Ladybug (Coccinella septempunctata) close-up. As you can see, this Coleoptera has a skull painted on its head, just like a common heavy metal band member:
Many thanks to @sarcasm-andotherstuff for her pareidolic superpowers.
Ngl every time someone follows this blog I automatically assume they’re a bot lol
She's a bit sluggish from the cold, but here's a little paper wasp :]
A model
Some Grackles! These birds are incredibly common but I still enjoy watching them.
A BOT LIKED THIS POST AND TRIED TO MESSAGE ME LMFAO
Ngl every time someone follows this blog I automatically assume they’re a bot lol
citheronia sepulcralis
pine-devil moth
location: north america
what’s on your mane, dad
I'd love to hear more about what makes the wings of the stylops so unique! Wings are always fascinating to me
Almost all insects with wings normally have four of them, except that in beetles, the front wings became the shields we call Elytra:
And in the true flies (diptera), the HIND wings became little vibrating knobs we call halteres, which are organic gyroscopes for collecting information about air pressure, direction and elevation, easiest to see on larger flies like this crane fly:
So, the male Strepsiptera is actually the only insect other than flies to have evolved halteres, but the Strepsiptera's halteres are evolved from the FRONT wings:
Their hind wings are odd enough too; simple "fans" unlike the intricately veined wings of other insects, but still not as unusual as forewing halteres. It's thought to be convergent evolution, and that they may have once been elytra like the beetles have. A connection to beetles is also suggested by the fact that a few beetle groups have larvae very similar to those of the strepsipterans, which look like this:
Lovably nasty larvae! They jump, and they're all spiny, and they actually use an acid secretion to melt their way into their first host.
There's one other insect group that incidentally evolved elytra shields, earwigs!
But earwigs can't be ancestral to either beetles or strepsiptera, because earwigs don't go through a larval stage, which the big evolutionary divide for insects; all the insects with larvae are thought to have just one common ancestor, splitting off from the other insects fairly early.
Miniature Awlsnail Out and About
Subulina octona
23/02/23
Hi it’s me puddleorganism if you’re confused why you got a billion hoops from me
298 posts