"she should be at the club"!!! "she should be at the club"!!
okay and I am literally at the club watching bugs on my phone
taylor price
𓃗
Cosimo Galluzzi
Today's Document
noise dept.
Mike Driver

JVL

tannertan36
$LAYYYTER
we're not kids anymore.
almost home
Jules of Nature

Product Placement
Not today Justin
art blog(derogatory)

gracie abrams
cherry valley forever
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

PR's Tumblrdome
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Arab Emirates
seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Sweden

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from South Africa
seen from Singapore

seen from Chile

seen from Guatemala

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from France
@ryjkowiec
"she should be at the club"!!! "she should be at the club"!!
okay and I am literally at the club watching bugs on my phone

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
MYSTERY CATERPILLAR OF THE AMAZON!
family Sphingidae, Manu Biological Station, Peru
Apparently, for years, the identity of this caterpillar has been a mystery. We may be very close to solving the mystery!
People have seen this large gorgeous caterpillar for ages, but have never been able to figure out what it grows/metamorphoses into... what species is it?
Entomologist Gwen Erdosh (Gwentomologist), currently the Volunteer Coordinator at the Manu Biological Station in Madre de Dios, Peru, has collected one, determined its host plant, and got it to pupate!
Luckily, I got to meet the larva before it pupated, and snap a few photos.
Hopefully, we will know soon, and the mystery will be solved!
- Paxon
one of my favourite moth finds of all time. Comostola laesaria has a wingspan of only 20mm, so it was truly like finding a tiny gem amongst the nighttime gumleaves.
in the closeup below you can even see tiny little hyaline sections (little bits of transparent scales, in the middle of the larger orange spots).
No common name (Comostola laesaria), April '24.
Wasp-mimic Moth (Tyrictaca sp.), family Sesiidae, Malaysia
photographs by Timmy Wong
“I could never be an entomologist. bugs creep me out” sucks to suck because I’m a real-life pokemon trainer. like look at these and tell me they’re not pokemon
like are you serious. have fun doing whatever you’re doing ill be at the arthropod zoo… also known as the motherfucking pokemon center

