Brovid Hasselsmof[Growling historic on the fury road]Registered Userregular
Could it be maybe that was all washed there by a surge and then the water receded
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Metzger MeisterIt Gets Worsebefore it gets any better.Registered Userregular
that's actually just a bollard in Junji Ito's new theme park
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JedocIn the scupperswith the staggers and jagsRegistered Userregular
edited September 2019
Okay, smartass. I maybe have a few small spiders and crickets here and there, but there are not enough bugs on my kitchen floor to sustain a mantis. Also super great to know that my weatherproofing is "nearly mantis-tight."
There you go. Plenty of bugs for you to chomp on out here. Roam free.
you're gonna need to explain what a squirrel cage is as the only google results I'm getting are hamster wheels and a specific type of electric motor
I'm guessing that "squirrel cage" means a grate or other fine mesh barrier designed to prevent a squirrel or similarly sized pests from gaining access to your homes interior through vents, chimneys or other small openings.
In this case, the mantis may have been small enough to squeeze through the barrier.
Long time ago I worked at a grocery store early mornings and one day I had to go out back to dump trash and there were hundreds of mantis all over the back wall of the store soaking in the morning sunlight. That was my first time actually seeing any around here and it was amazing.
JedocIn the scupperswith the staggers and jagsRegistered Userregular
edited October 2019
I have a spider friend who lives on the wall right outside the library's emergency exit.
The little web-tent has been there for months, but they're almost always bundled up inside by the time I get to work. But I guess it's cool and cloudy enough that they just want to take a stroll, because here they are out of the tent!
I have a spider friend who lives on the wall right outside the library's emergency exit.
The little web-tent has been there for months, but they're almost always bundled up inside by the time I get to work. But I guess it's cool and butty enough that they just want to take a stroll, because here they are out of the tent!
Any idea what kind of wasp these are? They've been chowing down on all the apples under the tree in our back yard... but unlike every other wasp I've ever encountered they didn't seem phased by my presence. I'm used to wasps being aggressive and chasing but even as I slowly cleaned up the apples around the ones they were eating they just kind of ignored me... wasn't sure if it was due to the type, or maybe the weather (it's been 60 pretty consistently here during the day, lower at night).
I also haven't seen a nest anywhere, despite how many were hanging out in my yard.
Brovid Hasselsmof[Growling historic on the fury road]Registered Userregular
Maybe the time of year. Not nesting any more and running out of food so more interested in eating than in you. They just look like regular yellow jackets to me.
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Metzger MeisterIt Gets Worsebefore it gets any better.Registered Userregular
Also a lot of the time if wasps have lots of food around they can be pretty docile, relatively.
They're perfectly normal yellowjackets. During fall yellowjackets tend to be in a feeding frenzy, if you're not threatening their nest or them they're going to focus on food rather than you.
"The western world sips from a poisonous cocktail: Polarisation, populism, protectionism and post-truth"
-Antje Jackelén, Archbishop of the Church of Sweden
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Brovid Hasselsmof[Growling historic on the fury road]Registered Userregular
I had to go past a wasp nest several times while working the other week, had them buzzing around me and landing on my head. They really aren't turbo hate machines all the time like some people think
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Metzger MeisterIt Gets Worsebefore it gets any better.Registered Userregular
Wasps and I have a complicated relationship because I wear a lot of tie-dye and apparently that just makes me look fuckin delicious or something I dunno
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Brovid Hasselsmof[Growling historic on the fury road]Registered Userregular
They just think you are really hip and groovy and want to be your friends but they are socially awkward and don't know how to express themselves
They had models of different insects and arachnids (so fake moth, but a nice fake moth). They were going over the differences, and she was yelling out the answers. I tried to get her to raise her hand first, and give other kids a chance...
But she's 5. And is very into bugs.
If that's all there is my friends, then let's keep dancing
Kidnapper ants raid other ant species' colonies, abduct their young and take them back to their nest. When the enslaved babies grow up, the kidnappers trick them into serving their captors – hunting, cleaning the nest, even chewing up their food for them.
Tarantulas Take Hooking Up To The Next Level | Deep Look3:56 https://youtu.be/5gOKd4cqFaY Every fall, male tarantulas leave home for good with one thing on their minds: sex. But before these spiders can make the ultimate connection, they have to survive the perils of the open road...which include their potential mates.
Huntsman-killing spider wasps turn arachnids into baby incubators
Huntsman-killing spider wasps have been observed beginning their gruesome reproduction cycle in Adelaide.
Entomologist and manager of live exhibits at the Museum of Victoria Patrick Honan explained to 891 ABC Adelaide's Spence Denny that spider wasps hunt the arachnids and use them as live hosts to incubate their larvae.
"The wasps go out, seek a live huntsman and then there is a life and death battle between the wasp and the spider," Mr Honan said.
"Most often the wasp wins."
The wasp stings and paralyses the spider and then drags it back to its mud nest.
Link in case you really want to read the rest (it doesn't turn out well for the spider)
JedocIn the scupperswith the staggers and jagsRegistered Userregular
edited December 2019
I wonder if huntsman wasps and tarantula hawks are closely related, or if parasitoid wasps are just big enough assholes to independently find big giant spiders on opposite sides of the planet and think "That gives me an idea. A wonderful, awful idea."
