Fotos / Sons

Observador

mathewlbrust

Data

Julho 3, 2021 06:35 AM MDT

Fotos / Sons

Observador

khristimantis

Data

Outubro 2, 2018

Fotos / Sons

Observador

pl_stenger

Data

Dezembro 2021

Lugar

Nord, NC (Google, OSM)

Fotos / Sons

Observador

kim_fleming

Data

Janeiro 14, 2024 12:10 PM EST

Descrição

walking around on a beech tree.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

free2fish

Data

Janeiro 7, 2024 10:39 AM CST

Descrição

I started a jar terrarium with a couple of moss species in the fall and today I noticed this specimen. Had been looking for life for about a month but had seen nothing till today. Body is about 14 mm long.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

ricemi2025

Data

Abril 2023

Lugar

Missing Location

Descrição

Lifer! Flipped under a rock in a tropical dry forest, but it has rained since early morning.

Fotos / Sons

What

Salamandra-Vermelha (Pseudotriton ruber)

Observador

ricemi2025

Data

Janeiro 2023

Lugar

Privado

Descrição

second lifer of the new year! Added some pics next to an Eastern Mud Salamander found 20 ft. away and a pic of the log it was under. I thought he was a Mud Salamander at first, but when looking at both the “red salamanders” this one seemed a tad different.
Richland County, SC

Fotos / Sons

What

Tartaruga-de-Caixa-Oriental (Terrapene carolina ssp. carolina)

Observador

ricemi2025

Data

Junho 2021

Lugar

Privado

Descrição

Horry County, SC
Nesting female. Layed three eggs. It took her several hours to lay and cover the nest. Right next to the road

Fotos / Sons

Observador

ricemi2025

Data

Agosto 2021

Lugar

Privado

Descrição

Hendry County, FL. In a severely flooded gator hole. Was moving through underwater vegetation.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

bennett_grappone

Data

Julho 20, 2021

Fotos / Sons

Observador

betootero

Data

Agosto 13, 2022 08:33 AM CDT

Fotos / Sons

Observador

kschnei

Data

Maio 15, 2020 10:33 AM PDT

Descrição

Found on wooden bench and collected, 8 mm, Acrosathe? Also posted to BG here:
https://bugguide.net/node/view/1814105

Etiquetas

Fotos / Sons

Observador

avnj

Data

Janeiro 2023

Lugar

Pahang, MY (Google, OSM)

Fotos / Sons

What

Corvo-Pequeno (Corvus mellori)

Observador

axaxa

Data

Março 22, 2023 09:08 AM AEDT

Fotos / Sons

Observador

alboertoalcala

Data

Fevereiro 3, 2023 09:46 AM CST

Fotos / Sons

Observador

lohityt

Data

Junho 19, 2023

Lugar

Mala (Google, OSM)

Descrição

Golden-backed Frog
Mushroom grown on frog body

Fotos / Sons

What

Inimia nat

Observador

glendawalter

Data

Janeiro 21, 2023 04:50 PM AEST

Descrição

About 25 mm long. Matthew, I have emailed you re these.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

artembunakin

Data

Outubro 16, 2023 08:38 AM MSK

Fotos / Sons

What

Coelho-de-Nutall (Sylvilagus nuttallii)

Observador

twillrichardson

Data

Março 17, 2023 11:53 AM PDT

Descrição

Drama. These guys all normally get along pretty well, but here a squirrel decided to start something and nearly got kicked in the head as reward. Moments later they were back to munching sunflower seeds side-by-side again.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

chofungi

Data

Março 7, 2023 10:37 PM CST

Fotos / Sons

Observador

jayisunj

Data

Julho 21, 2023 12:06 AM CDT

Fotos / Sons

Observador

nan-cee

Data

Agosto 26, 2012 10:17 PM CDT

Fotos / Sons

Observador

olgamedvezhonkova

Data

Janeiro 24, 2010 11:54 AM +08

Descrição

Endemic species inhabiting in the sandy beach shallow and splash zone of lake Baikal

Fotos / Sons

Observador

stenthesnake

Data

Julho 9, 2022 11:43 AM MDT

Descrição

Specimen was in bad shape when collected, it was missing legs and part of antenna. Tibia spur is present in second image