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Shell-Nesting Mason Bees: these bees build their nests in empty snail shells, using crushed leaves and soil to form the inner brood chambers and then sealing the entrance with debris
Above: the photo at the top shows a mason bee building its nest, while the illustration at the bottom shows the nest's internal structure
Bees of the family Megachilidae typically build their nests in the gaps and crevices in tree stumps, rocks, plant stems, and wooden structures, but there are a few species that prefer to nest in discarded snail shells. Most of these shell-nesting bees are found in Europe, North Africa, and the Near East; a few can also be found in North America, South Africa, and Japan.
Above: just some cozy little mason bees, Hoplitis zandeni and Osmia rufohirta
These are solitary bees, meaning that they don't form colonies or live together in hives, so each female builds her own individual nest. The nest is constructed as a series of brood cells, and each cell contains a single egg with enough pollen and nectar to sustain the larva until it reaches adulthood.
Shell-nesting mason bees are known to exist in at least five different genera, including Osmia, Hoplitis, Rhodanthidium, Wainia, and Protosmia.
Above: Osmia spinulosa and Rhodanthidium septemdentatum
When the female is ready to nest, she carefully selects a shell and then drags it into a shaded or well-hidden spot. Moving the shell is no easy feat, but she clings to it with her hind legs and pulls herself along by grabbing objects with her mandibles. A single bee may travel like that for several meters before finally settling on the right spot to prepare her nest.
Above: Osmia rufohirta dragging her shell into position
This article describes how the nest is then constructed:
The bee begins to build its nest, mainly within the “whorl” or spire of the shell. A typical nest consists of a few chambers (about two or four in number, depending on the size of the shell) known as cells, the walls of which consist of masticated leaf pulp known as leaf mastic. When fresh, the colour of this material is bright green, but with time, it assumes a brownish or black colour. Each cell is provisioned with a mixture of pollen and nectar, an egg is laid on this, and the cell sealed with further leaf mastic.
Above: two nests with their internal structures partially exposed, revealing the brood cells, larvae, pollen, nectar, and several layers of debris
The layout of the nest varies depending on the species, with some bees producing brood cells that are arranged into rows, while others create clustered or overlapping cells.
Above: the nest of a gold-fringed mason bee, Osmia aurulenta
The female must make dozens of trips just to gather the provisions for a single brood cell, and completing the entire nest can take days.
Once the brood chambers have been constructed and provisioned, the entrance to the shell is "bricked up" with several layers of plant pulp, soil, pebbles, and shell fragments. In some cases, the female will also apply patches of plant pulp to the outer surface of the shell as a way to provide camouflage.
Above: Oamia bicolor and Osmia aurulenta sealing their nests with plant pulp
The completed nest is then carefully maneuvered so that the entrance faces the ground. Some females will conceal the nest beneath a pile of twigs, pine needles, and plant stems, weaving moss and blades of grass throughout the pile. All of the debris is carefully selected, positioned, and then "glued" together with saliva, forming a tangled, tent-like structure over the nest.
Above: Osmia bicolor, commonly known as the red-tailed mason bee. constructing a protective thatch over her nest
In other cases, the female will conceal the nest by creating a small hole in the sand and then dragging the shell into it, ensuring that the nest is partially buried.
Above: Osmia aurulenta and Osmia rufohirta
This is just one of the many peculiar nesting habits that can be found among solitary bees. Several other examples have been featured in my previous posts, which describe the nest-building strategies of woolcarder bees, resin-pot bees, and a ground-dwelling species known as Osmia avosetta.
Above: the fully-constructed nest of a gold-fringed mason bee
Sources & More Info:
Bulletin of the Amateur Entomologists' Society: Shell-Nesting Bees
The Little Book of Bees: Snail-Nesting Mason Bees
University of Hradec Králové: Bees Nesting in Empty Gastropod Shells
Bees of the World: Snail Shells
The Wildlife Trusts: Red-Tailed Mason Bees
Insects: Nesting Preferences of Osmia orientalis
Journal of Hymenoptera Research: Comparative Biology of Four Rhodanthidium Species that Nest in Snail Shells
Journal of Hymenoptera Research: Biology of Palaearctic Wainia Bees of the Subgenus Caposmia
Cambridge University Press: The Native Shell-Nesting Bee Osmia conjuncta
Zootaxa: Palaearctic Osmia Bees of the Subgenera Hemiosmia, Tergosmia and Erythrosmia
Wired: Adorable Bees that Live Inside Snail Shells
Tiger Moth (Trichomia sp.), family Erebidae, Venezuela
photograph by Arthur Anker
Emeraldine Moth (Ceroctena amynta), family Erebidae, Brazil
photograph by Enio Branco
The Caterpillar-Mimicking Spider: this species of jumping spider mimics a lichen moth caterpillar, possibly as a way to deter predators
This species (Uroballus carlei) is sometimes referred to as a caterpillar jumping spider or caterpillar jumper, because it bears such a striking resemblance to a caterpillar. It was discovered in Hong Kong just a few years ago.
Researchers believe that these strange little spiders mimic the caterpillars of local lichen moths, which may help to deter predators. Lichen moth caterpillars ingest toxic substances that make them unpalatable to predators, and they're covered in urticating hairs that cause pain and irritation when touched, so predators tend to avoid them. They also have aposematic features that advertise those defense mechanisms, making them an excellent model for mimicry.
The spider's resemblance to a caterpillar may serve as a defense mechanism against larger vertebrates, such as birds, and as a predatory ploy against certain invertebrates, like small beetles, thus allowing the spider to avoid being eaten while also enabling it to stalk and capture its own prey more effectively.
This article described the discovery back in 2019:
A new spider has been discovered, hiding in plain sight in one of the most populated places on the planet. And there’s a good chance it went undiscovered for so long because it doesn’t really look like a spider at all, but more like a fuzzy baby caterpillar. Its cute, fuzzy appearance has led the newly discovered spider to be named Uroballus carlei, after Eric Carle – author of the wildly popular children’s book The Very Hungry Caterpillar.
Living alongside Uroballus carlei in the wooded areas of the Eastern District in Hong Kong are lichen moths. During the caterpillar stage, these moths are covered in bristly brown fur not dissimilar to Uroballus carlei. They live on a diet of lichen, and it’s this diet that gives them their name.
Sources & More Info:
Journal of Entomology: A New Species of Uroballus from Hong Kong: a Jumping Spider that Appears to Mimic Lichen Moth Caterpillars (PDF)
University of Manchester: Newly Discovered Jumping Spider is Master of Disguise
University of Manchester: Newly Discovered Jumping Spider Named for Children's Author
BBC: Spider Named After The Very Hungry Caterpillar Author, Eric Carle
Sloth Moths (Parasa schausi complex), family Limacodidae, Costa Rica
photograph by Casey Owen

