens, resembling bees. They have large eyes that face toward the sides, and the top of the head is MITE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Mite, common name for some 30,000 species of minute, usually oval-bodied arachnids. They are worldwide in distribution. Mites resemble ticks in having the head, thorax, and abdomen fused into one unsegmented body, but they are usually much smaller. They often have three pairs of legs in the larval stage and four pairs of legs in thenymph and
WATER BEETLE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MOREBARK BEETLEGROUND BEETLETIGER BEETLEWEEVILMETALLIC WOOD BORERCLICK BEETLE Water scavenger beetles do not swim as rapidly as the diving or whirligig beetles; most species are aquatic or amphibian, but a few are terrestrial. Scientific classification: Water beetles belong to the order Coleoptera. True, or diving, water beetles make up the family Dytiscidae. Whirligig beetles make up SAWFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Sawfly, common name applied to four-winged insects, widely distributed in temperate countries. Female sawflies have ovipositors, or egg-laying organs, that are partially modified into sharp-toothed, sawlike instruments with which the insect incises leaves and plant stems to form a receptacle for eggs. BEES: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Bees range in size from tiny species only 2 mm (0.08 in) in length to rather large insects up to 4 cm (1.6 in) long. Many bees are black or gray, but others are bright yellow, red, or metallic green or blue. Social Structure and Nesting Habits. Bees have diverse nesting and social habits. This diversity has provided scientists with a natural CHIGOE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORECHIGOE FLEA INFESTATIONCHIGOE FLEA TREATMENTCHIGOE FLEAS ON HUMANS Information on Chigoe - pictures, articles, classification and more. Chigoe, common name for a burrowing, biting, tropical American flea. It is sometimes also called jigger, jigger flea, or, improperly, chigger, although a chigger is a mite, a different kind of animalpest.
BLACK FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MOREINSECT KINGDOM CLASSIFICATION Black Fly. Black Fly, any of a number of species of small humpbacked flies, the females of which are bloodsucking. Black flies are typically dark in color with broad, transparent wings. Adults range in size from 2.5 to 3.5 mm (0.01 to 0.14 in). Black flies are sometimes ROBBER FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Robber flies are highly variable in size and body shape, ranging from 0.5 to 5.0 cm (0.2 to 2.0 in) in length. Most species are slender-bodied, with hunched backs and tapering abdomens; but some are stout-bodied and hairy, with rounded abdomens, resembling bees. They have large eyes that face toward the sides, and the top of the head is JUNE BUG: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE June Bug, common name for any of several beetles in the scarab family, also called June beetle. The adults are most common in June. In the northern United States, the name is applied to the numerous species that are known as May bugs in the southern United States, where theyemerge earlier.
SCREWWORM: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE The adult screwworm is a dark, shiny, bluish-green fly about 10 mm (0.4 in) long. It has a reddish-yellow face and three black stripes on its upper thorax between the wings. The fly lays eggs on the skin of the animal host near open wounds such as barbed-wire cuts, scratches from thorns or from fighting, sore eyes, or injuries from brand marks CHEESE SKIPPER: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Cheese Skipper. 2009. Ads. Cheese Skipper, a shiny black fly, 5 mm (0.2 in) in length, found throughout the world. It is best known for its problematic larvae (newly hatched wormlike forms) that live in human foods such as dried or processed meat, fish, and cheese. They are called cheese skippers not only for their habit of feeding oncheese
MITE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Mite, common name for some 30,000 species of minute, usually oval-bodied arachnids. They are worldwide in distribution. Mites resemble ticks in having the head, thorax, and abdomen fused into one unsegmented body, but they are usually much smaller. They often have three pairs of legs in the larval stage and four pairs of legs in thenymph and
WATER BEETLE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MOREBARK BEETLEGROUND BEETLETIGER BEETLEWEEVILMETALLIC WOOD BORERCLICK BEETLE Water scavenger beetles do not swim as rapidly as the diving or whirligig beetles; most species are aquatic or amphibian, but a few are terrestrial. Scientific classification: Water beetles belong to the order Coleoptera. True, or diving, water beetles make up the family Dytiscidae. Whirligig beetles make up SAWFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Sawfly, common name applied to four-winged insects, widely distributed in temperate countries. Female sawflies have ovipositors, or egg-laying organs, that are partially modified into sharp-toothed, sawlike instruments with which the insect incises leaves and plant stems to form a receptacle for eggs. BEES: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Bees range in size from tiny species only 2 mm (0.08 in) in length to rather large insects up to 4 cm (1.6 in) long. Many bees are black or gray, but others are bright yellow, red, or metallic green or blue. Social Structure and Nesting Habits. Bees have diverse nesting and social habits. This diversity has provided scientists with a natural CHIGOE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORECHIGOE FLEA INFESTATIONCHIGOE FLEA TREATMENTCHIGOE FLEAS ON HUMANS Information on Chigoe - pictures, articles, classification and more. Chigoe, common name for a burrowing, biting, tropical American flea. It is sometimes also called jigger, jigger flea, or, improperly, chigger, although a chigger is a mite, a different kind of animalpest.