Fotos / Sons

Observador

ponerinecat

Data

Janeiro 2021

Descrição

Unusual stridulation similar to cackling or seal barking, beginning with a short and loud burst of squeaks and slowly puttering out with a series of "heh"s. Beetles will continue to stridulate for more than 2 minutes after the disturbance has ceased.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

thecicadadude

Data

Setembro 2023

Descrição

Calling from an eastern cottonwood tree in my yard. This is the first definitive proof (a specimen I found might’ve been a weird linnei) that I’ve been able to get that this species is in my area. First one that I have heard in ~2 years. Rarest cicada in my area. This might be their northernmost location

Fotos / Sons

Observador

bennett_grappone

Data

Julho 5, 2022 04:04 PM CDT

Descrição

Found dead on the concrete. This specimen is currently deposited in the Nebraska State Museum.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

cholmesphoto

Data

Abril 30, 2023 09:25 PM CDT

Descrição

A lone fly attracted to my white light setup adjacent to sand dunes with low, scrubby vegetation.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

suecar

Data

Agosto 3, 2022 09:23 PM MST

Descrição

14 mm; possible first U.S. record. ID (from photos) by Evan Waite.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

cgstults

Data

Agosto 29, 2022

Fotos / Sons

Observador

entomo-logic

Data

Junho 4, 2016 03:14 PM CDT

Descrição

3mm

Fotos / Sons

Observador

jayisunj

Data

Julho 11, 2022 04:08 PM CDT

Descrição

Jumping

Fotos / Sons

Observador

alex_cicindela_guy

Data

Agosto 2020

Fotos / Sons

Observador

vireolanius

Data

Julho 6, 2019 11:21 AM PDT

Descrição

Embedded in an American Kestrel’s scalp

Fotos / Sons

Observador

thecicadadude

Data

Junho 2020

Descrição

I haven’t seen one since this date in my yard despite seeing them semi-frequently up to 2020. I hope to see and collect one in 2023

Fotos / Sons

Observador

thecicadadude

Data

Agosto 2022

Descrição

What the heck?!

Fotos / Sons

Observador

jayisunj

Data

Julho 12, 2022 06:24 PM CDT

Descrição

Fotos / Sons

Observador

hexapoda

Data

Abril 2022

Fotos / Sons

Observador

evanbondauthor

Data

Maio 16, 2021 03:39 PM EDT

Fotos / Sons

Observador

jaroschacht

Data

Janeiro 13, 2022 08:02 PM CET

Fotos / Sons

Observador

joekunk

Data

Junho 30, 1969 04:14 PM EDT

Fotos / Sons

Observador

alex_cicindela_guy

Data

Maio 18, 2022 02:51 PM CST

Fotos / Sons

Observador

tototzin

Data

Julho 20, 2022 08:20 PM CDT

Fotos / Sons

Observador

sambiology

Data

Junho 13, 2020 09:14 PM CDT

Descrição

Did a little black-lighting at this park trail -- a bit windy so not too too much showed up... Nonetheless, some little bugs hopped on the sheet!

Fotos / Sons

Observador

sambiology

Data

Maio 3, 2021 04:45 PM CDT

Descrição

Looks like some stormy weather coming this evening, so I wanted to get a few more bug observations during the CNC. Headed over to Cobblestone Trail Park to sweep the plants. :)

Fotos / Sons

Observador

finatic

Data

Julho 16, 2021 09:16 PM PDT

Descrição

Fotos / Sons

Observador

mlodinow

Data

Agosto 2, 2021 02:11 PM MST

Fotos / Sons

Observador

froggy143

Data

Setembro 15, 2021 08:50 AM MST

Descrição

Workers were found in a makeshift termite bait made of a PVC pipe with holes drilled into the side, it was buried in the ground (the top of it was surface level so you could access the inside and a stone was placed on top to act as a cover) and pine wood was put inside, the wood was rotting when I checked it. Termites (Reticulitermes sp.) were present and workers were seen walking in the tunnels that the termites made in the wood. Workers were also seen on the inside and bottom of the PVC pipe.

Very happy to have found these and definitely wasn't expecting to.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

cypselurus

Data

Junho 2022

Fotos / Sons

Observador

aaron567

Data

Junho 25, 2022 12:34 PM CDT

Descrição

New state record for Tennessee, and consequently the northernmost collection of this species. First for iNaturalist as well.

