Friday, August 10, 2012
Swimming Cricket
Now this is my dream!
http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/19102700
I need to get myself one of those.
If you think about what they say enough, you can figure out that they are making up some of the facts. For example they say,
"Isolation in the caves has made the swimming cricket an apex predator"
How do they know that the cricket is an apex predator? They would have had to spend a lot of time in the cave observing this cricket, and searching for other creatures that could possibly be able to kill the cricket. If they had done this then they would have almost definitely come across several more crickets. And anyways, how do they know that it preys on anything but very small creatures? Just because an insect has a painful bite in defense doesn't mean that they use that for hunting other prey. I have caught a long-horn beetle before, and it bit me, that still doesn't mean that it is a predator. That is only a defense.
Friday, May 18, 2012
Pinacate Beetle
Pinacate Beetle
God’s Wonderful Design Revealed
Scientific Classification:
Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Arthropoda
Class
Insecta
Order
Coleoptera
Suborder
Polyphaga
Superfamily
Tenebrionoidea
Family
Tenebrionidae
Genus
Eleodes
The pinacate beetle, also known as
the stink beetle, is a species of darkling beetle in the genus Eleodes
endemic to the Sonoran Desert and adjacent regions of the U.S. Southwest and
Mexico ,
usually the species Eleodes obscurus. Other common names are stinkbugs or clown
beetles (names also
applied to other unrelated insects). Eleodes, derived from the Greek term for
"olivelike" describes the general body shape and jet black
coloration. Darkling is a common name applied to several genera and over 1400 species within the family Tenebrionidae.
Pinacate comes from the Aztec pinacatl, for "black beetle." Stinkbug
refers to the malodorous secretion emitted from the insect’s rear end. Clown
beetle alludes to the habit of these beetles to do a "headstand" when
threatened.
Pinacate beetles are well known for their
comical, yet effective, defense tactics which God has given them. When alarmed
they stand on their heads by bending their front legs down and extending their
rear legs. Depending upon the species, they exude an oily, musty secretion,
which collects at the tip of the abdomen or spreads over posterior parts of the
body, or they eject the reddish brown to brown secretion as a spray. Larger
desert species, like E. armata and E. longicollis, can spray 10 to 20 inches.
Most species can spray multiple times, if necessary. The spray is not painful
unless you get it in your eyes or mouth, where it is painful, burning and
temporarily blinding. It does not wash off.
Most animals avoid contact with Eleodes due
to the insect’s ability to produce a stinky secretion. God created grasshopper
mice, however, to get around this problem by grabbing the beetle, jamming its
behind into the sand, and eating it head first. Other predators include
burrowing owls, loggerhead shrikes and another well-known stinker, skunks.
Pinacate beetles tend to live in dry, arid
climates, and thus God has created them specially to live there. The beetles’
wing covers are fused to help prevent dehydration.
The functions of the pinacate beetle point
to an awesome God who created this world and everything in it (Genesis 1:1-25).
We should give Him praise and thanks to Him for giving us His creation to enjoy
its beauty and to be its stewards.
Bibliography
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinacate_beetle
http://www.desertusa.com/mag01/may/papr/sbug.html
Kaufman, Kenn. Field Guide to Insects of North America. Rocky Ridge, Ohio: Hollstar Editions L.C., 2007.
Bibliography
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinacate_beetle
http://www.desertusa.com/mag01/may/papr/sbug.html
Kaufman, Kenn. Field Guide to Insects of North America. Rocky Ridge, Ohio: Hollstar Editions L.C., 2007.
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Findings - 14/28/2012
All these insects I encountered in the Deschutes River Canyon, Sherman County, Oregon, USA
April 28, 2012. It was mostly sunny with a few clouds, warm/hot.
Pinacate Beetle
I found three of this species
Eleodes scabrosa
Pinacate Beetle
I found four of this species
Eleodes obscurus
Pinacate Beetle
Found two of this species:
Eleodes hispilabris
Darkling Beetle
I found one of this species:
Family - Tenebrionidae
Click Beetle
I found two of this species:
Family - Elateridae
Click Beetle
I found two of this species:
Family - Elateridae
Damselfly
I found one of this species:
Enallagma - Female
Field Crickets
I found two of this species:
Subfamily - Gryllinae - Male and Female
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