Thread subject: Diptera.info :: A few Bugs
Posted by fleabag on 17-08-2006 12:54
#1
Hi,
If possible,please could someone help me id these bugs.Both from West Sussex.
The first and second were on the same plant,but I've not been able to figure out what the plant it is,they're quite common i think,and i usually see them growing among nettles,they look kind of dead or dry and are about nettle hight.
We thought they might be shield bugs of some sort.
The last one was found a few months ago in open grassland.
pic 1 bug was smaller(younger?) about 6mm
pic 2 and 3 bugs about 11mm ish
Thankyou
Posted by fleabag on 17-08-2006 12:56
#2
number two
Posted by fleabag on 17-08-2006 12:57
#3
number three
Posted by LordV on 17-08-2006 13:28
#4
Suspect first bug is an assassin bug.
2nd bug is a shield bug possibly a tortoise bug Eurygaster maura
Brian V.
Posted by Paul Beuk on 17-08-2006 14:33
#5
The first to pictures are not nymphs of assasin bugs (Reduviidae) but of Coreidae.
Posted by Tony Irwin on 17-08-2006 15:58
#6
Top photo is second instar, middle is third instar of
Coreus marginatus. The plant is
Rumex obtusifolius - Broad-leaved Dock, one of a number of foodplants (all related).
I agree with Brian that the third photo is
Eurygaster maura - feeds on grasses among others.
Posted by lweit on 17-08-2006 19:14
#7
Hello
It's looks like this bug : Eurygaster testudinaria (Geoffroy, 1785)
Louis
Posted by Tony Irwin on 17-08-2006 19:49
#8
Louis is right - both
Eurygaster testudinaria and
E. maura are very similar, and examining the genitalia is often the only way to separate them reliably. Checking up on their British distribution, it looks like
testudinaria is the most likely species in Sussex, though
maura does occur in neighbouring counties and is associated with drier grassland. Unless there are other recent records from Sussex, I guess it would be safer to go with
testudinaria.
Posted by lweit on 17-08-2006 21:04
#9
Here another species of Eurygaster : it's E. austriaca (Schrank, 1776)
Louis
Posted by fleabag on 17-08-2006 21:05
#10
Thats great,thanks everyone for being so helpfull.
thanks Tony...very usefull + for telling me what the plants are.
intriguing little things these bugs.
regards:)
Posted by cthirion on 17-08-2006 23:28
#11
Scutelleridae
???????Odontoscelis fuliginosa
http://www.koleopterologie.de/heteroptera/index.html
Posted by Tony Irwin on 18-08-2006 10:28
#12
One of the characters of
Odontoscelis is that they are very hairy. This can be seen in the photos on the
http://www.koleop...index.html site. The site also shows how similar the
Eurygaster species are, both
testudinaria and
maura showing a range of colour forms, including the yellow and pink variety which fleabag posted.