Showing posts with label katydid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label katydid. Show all posts

Friday, September 20, 2013

Friday foto fling


B1 Bomber

This shot CRACKS me up. Photo phail. =)

lighting, lighting, lighting.

 dainty lady

 Katydid. I swear it.

Charming hoverfly (of some sort, I presume).

xoxoxobb

Monday, August 12, 2013

Ka POW! Bush katydid nymph ROCKS the fashion world



I THINK it is a bush katydid nymph, at least...

Either way, this creature was WORKIN' it
in our garden, this a.m., on a Coreopsis flower.

First thing in the morning?
You've gotta respect that.

xobb


(It's Macro Monday, baby.)

Saturday, August 13, 2011

adult katydid in the garden, lovely green, with red eyes


These are all large photos, so clicking on them will be rewarded.

Based on my reading, this is a female.


It moved gingerly, once I made it nervous,
moving slowly forward on the cosmos flower.
I left, so it could continue doing whatever it needed to do.

I remember thinking "Hm, I thought they'd be faster."

Only when I looked at the photos on the computer
did I realize it was missing 2 of 6 legs.
One of the missing legs was its giant jumping rear leg. Yikes!

I'd say if you're missing 1/3 of your walking appendages,
being ambulatory at all is an accomplishment.

Will try and figure out its genus (or whatever I can) soon.
Anyhow, three (apparent) katydids in a week.

Cool!

=)

biobabbler

Friday, August 12, 2011

so... is this a katydid?

 
These are all pretty big pictures, so feel free to click for a closer look.
They are cropped, so clarity isn't spectacular, 
but you run with the horses you've got.

Or, so I hear. =)

"I don't want my picture taken..."

Seems the resting pose is antennae together...


Eventually I paid it enough attention, it separated its antennae,
lifting one up for a whiff of the goingson.
Until then, I couldn't be certain that there were 2 appendages.

Playing around in bugguide.net, it looks a bit like other creatures in the Scudderia genus, home to Scudder's bush katydids, specifically, the nymphs. They are a subset of the subfamily Phaneropterinae, false katydids.

Not sure what they did to be called false...

Of course, this being a pretty darn dry place, with lots of bleached blonde grass, this creature is suitably colored to blend in, versus many of the green creatures pictured in bugguide.

However, the Scudderia section does say:

"We made a no taxon page for the young katydid nymphs with the striped antennae which are all apparently in the genus Scudderia but not identifiable to species. It is quite likely that nymphs of Inscudderia are also included among these."

Considering my little creatures (2 different individuals, cozied up to my door frame) do not have obviously striped antennae, I still may have a ways to go to get an ID.

I really am not an entomologist, so if anyone has any thoughts re: confirming or correcting my guess, please feel free.

I wanna learn.

=)

Thanks!

biobabbler


P.S. Killer Moth Update

Another day, another sighting of the moth which parasitizes paper wasps. It's resting on our window screen, in the shade, south wall, about 10 feet from the nearest wasp nest. =)

Funny how you can learn something in biology, and what initially had looked like a dull, peaceful scene, a moth just hanging out, turns out to be a scene filled with intrigue and the possibility of a gruesome death, worthy of the most dramatic Hitchcock music.

Mwa ha ha ha ha....