This small, orange worker was crawling on the forest floor slowly, not in very good shape. Looks like it got in a fight.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

silversea_starsong

Data

Julho 8, 2022 01:24 AM MDT

Fotos / Sons

Observador

arbonius

Data

Setembro 19, 2017 10:11 AM PDT

Descrição

ATTN: This was not my field observation...it is derived from John Karges' iNat observation here.

Context & Collage Details

I became interested in the ID of this small metallic-green syrphid via the discussion thread under John Karges' iNaturalist observation 8376114, where the primary subject of the photos is the larger cerioidine, Sphiximorpha roederii.

The composite collage above (click it twice to view at full-size) was made solely for educational purposes to support the ID of this smaller metallic-green syrphid. It consists of a zoomed-in crop from the 1st photo in John's observation, together with crops of wing venation reference diagrams ("Fig. 2" & "Fig. 4") from the Copestylum and Ornidia pages of the Syrphidae da Amazônia website (associated with the paper Miranda(2017)). I added the colored-arrows to help indicate critical diagnostic ID characters in the discussion below. (Note, in particular, that although I made the collage, the component images were not taken be me, see my "Acknowledgements/Copyright Disclaimer" at bottom of these remarks.)

Genus ID Details

To pursue the ID I started with Miranda's 2017 "Syrphidae da Amazônia" picture key and followed what seemed the two most apropos sequences of choices available, leading to either "Step 1-3" of the key or to "Step 2-1". The joint outcome boiled down to either genus Copestylum or Ornidia (since the other alternatives at "Step 2-1" could be eliminated for John's photos due to: the lack of conspicuous antennae visible from above, and there being just a single species of Cepa in the treatment...which, unlike here, has entirely hyaline wings).

The character dichotomies at "Step 1-3" indicate that, within the given region of coverage (i.e. Amazônia), members of Copestylum are "rarely with metallic shine" while Ornidia have "metallic shine (green to blue)"...suggesting Ornidia here. Due to lack of a clear view of the face and side of the thorax here, two of the remaining three characters in "Step 1-3" can't be evaluated (i.e. those involving facial tubercles and anepimeron hairs)...but I think John's dorsal photo suggests that the notopleuron is indeed "laterally produced" (see orange arrow in the collage...and for comparison the specimen photos in the "Step 1-3" plate...and note that (from the placement of the insect pins) those specimens photos are dorsal(!) views with their heads twisted far to the left...and not profile views as they may initially appear to be!).

Moreover, note the two distinctive dark spots on the otherwise hyaline wings in John's photos (see pink arrows in the collage), which agree with those in the wing diagram for O. obesa in Fig. 4 from the Ornidia page ...and with similar wing markings in other online images, like the male & female BugGuide posts of O. obesa thumbnailed below:

As further support for the genus ID, I noticed something more while scrutinizing the wing venation details in Figs. 2 & 4 at the bottom of the collage (from the Copestylum and Ornidia pages of the Syrphidae da Amazônia website)...something that provides yet another character that appears to separate the genera Copestylum and Ornidia (and that I've corroborated by checking many additional reference images online). I've used yellow arrows in the collage to illustrate this character. It's somewhat technical (involving the basad [= closest to the wing base] veinlet bounding the "discal cell" of the wing) and it's tricky to describe, but here's my attempt:

For Ornidia, the most basad veinlet bounding the discal cell tends "anterior & apicad [= towards the wing apex]"; whereas in Copestylum the corresponding vein tends "anterior & basad [= towards the wing base]".

Each yellow arrow in the collage was drawn to lie within the discal cell of its associated wing, and point to the "basad bounding veinlet" of that discal cell. Though barely visible in the crop of John's photo, that basad bounding veinlet can be seen to be veering anterior and apicad, in accordance with Ornidia.

All of the above strongly points to a genus ID of Ornidia here...as does, additionally, the presence of a transverse "pre-apical scutellar depression" (see blue arrow in the collage) which is absent in most Copestylum but is a distinctive character of Ornidia, as indicated in the paper Thompson(1991), cited below.

Species ID Details

As far as species ID goes, the Ornidia page lists 4 species in its coverage area: O. aemula, O. major, O. obesa, and O. therezinhae.