BLACK FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MOREINSECT KINGDOM CLASSIFICATION Black Fly. Black Fly, any of a number of species of small humpbacked flies, the females of which are bloodsucking. Black flies are typically dark in color with broad, transparent wings. Adults range in size from 2.5 to 3.5 mm (0.01 to 0.14 in). Black flies are sometimes ROBBER FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Robber flies are highly variable in size and body shape, ranging from 0.5 to 5.0 cm (0.2 to 2.0 in) in length. Most species are slender-bodied, with hunched backs and tapering abdomens; but some are stout-bodied and hairy, with rounded abdomens, resembling bees. They have large eyes that face toward the sides, and the top of the head is JUNE BUG: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE June Bug, common name for any of several beetles in the scarab family, also called June beetle. The adults are most common in June. In the northern United States, the name is applied to the numerous species that are known as May bugs in the southern United States, where theyemerge earlier.
SCREWWORM: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE The adult screwworm is a dark, shiny, bluish-green fly about 10 mm (0.4 in) long. It has a reddish-yellow face and three black stripes on its upper thorax between the wings. The fly lays eggs on the skin of the animal host near open wounds such as barbed-wire cuts, scratches from thorns or from fighting, sore eyes, or injuries from brand marks CHEESE SKIPPER: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Cheese Skipper. 2009. Ads. Cheese Skipper, a shiny black fly, 5 mm (0.2 in) in length, found throughout the world. It is best known for its problematic larvae (newly hatched wormlike forms) that live in human foods such as dried or processed meat, fish, and cheese. They are called cheese skippers not only for their habit of feeding oncheese
ROBBER FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Robber flies are highly variable in size and body shape, ranging from 0.5 to 5.0 cm (0.2 to 2.0 in) in length. Most species are slender-bodied, with hunched backs and tapering abdomens; but some are stout-bodied and hairy, with rounded abdomens, resembling bees. They have large eyes that face toward the sides, and the top of the head is DIGGER BEE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE The Pacific sand dune bee is a digger bee that nests in coastal sand dunes in California, Oregon, and Washington. The females dig nests 0.9 m (3 ft) deep in compacted dune sand. Scientific classification: The digger bees comprise the subfamily Anthophorinae, family Anthophoridae, order Hymenoptera. The southeastern blueberry bee isHabropoda
JUNE BUG: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE June Bug, common name for any of several beetles in the scarab family, also called June beetle. The adults are most common in June. In the northern United States, the name is applied to the numerous species that are known as May bugs in the southern United States, where theyemerge earlier.
WEEVIL: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Information on Weevil - pictures, articles, classification and more. Weevil, common name for most members of a superfamily of beetles. The adult weevil is usually dull in color and herbivorous, characterized by a prolongation of the anterior part of the head into a rostrum (a beaklike extension). STONEFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Adult stone flies range from 6 to 50 mm (0.25 to 2.0 inches) long. They are dull-colored, commonly gray, brown, green, or yellowish. Adult stoneflies have two pair of membranous wings that fold over the back when at rest. The wings have many veins, and the hind wing is broad at the base and fanlike. Adults of most stonefly species livefrom a
WHITEFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Whitefly. Whitefly, common name for any member of a family of plant-feeding insects that resemble tiny moths. Whiteflies actually are not flies; they have piercing-sucking mouthparts and are related to aphids, cicadas, and jumping plant lice. About 1200 species are known, mostly from tropical regions; about 100 of these inhabit NorthAmerica.
