A leaf hopper! I felt so smart, and sure I was going to find lots of leaf hoppers. Or at least, a few leaf hoppers. And then I didn't find any more after this one.
I think that today's Backyard Bug of the Day is from the same order, Hemiptera, though:
I don't know what it is, though. It is quite a small bug, but has enormous eyes for its size.
The March flies (I think) were out in force again today, and I saw a lot of tussling, which seems to be all about mating. Sometimes one bug wants to mate and the bug it has chosen as a mate is not interested. So there's a bit of a wrestling match, and they separate. So this little scenario was interesting:
There are four of those bugs here.
As it was going on, the encounter was kind of like a ball of bugs tumbling around on this branch.
This is right before they all fell off, and I lost sight of them in the leaf litter.
Random Bugs:
Weevil
How many pictures will it take for you to be able to see the bug on this coneflower head?
Some sort of gnat, I guess. It was small, and I didn't get very close. And I managed to put my face through a spider web trying to get these shots. That was a nice moment in my day.
Case bearing caterpillar
Really tiny bug hiding in a crack in tree bark
Here's the same shot zoomed in.
Fly
I saw two spiders today, but they were both awesome, so I am going to post a whole slew of pictures in Arachnid Appreciation:
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When I was looking at this spider through the camera it was obvious to me that it had captured one of those March flies. But now looking at the pictures I can see that it actually has two of them in there.
Awesome chelicerae. I think from something I saw on The Brain Scoop (a YouTube show about the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago) that this is a male, because the scientist on the program said that male spiders' chelicerae look like boxing gloves.
This is the smallest jumping spider I have ever seen, and therefore adorable. It also had an iridescence to its head, which was also adorable.
Just before the jump...
... and after the jump.
Zoomed-in version. It is my belief that the colors of the eyes vary based on the direction of the lift, so since each eye is at a slightly different angle here, they look different colors.
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