The paper Thompson(1991) provides a good revision for Ornidia...though it doesn't include O. therezinhae, which was described in 2009 (in the paper Carvalho-Filho & Esposito(2009), which I've not yet seen).

Based on the key and descriptions in Thompson(1991), the small apical wing spot in John's photos eliminates O. aemula (which has a larger apical spot).

I also suspect that this is not O. major...since it's described as having the pre-apical scutellar depression "divided medially" (this character is shared by O. whiteheadi, and is nicely illustrated here). It appears to me that in John's photo (again, see blue arrow) the scutellar depression is not divided medially ...though the image-resolution is perhaps not clear enough to make that assessment unequivocally. To illustrate the potential difficulty here in interpreting this character, note that in the two photos from the BOLDSystems web site thumbnailed below (click them to enlarge)...both of which are females placed as O. major...the 1st specimen does appear to have the pre-apical scutellar depression divided medially; whereas the 2nd does not:
For context, I don't know for sure whether some of the BOLD O. major images may be mis-identified (or perhaps identified solely by molecular concordance with a reference specimen, without cross-checking the given specimen ID using morphology?).

It should be noted that O. obesa is the most widespread and frequently-encountered member of the genus, and is notably "(hemi)synanthropic"...i.e. often associated with (but not dependent on) human settlements (usually rural) where it is known to take advantage of additional resources for larval rearing such as animal dung, sewage, and rotten fruits & vegetables (see Thompson(1991) and 3rd paragraph after the abstract in Martins et. al.(2010)).

So, taking all the above into consideration, I think John's little metallic-green syrphid is most likely Ornidia obesa...though I can not rule out O. major or O. therezinhae with complete confidence.

Acknowledgements/Copyright Disclaimer

While I composed the collage here, the component photos were not taken be me...they were taken by John Karges and the photographers cited in the "Acknowledgements" at the end of Miranda(2017). I'm very grateful to those photographers (and Gil F. G. Miranda) for sharing their work on the web, however I have not yet obtained their explicit usage permission here, though I hope to and am in the process of trying [Note: Regarding preceding struck text...permission has now been obtained, see Postscript below.] In the interim I'm posting this since to the best of my knowledge the usage here (i.e. a transformatively-modified composite image for very-limited educational & non-profit use) is allowed under "fair use" rules (see also here) for limited use in the pursuit of research & scholarship in a non-profit, non-commercial, public interest context such as this. Still, I believe that even when "fair use" applies, it's often good (i.e. considerate & respectful) to inform & request permission of the appropriate parties when one uses their works, and will do so here.

Postscript (7/21/21): Both John Karges and Gil F. G. Miranda have graciously granted permission for usage here...I'm grateful to both of them.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

jayisunj

Data

Julho 24, 2022 09:15 PM CDT

Fotos / Sons

Observador

thecicadadude

Data

Julho 2022

Descrição

I discovered a remnant population of about 7 in the back of my yard. I also witnessed a male attempting to mate with a female.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

thecicadadude

Data

Julho 2022

Descrição

Found in spider web

Fotos / Sons

Observador

treegrow

Data

Setembro 2021

Fotos / Sons

Observador

jayisunj

Data

Julho 6, 2022 11:01 AM CDT

Fotos / Sons

Observador

i_fox

Data

Março 2020

Lugar

Kansas, US (Google, OSM)

Descrição

Found along with 2 or 3 other members of it's species under a rock with Crematogaster atkinsoni ants.
Superb mimic, good enough that I lost it when the ants started moving.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

dan_johnson

Data

Julho 3, 2022 12:19 PM CDT

Fotos / Sons

Observador

cholmesphoto

Data

Julho 2022

Descrição

Approx. 2-3mm

Fotos / Sons

Observador

sammydstecher

Data

Fevereiro 4, 2022

Fotos / Sons

Observador

alex_cicindela_guy

Data

Junho 2022

Fotos / Sons

Observador

hydrophilus

Data

Outubro 2019

Fotos / Sons

Observador

hydrophilus

Data

Novembro 28, 2020 01:06 PM EST

Descrição

Observed deep within a river cave.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

hydrophilus

Data

Agosto 2018

Fotos / Sons

Observador

sunguramy

Data

Julho 2021

Descrição

This one displayed very interesting glow occasionally for a second or two along the length as seen here.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

silaseckhardt

Data

Novembro 16, 2021

Descrição

Nesting in pipe. The ID was confirmed by Dr. Matthias Buck (@matthias22 ), and Mr. Nicholas Fensler (@nfensler ). For reference, or anyone who is curious, the distinguishing factors are that the hairs on tergum 1 must be a certain length, and the hind coxae must be hairless.