BLOW FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Blow Fly, any of a large family of flies known for the habit of the larvae, or immature flies of, infesting animal carcasses. They are found worldwide, occurring nearly every place inhabited by people. Blow flies are slightly larger than true house flies, and the bodies of many are metallic blue or green in color. FLEA: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Information on Flea - pictures, articles, classification and more. Flea, common name for small, bloodsucking, wingless insects. Adult fleas, which feed on the blood of their hosts, are surface parasites on the skin of humans and other mammals and, less often, on birds. KATYDID: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Katydid. Katydid, any of several species of long-horned grasshoppers that are found in the western hemisphere. The name katydid is meant to represent the characteristic sound made by the male when it rubs its wings together to attract females. Katydids are tree-living insects that are most commonly heard at night during summer and early fall. CARPENTER BEE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE In North America, these species are known as small carpenter bees. They are black or metallic greenish-black and measure 2 to 3 mm (0.1 to 0.2 in) in length. Scientific classification: Carpenter bees comprise the genus Xylocopa in the family Anthophoridae of the order Hymenoptera. The Virginia carpenter bee is Xylocopa virginica, thehairy
MITE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Mite, common name for some 30,000 species of minute, usually oval-bodied arachnids. They are worldwide in distribution. Mites resemble ticks in having the head, thorax, and abdomen fused into one unsegmented body, but they are usually much smaller. They often have three pairs of legs in the larval stage and four pairs of legs in thenymph and
WATER BEETLE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MOREBARK BEETLEGROUND BEETLETIGER BEETLEWEEVILMETALLIC WOOD BORERCLICK BEETLE Water scavenger beetles do not swim as rapidly as the diving or whirligig beetles; most species are aquatic or amphibian, but a few are terrestrial. Scientific classification: Water beetles belong to the order Coleoptera. True, or diving, water beetles make up the family Dytiscidae. Whirligig beetles make up SAWFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Sawfly, common name applied to four-winged insects, widely distributed in temperate countries. Female sawflies have ovipositors, or egg-laying organs, that are partially modified into sharp-toothed, sawlike instruments with which the insect incises leaves and plant stems to form a receptacle for eggs. BEES: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Bees range in size from tiny species only 2 mm (0.08 in) in length to rather large insects up to 4 cm (1.6 in) long. Many bees are black or gray, but others are bright yellow, red, or metallic green or blue. Social Structure and Nesting Habits. Bees have diverse nesting and social habits. This diversity has provided scientists with a natural CHIGOE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORECHIGOE FLEA INFESTATIONCHIGOE FLEA TREATMENTCHIGOE FLEAS ON HUMANS Information on Chigoe - pictures, articles, classification and more. Chigoe, common name for a burrowing, biting, tropical American flea. It is sometimes also called jigger, jigger flea, or, improperly, chigger, although a chigger is a mite, a different kind of animalpest.
ROBBER FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Robber flies are highly variable in size and body shape, ranging from 0.5 to 5.0 cm (0.2 to 2.0 in) in length. Most species are slender-bodied, with hunched backs and tapering abdomens; but some are stout-bodied and hairy, with rounded abdomens, resembling bees. They have large eyes that face toward the sides, and the top of the head is BLACK FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MOREINSECT KINGDOM CLASSIFICATION Black Fly. Black Fly, any of a number of species of small humpbacked flies, the females of which are bloodsucking. Black flies are typically dark in color with broad, transparent wings. Adults range in size from 2.5 to 3.5 mm (0.01 to 0.14 in). Black flies are sometimes JUNE BUG: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE June Bug, common name for any of several beetles in the scarab family, also called June beetle. The adults are most common in June. In the northern United States, the name is applied to the numerous species that are known as May bugs in the southern United States, where theyemerge earlier.