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
acorn weevils, shockingly, want acorns to feed on and lay eggs in, and so are more often seen in late summer and early autumn, when mature acorns are everywhere. so what was this Curculio venosus doing out so early on a practically fruitless oak? i don't know, and judging by its expression i don't think it does either
(July 22nd, 2025)
Yellowjacket-Mimicking Moth: this is just a harmless moth that mimics the appearance and behavior of a yellowjacket/wasp; its disguise is so convincing that it can even fool actual wasps
This species (Myrmecopsis polistes) may be one of the most impressive wasp-mimics in the world. The moth's narrow waist, teardrop-shaped abdomen, black-and-yellow patterning, transparent wings, smooth appearance, and folded wing position all mimic the features of a wasp. Unlike an actual wasp, however, it does not have any mandibles or biting/chewing mouthparts, because it's equipped with a proboscis instead, and it has noticeably "feathery" antennae.
There are many moths that use hymenopteran mimicry (the mimicry of bees, wasps, yellowjackets, hornets, and/or bumblebees, in particular) as a way to deter predators, and those mimics are often incredibly convincing. Myrmecopsis polistes is one of the best examples, but there are several other moths that have also mastered this form of mimicry.
Above: Pseudosphex laticincta, another moth species that mimics a yellowjacket
These disguises often involve more than just a physical resemblance; in many cases, the moths also engage in behavioral and/or acoustic mimicry, meaning that they can mimic the sounds and behaviors of their hymenopteran models. In some cases, the resemblance is so convincing that it even fools actual wasps/yellowjackets.
Above: Pseudosphex laticincta
Such a detailed and intricate disguise is unusual even among mimics. Researchers believe that it developed partly as a way for the moth to trick actual wasps into treating it like one of their own. Wasps frequently prey upon moths, but they are innately non-aggressive toward their own fellow nest-mates, which are identified by sight -- so if the moth can convincingly impersonate one of those nest-mates, then it can avoid being eaten by wasps.
Above: Pseudosphex laticincta
I gave an overview of the moths that mimic bees, wasps, yellowjackets, hornets, and bumblebees in one of my previous posts, but I felt that these two species (Myrmecopsis polistes and Pseudosphex laticincta) deserved to have their own dedicated post, because these are two of the most convincing mimics I have ever seen.
Above: Pseudosphex sp.
I think that moths in general are probably the most talented mimics in the natural world. They have so many intricate, unique disguises, and they often combine visual, behavioral, and acoustic forms of mimicry in order to produce an uncanny resemblance.
Several of these incredible mimics have already been featured on my blog: moths that mimic jumping spiders, a moth that mimics a broken birch twig, a moth caterpillar that can mimic a snake, a moth that disguises itself as two flies feeding on a pile of bird droppings, a moth that mimics a dried-up leaf, a moth that can mimic a cuckoo bee, and a moth that mimics the leaves of a poplar tree.
Moths are just so much more interesting than people generally realize.
Sources & More Info:
Journal of Ecology and Evolution: A Hypothesis to Explain Accuracy of Wasp Resemblances
Entomology Today: In Enemy Garb: A New Explanation for Wasp Mimicry
iNaturalist: Myrmecopsis polistes and Pseudosphex laticincta
Transactions of the Entomological Society of London: A Few Observations on Mimicry
[Siren wailing]... Big pink hawkmoth season is upon us. I repeat, big pink hawkmoth season. This is not a drill.
This is an elephant hawkmoth, warming up its wings & taking off. It's caterpillars are also magnificent chonks, and they eat rosebay willow herb (AKA fireweed in the US I think?) This is a perfect reason to do less weeding. Keep some weeds, get big pink hawkmoths like this one.
Thank you from the Moth Promotional Board ✨🦋🐾🛹✨
Rainbow Leaf Beetle (Spilopyra sumptuosa), family Chrysomelidae, Brisbane, Australia
photographs by Dedi Barasat

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Coenodomus Moths: these moths have long, fuzzy "antlers" that grow from the structures at the base of their antennae
Moths of the genus Coenodomus have a very peculiar appearance, as each male has a pair of horn-like appendages sprouting from his head. These "horns" are actually soft, pliable structures that are known as scape extensions or scape projections, and they grow from the scape (i.e. the base) of each antenna.
The scape extensions are covered in long, fuzzy-looking scales, and they're often held in an upright position, with the two "horns" curling together to form a tiny horseshoe/halo over the moth's head.
They can also be folded back toward the body; in some cases, they're even tucked down to the point where they are barely visible.
It's unclear whether or not these projections have any adaptive purpose. Some sources argue that they could be used to help with camouflage/crypsis; they could also play a role in courtship or sexual selection, since they are present only in the males of this genus.
There are at least 15 different species of Coenodomus moth. They can be found in Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Indonesia, China, Bhutan, Singapore, Sri Lanka, India, and Australia.
Sources & More Info:
Annales Zooligici: A Review of the Genus Coenodomus in China with Descriptions of Four New Species
iNaturalist: Genus Coenodomus
Moths of India: Observation for Coenodomus rubrescens
these are the miserable remains of a chestnut weevil (Curculio elephas) who will never again feel the joy of a freshly drilled acorn after unspeakable atrocities were perpetrated upon her by me
this is her thirty seconds later. the atrocities that she miraculously recovered from included "being gently scooped up from a branch"
(September 1st, 2024)