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What is this dime sized black bug with white on the segments near Loveland Colorodao?
Identify what bit me by the mark it left (note: potentially graphic, but also beautiful, photos)How can I identify Woolly Adelgid on a Hemlock tree?Is this a dragonfly or a damselfly?What is this round, shiny black bug, about 10mm long, found in Singapore?What is the rather large bug with a green body, black stripe down the middle, 8 orange legs , two large antenna and large chompers?What is growing in these cocoon-looking structures found on a mountain in Massachusetts, USA?What bug is this?What is this just-hatched black caterpillar with white and black hairs, found in India?What type of centipede is this?What is this brown catipillar with white stripes and two black spots near the head in Loveland, Colorado?
On my walk around town today I found this small black bug, (keychain carabiner for scale).
It has two antenna and it seems that there is white on the edge of the segments.
Does anyone know what kind of bug this is?
bug-identification colorado
add a comment |
On my walk around town today I found this small black bug, (keychain carabiner for scale).
It has two antenna and it seems that there is white on the edge of the segments.
Does anyone know what kind of bug this is?
bug-identification colorado
DIIK, but it is either a bug that is essential to the local ecology or bug that hitchhiked on a shipment from elsewhere that is a disaster for the local ecology. In other words, an important question.
– ab2
2 hours ago
add a comment |
On my walk around town today I found this small black bug, (keychain carabiner for scale).
It has two antenna and it seems that there is white on the edge of the segments.
Does anyone know what kind of bug this is?
bug-identification colorado
On my walk around town today I found this small black bug, (keychain carabiner for scale).
It has two antenna and it seems that there is white on the edge of the segments.
Does anyone know what kind of bug this is?
bug-identification colorado
bug-identification colorado
edited 24 mins ago
Charlie Brumbaugh
asked 3 hours ago
Charlie BrumbaughCharlie Brumbaugh
52k16143296
52k16143296
DIIK, but it is either a bug that is essential to the local ecology or bug that hitchhiked on a shipment from elsewhere that is a disaster for the local ecology. In other words, an important question.
– ab2
2 hours ago
add a comment |
DIIK, but it is either a bug that is essential to the local ecology or bug that hitchhiked on a shipment from elsewhere that is a disaster for the local ecology. In other words, an important question.
– ab2
2 hours ago
DIIK, but it is either a bug that is essential to the local ecology or bug that hitchhiked on a shipment from elsewhere that is a disaster for the local ecology. In other words, an important question.
– ab2
2 hours ago
DIIK, but it is either a bug that is essential to the local ecology or bug that hitchhiked on a shipment from elsewhere that is a disaster for the local ecology. In other words, an important question.
– ab2
2 hours ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
Probably a woodlouse which is a type of crustacean in the suborder Oniscidea.
Source: a-z animals
They are globally distributed, except in polar regions and arid deserts, and are also known by the following names:
- "armadillo bug"
- "boat-builder" (Newfoundland, Canada)
- "butcher boy" or "butchy boy" (Australia,mostly around Melbourne)
- "carpenter" or "cafner" (Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada)
- "cheeselog" (Reading, England)
- "cheesy bobs" (Guildford, England)
- "cheesy bug" (North West Kent, England)
- "chiggy pig" (Devon, England)
- "chucky pig" (Devon, Gloucestershire, Herefordshire, England)
- "doodlebug" (also used for the larva of an antlion)
- "gramersow" (Cornwall, England)
- "granny grey" (South Wales)
- "hog-louse"
- "monkey-peas" (Kent, England)
- "monk's louse" (transl. "munkelus", Norway)
- "pea bug" or "peasie-bug" (Kent, England)
- "pill bug" (usually applied only to the genus Armadillidium)
- "potato bug"
- "roll up bug"
- "roly-poly"
- "sow bug"
- "slater" (Scotland, Northern Ireland, New Zealand and Australia)
- "wood bug" (British Columbia, Canada)
Source: Wikipedia
add a comment |
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Probably a woodlouse which is a type of crustacean in the suborder Oniscidea.
Source: a-z animals
They are globally distributed, except in polar regions and arid deserts, and are also known by the following names:
- "armadillo bug"
- "boat-builder" (Newfoundland, Canada)
- "butcher boy" or "butchy boy" (Australia,mostly around Melbourne)
- "carpenter" or "cafner" (Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada)
- "cheeselog" (Reading, England)
- "cheesy bobs" (Guildford, England)
- "cheesy bug" (North West Kent, England)
- "chiggy pig" (Devon, England)
- "chucky pig" (Devon, Gloucestershire, Herefordshire, England)
- "doodlebug" (also used for the larva of an antlion)
- "gramersow" (Cornwall, England)
- "granny grey" (South Wales)
- "hog-louse"
- "monkey-peas" (Kent, England)
- "monk's louse" (transl. "munkelus", Norway)
- "pea bug" or "peasie-bug" (Kent, England)
- "pill bug" (usually applied only to the genus Armadillidium)
- "potato bug"
- "roll up bug"
- "roly-poly"
- "sow bug"
- "slater" (Scotland, Northern Ireland, New Zealand and Australia)
- "wood bug" (British Columbia, Canada)
Source: Wikipedia
add a comment |
Probably a woodlouse which is a type of crustacean in the suborder Oniscidea.
