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Macro > fisherwr2  > Animals > Small Wonders
Insects and spiders close up
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fisherwr2 > Ventral view of a 2-mm long puffball beetle, Caenocara sp (Coleoptera: Anobiidae) shown folded up and feigning death to avoid predators.  In this position the head is down and all the appendages are held tightly within ridges on the body.  All the softer, more vulnerable parts of the body (eg flexible intersclerite membranes) are well protected.  Try to locate the eyes, antennae, and all six legs.  Most of this beetle's life cycle is spent in puffball fungi that grow among the organic debris that collects on forest floors.
fisherwr2 > Diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella
fisherwr2 > Colorado potato beetle molting from one larval instar to the next.
fisherwr2 > Wasp building a nest
fisherwr2 > Red banded thrips
fisherwr2 > Beet armyworm, Spodoptera exigua (Leipdoptera: Noctuidae) on a cotton leaf
fisherwr2 > Hornworm larva with cocoons from a hymenopterous wasp parasitoid
fisherwr2 > Tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta (Lepidoptera: Sphingidae) on a moon flower plant
fisherwr2 > Cigarette beetle in the typical resting pose with the head rolled back under the thorax.
Ventral view of a 2-mm long puffball beetle, Caenocara sp (Coleoptera: Anobiidae) shown folded up and feigning death to avoid predators. In this position the head is down and all the appendages are held tightly within ridges on the body. All the softer, more vulnerable parts of the body (eg flexible intersclerite membranes) are well protected. Try to locate the eyes, antennae, and all six legs. Most of this beetle's life cycle is spent in puffball fungi that grow among the organic debris that collects on forest floors.
 > Ventral view of a 2-mm long puffball beetle, Caenocara sp (Coleoptera: Anobiidae) shown folded up and feigning death to avoid predators.  In this position the head is down and all the appendages are held tightly within ridges on the body.  All the softer, more vulnerable parts of the body (eg flexible intersclerite membranes) are well protected.  Try to locate the eyes, antennae, and all six legs.  Most of this beetle's life cycle is spent in puffball fungi that grow among the organic debris that collects on forest floors.
Ventral view of a 2-mm long puffball beetle, Caenocara sp (Coleoptera: Anobiidae) shown folded up and feigning death to avoid predators. In this position the head is down and all the appendages are held tightly within ridges on the body. All the softer, more vulnerable parts of the body (eg flexible intersclerite membranes) are well protected. Try to locate the eyes, antennae, and all six legs. Most of this beetle's life cycle is spent in puffball fungi that grow among the organic debris that collects on forest floors.
Original size: 1248px x 939px |
Current: 399px x 300px |
Other sizes: Small • M • L |
Keywords: defense beetle micro puffball coleoptera
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