Update: As is apparent from the comments section, it is the other way around: Hind coxae hairy, or else it is another species.

Update II: I got back to site today and took a photo of the pipes where I found the wasp. The nest site is the white one to the left. In the 2nd photo that isn't a wasp, the mud at the back was what I thought to be the nest. Gonna cut it out and raise the wasps, whatever type they are.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

johnmorgan

Data

Setembro 9, 2021 07:29 PM CDT

Fotos / Sons

Observador

dr_firefly

Data

Maio 22, 2018 09:39 AM EDT

Descrição

Fireflies in this genus are ant inquilines, and all life stages have been found in the brood-queen-fungal chambers of varied #ant species. They don't seem to feed on or harm the ants.

For more information:
Sivinski, J. M., J. E. Lloyd, S. N. Beshers, L. R. Davis, R. G. Sivinski, S. R. Wing, R. T. Sullivan, P. E. Cushing, and E. Petersson. 1998. A natural history of Pleotomodes needhami Green (Coleoptera: Lampyridae): a firefly symbiont of ants. The Coleopterists Bulletin 52(1): 23–30.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

thecicadadude

Data

Julho 8, 2022 04:09 PM CDT

Descrição

Found on vegetation near pond

Fotos / Sons

Observador

wongun

Data

Junho 2, 2022 08:40 PM KST

Fotos / Sons

Observador

nadia_tx_usa

Data

Julho 5, 2022 09:45 AM CDT

Fotos / Sons

Observador

thecicadadude

Data

Junho 2022

Descrição

@jayisunj look what I just collected….. it was on the trunk of a huge elm tree in my yard.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

thecicadadude

Data

Julho 2022

Descrição

@jayisunj !!!!!!
I found this on a neighbor’s fence and collected it. You can now have my other specimen if you want

Fotos / Sons

Observador

thecicadadude

Data

Julho 2022

Descrição

@jayisunj @hexapoda ….
I was sitting out on my back porch with my parents enjoying fireworks and fireflies when I heard a very loud buzzzz-SMACK. I looked under my porch light to see this beast laying on the door mat.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

mgguilin

Data

Julho 4, 2022 11:23 AM EDT

Fotos / Sons

Observador

ivanj

Data

Maio 11, 2022 02:28 PM CEST

Fotos / Sons

Observador

thecicadadude

Data

Julho 2022

Descrição

I have a weird ‘cicada sense’. I thought tonight would be the night I’d find a nymph in my yard and guess what…
@jayisunj hopefully tomorrow we can get a species ID.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

amygraz

Data

Setembro 2021

Descrição

observed in an open field.sunny summer day in Colorado.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

thecicadadude

Data

Junho 2022

Descrição

Holy….
This was in the bottom of a drainage creek in my yard….. out of all the dragonflies I expected to find in my yard, this was certainly not one of the top pics
@colindjones @b_coulter @joshualincoln

Fotos / Sons

Observador

sneak-e

Data

Agosto 10, 2020 01:14 AM EDT

Descrição

I believe same individual spotted on Aug 8th, 2020. Found in same general area.

I found 7 DIFFERENT individuals over a couple weeks.

Etiquetas

Fotos / Sons

Observador

thecicadadude

Data

Maio 2022

Descrição

@jayisunj this thing was a tank
ID is from past bugguide IDs

Fotos / Sons

Observador

thecicadadude

Data

Agosto 2020

Descrição

Reared from caterpillar on lichen-covered branches

Fotos / Sons

Observador

hopperdude215

Data

Março 12, 2022 12:08 PM -05

Descrição

This species was rediscovered in 2015, as it had not been seen since the original and previously only specimen was collected in 1970, with the rediscovery officially published in 2017. This species is endemic to western Colombia, and this is likely one of the only pictures of a live individual online.

Fotos / Sons

Observador

thecicadadude

Data

Junho 2, 2022 01:28 PM CDT

Descrição

@jayisunj check this beast out! Many males fighting over territory in sunlit areas