SCREWWORM: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE The adult screwworm is a dark, shiny, bluish-green fly about 10 mm (0.4 in) long. It has a reddish-yellow face and three black stripes on its upper thorax between the wings. The fly lays eggs on the skin of the animal host near open wounds such as barbed-wire cuts, scratches from thorns or from fighting, sore eyes, or injuries from brand marks CHEESE SKIPPER: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Cheese Skipper. 2009. Ads. Cheese Skipper, a shiny black fly, 5 mm (0.2 in) in length, found throughout the world. It is best known for its problematic larvae (newly hatched wormlike forms) that live in human foods such as dried or processed meat, fish, and cheese. They are called cheese skippers not only for their habit of feeding oncheese
MITE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Mite, common name for some 30,000 species of minute, usually oval-bodied arachnids. They are worldwide in distribution. Mites resemble ticks in having the head, thorax, and abdomen fused into one unsegmented body, but they are usually much smaller. They often have three pairs of legs in the larval stage and four pairs of legs in thenymph and
WATER BEETLE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MOREBARK BEETLEGROUND BEETLETIGER BEETLEWEEVILMETALLIC WOOD BORERCLICK BEETLE Water scavenger beetles do not swim as rapidly as the diving or whirligig beetles; most species are aquatic or amphibian, but a few are terrestrial. Scientific classification: Water beetles belong to the order Coleoptera. True, or diving, water beetles make up the family Dytiscidae. Whirligig beetles make up SAWFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Sawfly, common name applied to four-winged insects, widely distributed in temperate countries. Female sawflies have ovipositors, or egg-laying organs, that are partially modified into sharp-toothed, sawlike instruments with which the insect incises leaves and plant stems to form a receptacle for eggs. BEES: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Bees range in size from tiny species only 2 mm (0.08 in) in length to rather large insects up to 4 cm (1.6 in) long. Many bees are black or gray, but others are bright yellow, red, or metallic green or blue. Social Structure and Nesting Habits. Bees have diverse nesting and social habits. This diversity has provided scientists with a natural CHIGOE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORECHIGOE FLEA INFESTATIONCHIGOE FLEA TREATMENTCHIGOE FLEAS ON HUMANS Information on Chigoe - pictures, articles, classification and more. Chigoe, common name for a burrowing, biting, tropical American flea. It is sometimes also called jigger, jigger flea, or, improperly, chigger, although a chigger is a mite, a different kind of animalpest.
BLACK FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MOREINSECT KINGDOM CLASSIFICATION Black Fly. Black Fly, any of a number of species of small humpbacked flies, the females of which are bloodsucking. Black flies are typically dark in color with broad, transparent wings. Adults range in size from 2.5 to 3.5 mm (0.01 to 0.14 in). Black flies are sometimes ROBBER FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Robber flies are highly variable in size and body shape, ranging from 0.5 to 5.0 cm (0.2 to 2.0 in) in length. Most species are slender-bodied, with hunched backs and tapering abdomens; but some are stout-bodied and hairy, with rounded abdomens, resembling bees. They have large eyes that face toward the sides, and the top of the head is JUNE BUG: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE June Bug, common name for any of several beetles in the scarab family, also called June beetle. The adults are most common in June. In the northern United States, the name is applied to the numerous species that are known as May bugs in the southern United States, where theyemerge earlier.
SCREWWORM: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE The adult screwworm is a dark, shiny, bluish-green fly about 10 mm (0.4 in) long. It has a reddish-yellow face and three black stripes on its upper thorax between the wings. The fly lays eggs on the skin of the animal host near open wounds such as barbed-wire cuts, scratches from thorns or from fighting, sore eyes, or injuries from brand marks CHEESE SKIPPER: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Cheese Skipper. 2009. Ads. Cheese Skipper, a shiny black fly, 5 mm (0.2 in) in length, found throughout the world. It is best known for its problematic larvae (newly hatched wormlike forms) that live in human foods such as dried or processed meat, fish, and cheese. They are called cheese skippers not only for their habit of feeding oncheese
ROBBER FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Robber flies are highly variable in size and body shape, ranging from 0.5 to 5.0 cm (0.2 to 2.0 in) in length. Most species are slender-bodied, with hunched backs and tapering abdomens; but some are stout-bodied and hairy, with rounded abdomens, resembling bees. They have large eyes that face toward the sides, and the top of the head is DIGGER BEE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE The Pacific sand dune bee is a digger bee that nests in coastal sand dunes in California, Oregon, and Washington. The females dig nests 0.9 m (3 ft) deep in compacted dune sand. Scientific classification: The digger bees comprise the subfamily Anthophorinae, family Anthophoridae, order Hymenoptera. The southeastern blueberry bee isHabropoda
JUNE BUG: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE June Bug, common name for any of several beetles in the scarab family, also called June beetle. The adults are most common in June. In the northern United States, the name is applied to the numerous species that are known as May bugs in the southern United States, where theyemerge earlier.