Source: a-z animals
They are globally distributed, except in polar regions and arid deserts, and are also known by the following names:
- "armadillo bug"
- "boat-builder" (Newfoundland, Canada)
- "butcher boy" or "butchy boy" (Australia,mostly around Melbourne)
- "carpenter" or "cafner" (Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada)
- "cheeselog" (Reading, England)
- "cheesy bobs" (Guildford, England)
- "cheesy bug" (North West Kent, England)
- "chiggy pig" (Devon, England)
- "chucky pig" (Devon, Gloucestershire, Herefordshire, England)
- "doodlebug" (also used for the larva of an antlion)
- "gramersow" (Cornwall, England)
- "granny grey" (South Wales)
- "hog-louse"
- "monkey-peas" (Kent, England)
- "monk's louse" (transl. "munkelus", Norway)
- "pea bug" or "peasie-bug" (Kent, England)
- "pill bug" (usually applied only to the genus Armadillidium)
- "potato bug"
- "roll up bug"
- "roly-poly"
- "sow bug"
- "slater" (Scotland, Northern Ireland, New Zealand and Australia)
- "wood bug" (British Columbia, Canada)
Source: Wikipedia
add a comment |
Probably a woodlouse which is a type of crustacean in the suborder Oniscidea.
Source: a-z animals
They are globally distributed, except in polar regions and arid deserts, and are also known by the following names:
- "armadillo bug"
- "boat-builder" (Newfoundland, Canada)
- "butcher boy" or "butchy boy" (Australia,mostly around Melbourne)
- "carpenter" or "cafner" (Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada)
- "cheeselog" (Reading, England)
- "cheesy bobs" (Guildford, England)
- "cheesy bug" (North West Kent, England)
- "chiggy pig" (Devon, England)
- "chucky pig" (Devon, Gloucestershire, Herefordshire, England)
- "doodlebug" (also used for the larva of an antlion)
- "gramersow" (Cornwall, England)
- "granny grey" (South Wales)
- "hog-louse"
- "monkey-peas" (Kent, England)
- "monk's louse" (transl. "munkelus", Norway)
- "pea bug" or "peasie-bug" (Kent, England)
- "pill bug" (usually applied only to the genus Armadillidium)
- "potato bug"
- "roll up bug"
- "roly-poly"
- "sow bug"
- "slater" (Scotland, Northern Ireland, New Zealand and Australia)
- "wood bug" (British Columbia, Canada)
Source: Wikipedia
Probably a woodlouse which is a type of crustacean in the suborder Oniscidea.
Source: a-z animals
They are globally distributed, except in polar regions and arid deserts, and are also known by the following names:
- "armadillo bug"
- "boat-builder" (Newfoundland, Canada)
- "butcher boy" or "butchy boy" (Australia,mostly around Melbourne)
- "carpenter" or "cafner" (Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada)
- "cheeselog" (Reading, England)
- "cheesy bobs" (Guildford, England)
- "cheesy bug" (North West Kent, England)
- "chiggy pig" (Devon, England)
- "chucky pig" (Devon, Gloucestershire, Herefordshire, England)
- "doodlebug" (also used for the larva of an antlion)
- "gramersow" (Cornwall, England)
- "granny grey" (South Wales)
- "hog-louse"
- "monkey-peas" (Kent, England)
- "monk's louse" (transl. "munkelus", Norway)
- "pea bug" or "peasie-bug" (Kent, England)
- "pill bug" (usually applied only to the genus Armadillidium)
- "potato bug"
- "roll up bug"
- "roly-poly"
- "sow bug"
- "slater" (Scotland, Northern Ireland, New Zealand and Australia)
- "wood bug" (British Columbia, Canada)
Source: Wikipedia
edited 2 hours ago
Charlie Brumbaugh
52k16143296
52k16143296
answered 2 hours ago
wanderweeerwanderweeer
1,8791621
1,8791621
add a comment |
add a comment |
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DIIK, but it is either a bug that is essential to the local ecology or bug that hitchhiked on a shipment from elsewhere that is a disaster for the local ecology. In other words, an important question.
– ab2
2 hours ago