This velvety worm-like creature may not look like a beetle, but it is. Beetles are like butterflies, passing through a complex metamorphosis on the way to adulthood, and this insect is the larval stage of a soldier beetle.
photo details:
Canon EOS 50D camera
Canon MP-E 65mm 1-5x macro lens
ISO 100, f/13, 1/250sec
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Podabrus sp. Soldier Beetle
Urbana, Illinois
Last week we featured a larval soldier beetle. Today we have an adult of the same family (Cantharidae), in the genus Podabrus.
photo details:
Canon EOS 50D camera
Canon MP-E 65mm 1-5x macro lens
ISO 100, f/13, 1/250sec
...because badass mandibles are in style this season:
Odontomachus turneri, Australia
photo details:
Canon EOS 50D camera
Canon MP-E 65mm 1-5x macro lens
ISO 100, f/13, 1/250sec
Take a photograph, of course:
Tapinoma sessile, the odorous house ant
photo details:
Canon EOS 50D camera
Canon MP-E 65mm 1-5x macro lens
ISO 100, f/13, 1/250sec
...just for you.
Cimex lectularius, the common Bed Bug
More photos from this series are posted here.
photo details:
Canon EOS 50D camera
Canon MP-E 65mm 1-5x macro lens
ISO 100, f/13, 1/250sec
Very nice! I am all for more larvae in the Friday beetle blogs.
Oh, you mean beetles have an onychophoran stage? Cool!
I thought larval soldiers were outlawed by the UN...
Ah... I love these guys. It's always a sign of spring when they start crawling out of their hiding places.
Er, are you trying to start a war between the beetle lover and the butterfly lovers? :)
I should find some brown velvet and make a toy version of this for my daughter. I think she'd love it. She certainly did like the live larva of a related species that she caught in her bedroom and raised to adulthood.
There should be more plush insects on the market for young children.
Very nice image, Alex. You can almost feel the body texture on this guy.
Two questions -
Do you have a recommendation regarding a beetle field guide with larval images comparable to the one you posted? If so, I think I'm going shopping.
What are you using as your neutral color background for this image? It certainly shows this larva off to maximum advantage.
Roberto Keller - of course they do! Didn't you know that endosymbiosis and hybridization of distant taxa is the answer to everything?
Yay for larvae! I always feel like they're terribly underrepresented, even amongst entomologists. Especially if you consider many species spend the majority of their life in that life stage...
I had a huge argument with someone who swore these larvae were eating the peppers in her garden because she found one in a chewed pepper. She absolutely would not believe me when I told her it was no doubt after another insect (and I'm an entomologist)!