WEEVIL: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Information on Weevil - pictures, articles, classification and more. Weevil, common name for most members of a superfamily of beetles. The adult weevil is usually dull in color and herbivorous, characterized by a prolongation of the anterior part of the head into a rostrum (a beaklike extension). STONEFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Adult stone flies range from 6 to 50 mm (0.25 to 2.0 inches) long. They are dull-colored, commonly gray, brown, green, or yellowish. Adult stoneflies have two pair of membranous wings that fold over the back when at rest. The wings have many veins, and the hind wing is broad at the base and fanlike. Adults of most stonefly species livefrom a
WHITEFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Whitefly. Whitefly, common name for any member of a family of plant-feeding insects that resemble tiny moths. Whiteflies actually are not flies; they have piercing-sucking mouthparts and are related to aphids, cicadas, and jumping plant lice. About 1200 species are known, mostly from tropical regions; about 100 of these inhabit NorthAmerica.
BLOW FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Blow Fly, any of a large family of flies known for the habit of the larvae, or immature flies of, infesting animal carcasses. They are found worldwide, occurring nearly every place inhabited by people. Blow flies are slightly larger than true house flies, and the bodies of many are metallic blue or green in color. FLEA: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Information on Flea - pictures, articles, classification and more. Flea, common name for small, bloodsucking, wingless insects. Adult fleas, which feed on the blood of their hosts, are surface parasites on the skin of humans and other mammals and, less often, on birds. KATYDID: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Katydid. Katydid, any of several species of long-horned grasshoppers that are found in the western hemisphere. The name katydid is meant to represent the characteristic sound made by the male when it rubs its wings together to attract females. Katydids are tree-living insects that are most commonly heard at night during summer and early fall. CARPENTER BEE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE In North America, these species are known as small carpenter bees. They are black or metallic greenish-black and measure 2 to 3 mm (0.1 to 0.2 in) in length. Scientific classification: Carpenter bees comprise the genus Xylocopa in the family Anthophoridae of the order Hymenoptera. The Virginia carpenter bee is Xylocopa virginica, thehairy
MITE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Mite, common name for some 30,000 species of minute, usually oval-bodied arachnids. They are worldwide in distribution. Mites resemble ticks in having the head, thorax, and abdomen fused into one unsegmented body, but they are usually much smaller. WATER BEETLE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MOREBARK BEETLEGROUND BEETLETIGER BEETLEWEEVILMETALLIC WOOD BORERCLICK BEETLE Water Beetle, common name for any of numerous aquatic beetles including the true, or diving, water beetles, the whirligig beetles, and the water scavenger beetles. SAWFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Sawfly, common name applied to four-winged insects, widely distributed in temperate countries. Female sawflies have ovipositors, or egg-laying organs, that are partially modified into sharp-toothed, sawlike instruments with which the insect incises leaves and plant stems to form a receptacle for eggs. BEES: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Bee, common name for a winged, flower-feeding insect with branched body hairs. Characteristics Bees are dependent on pollen as a protein source and on flower nectar or oils as an energy source. CHIGOE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORECHIGOE FLEA INFESTATIONCHIGOE FLEA TREATMENTCHIGOE FLEAS ON HUMANS Information on Chigoe - pictures, articles, classification and more. Chigoe, common name for a burrowing, biting, tropical American flea. It is sometimes also called jigger, jigger flea, or, improperly, chigger, although a chigger is a mite, a different kind of animalpest.
JUNE BUG: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE June Bug, common name for any of several beetles in the scarab family, also called June beetle. The adults are most common in June. In the northern United States, the name is applied to the numerous species that are known as May bugs in the southern United States, where theyemerge earlier.