I suspect the latter.
Edit: also, why didn't Children of Time include spider wasps? That would have been terrifying.
Jedoc on
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Brovid Hasselsmof[Growling historic on the fury road]Registered Userregular
Are Australian spider hunting wasps as scary as the ones in Africa? The ones in Africa will aggro extremely easily if you get near them while they have a spider and have been known to chase people substantial distances to sting them.
They also make a very distinctive, loud noise when flying, so it's easy for them to make an entire group of people panic just by flying past.
I wonder if huntsman wasps and tarantula hawks are closely related, or if parasitoid wasps are just big enough assholes to independently find big giant spiders on opposite sides of the planet and think "That gives me an idea. A wonderful, awful idea."
I suspect the latter.
Edit: also, why didn't Children of Time include spider wasps? That would have been terrifying.
Well, at the very least they're in the same Family- Pomipilidae, so they're decently related
The Australian species is probably Cryptocheilus bicolor and the Tarantula Hawk can be from a couple different species, but most people think of Pepsis formosa, which is the state insect of New Mexico.
Huntsman-killing spider wasps turn arachnids into baby incubators
Huntsman-killing spider wasps have been observed beginning their gruesome reproduction cycle in Adelaide.
Entomologist and manager of live exhibits at the Museum of Victoria Patrick Honan explained to 891 ABC Adelaide's Spence Denny that spider wasps hunt the arachnids and use them as live hosts to incubate their larvae.
"The wasps go out, seek a live huntsman and then there is a life and death battle between the wasp and the spider," Mr Honan said.
"Most often the wasp wins."
The wasp stings and paralyses the spider and then drags it back to its mud nest.
Link in case you really want to read the rest (it doesn't turn out well for the spider)
Posts
Okay, smartass. I maybe have a few small spiders and crickets here and there, but there are not enough bugs on my kitchen floor to sustain a mantis. Also super great to know that my weatherproofing is "nearly mantis-tight."
There you go. Plenty of bugs for you to chomp on out here. Roam free.
I'm guessing that "squirrel cage" means a grate or other fine mesh barrier designed to prevent a squirrel or similarly sized pests from gaining access to your homes interior through vents, chimneys or other small openings.
In this case, the mantis may have been small enough to squeeze through the barrier.
The little web-tent has been there for months, but they're almost always bundled up inside by the time I get to work. But I guess it's cool and cloudy enough that they just want to take a stroll, because here they are out of the tent!
What a magnificent little beast.
Butty?
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/butty
Edit: oh wait, I forgot I still have that extension installed.
Any idea what kind of wasp these are? They've been chowing down on all the apples under the tree in our back yard... but unlike every other wasp I've ever encountered they didn't seem phased by my presence. I'm used to wasps being aggressive and chasing but even as I slowly cleaned up the apples around the ones they were eating they just kind of ignored me... wasn't sure if it was due to the type, or maybe the weather (it's been 60 pretty consistently here during the day, lower at night).
I also haven't seen a nest anywhere, despite how many were hanging out in my yard.
-Antje Jackelén, Archbishop of the Church of Sweden
My daughter wants a vinegaroon. She got to hold one the other day at a parks department demonstration. One day she will own all of the bugs.
But she's 5. And is very into bugs.
https://youtu.be/V400oXh_YTQ
This will be here until I receive an apology or Weedlordvegeta get any consequences for being a bully
https://youtu.be/sC4MjPKf3jY
Kidnapper ants raid other ant species' colonies, abduct their young and take them back to their nest. When the enslaved babies grow up, the kidnappers trick them into serving their captors – hunting, cleaning the nest, even chewing up their food for them.
This will be here until I receive an apology or Weedlordvegeta get any consequences for being a bully
https://youtu.be/5gOKd4cqFaY
Every fall, male tarantulas leave home for good with one thing on their minds: sex. But before these spiders can make the ultimate connection, they have to survive the perils of the open road...which include their potential mates.
edit:
True Facts: Leafhoppers and Friends 5:34
https://youtu.be/J4gJY_5eNqQ
These are really cool, I have no idea they exist
This will be here until I receive an apology or Weedlordvegeta get any consequences for being a bully
Living art, tell ya what.
Look at it, just flailing it's legs around trying to make some distance.
Link in case you really want to read the rest (it doesn't turn out well for the spider)
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-01-06/huntsman-killer-spider-wasps-turn-crawlies-into-baby-incubators/7068188
I suspect the latter.
Edit: also, why didn't Children of Time include spider wasps? That would have been terrifying.
They also make a very distinctive, loud noise when flying, so it's easy for them to make an entire group of people panic just by flying past.
Well, at the very least they're in the same Family- Pomipilidae, so they're decently related
The Australian species is probably Cryptocheilus bicolor and the Tarantula Hawk can be from a couple different species, but most people think of Pepsis formosa, which is the state insect of New Mexico.
I'm a beetle guy, mostly, and a little bit of a mosquito and moth guy
thanks, i hate it