SCREWWORM: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Screwworm (fly), a parasitic fly known for its screw-shaped larvae, which infest open wounds. The screwworm is a serious pest of livestock and certain domestic and wild animals. BLACK FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MOREINSECT KINGDOM CLASSIFICATION Black Fly, any of a number of species of small humpbacked flies, the females of which are bloodsucking. Black flies are typically dark in color with broad, transparent wings. ROBBER FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Robber Fly, any of a family of medium to large predatory flies known for their fast flight, excellent vision, and their habit of catching large prey while in flight. CHEESE SKIPPER: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Cheese Skipper, a shiny black fly, 5 mm (0.2 in) in length, found throughout the world. It is best known for its problematic larvae (newly hatched wormlike forms) that live in human foods such as dried or processed meat, fish, and cheese. MITE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Mite, common name for some 30,000 species of minute, usually oval-bodied arachnids. They are worldwide in distribution. Mites resemble ticks in having the head, thorax, and abdomen fused into one unsegmented body, but they are usually much smaller. WATER BEETLE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MOREBARK BEETLEGROUND BEETLETIGER BEETLEWEEVILMETALLIC WOOD BORERCLICK BEETLE Water Beetle, common name for any of numerous aquatic beetles including the true, or diving, water beetles, the whirligig beetles, and the water scavenger beetles. SAWFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Sawfly, common name applied to four-winged insects, widely distributed in temperate countries. Female sawflies have ovipositors, or egg-laying organs, that are partially modified into sharp-toothed, sawlike instruments with which the insect incises leaves and plant stems to form a receptacle for eggs. BEES: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Bee, common name for a winged, flower-feeding insect with branched body hairs. Characteristics Bees are dependent on pollen as a protein source and on flower nectar or oils as an energy source. CHIGOE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORECHIGOE FLEA INFESTATIONCHIGOE FLEA TREATMENTCHIGOE FLEAS ON HUMANS Information on Chigoe - pictures, articles, classification and more. Chigoe, common name for a burrowing, biting, tropical American flea. It is sometimes also called jigger, jigger flea, or, improperly, chigger, although a chigger is a mite, a different kind of animalpest.
JUNE BUG: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE June Bug, common name for any of several beetles in the scarab family, also called June beetle. The adults are most common in June. In the northern United States, the name is applied to the numerous species that are known as May bugs in the southern United States, where theyemerge earlier.
SCREWWORM: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Screwworm (fly), a parasitic fly known for its screw-shaped larvae, which infest open wounds. The screwworm is a serious pest of livestock and certain domestic and wild animals. BLACK FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MOREINSECT KINGDOM CLASSIFICATION Black Fly, any of a number of species of small humpbacked flies, the females of which are bloodsucking. Black flies are typically dark in color with broad, transparent wings. ROBBER FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Robber Fly, any of a family of medium to large predatory flies known for their fast flight, excellent vision, and their habit of catching large prey while in flight. CHEESE SKIPPER: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Cheese Skipper, a shiny black fly, 5 mm (0.2 in) in length, found throughout the world. It is best known for its problematic larvae (newly hatched wormlike forms) that live in human foods such as dried or processed meat, fish, and cheese. ROBBER FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Robber Fly, any of a family of medium to large predatory flies known for their fast flight, excellent vision, and their habit of catching large prey while in flight. JUNE BUG: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE June Bug, common name for any of several beetles in the scarab family, also called June beetle. The adults are most common in June. In the northern United States, the name is applied to the numerous species that are known as May bugs in the southern United States, where theyemerge earlier.
WEEVIL: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Information on Weevil - pictures, articles, classification and more. Weevil, common name for most members of a superfamily of beetles. The adult weevil is usually dull in color and herbivorous, characterized by a prolongation of the anterior part of the head into a rostrum (a beaklike extension). DIGGER BEE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Digger Bee, common name for a group of robust, fast-flying, ground-nesting bees with velvety fur. These bees live throughout the world. There are several thousand species, more than 900 of which occur in the United States and Canada. BLOW FLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Blow Fly, any of a large family of flies known for the habit of the larvae, or immature flies of, infesting animal carcasses. They are found worldwide, occurring nearly every place inhabited by people. WHITEFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Whitefly, common name for any member of a family of plant-feeding insects that resemble tiny moths. Whiteflies actually are not flies; they have piercing-sucking mouthparts and are related to aphids, cicadas, and jumping plant lice. GALL MIDGE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Gall Midge, any member of a family of small plant-feeding flies that cause swellings or distortions of plant tissue, called galls. They are also called gall gnats, gall flies, and cecidomyiids. KATYDID: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Katydid, any of several species of long-horned grasshoppers that are found in the western hemisphere. The name katydid is meant to represent the characteristic sound made by the male when it rubs its wings together to attract females. STONEFLY: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Stonefly, freshwater aquatic insect, the larvae of which occur on rocks in streams. Stonefly larvae live in cold, gravelly or mucky stream bottoms and are a key food for trout and other fish. CARPENTER BEE: PICTURES, INFORMATION, CLASSIFICATION AND MORE Carpenter Bee, common name for a group of mostly large, metallic-colored bees that construct nests in flower stalks or wood. There are about 730 species of carpenter bees. Everything About Welcome!HI,
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