Now, though, I look more closely at insects, and I know what a firefly looks like in the daytime. However, my first picture of today's Backyard Bug of the Day is one I took at dusk, when it was almost completely dark (and the mosquitoes were definitely active). Backyard Bug of the Day:
Okay, not a great picture. But... you can see the firefly. It was darker than the picture implies; I had it on a long exposure.
Actually none of the daytime pictures are great, either, and normally I wouldn't award Backyard Bug of the Day status on the basis of pictures like these, but it's pretty unusual for me to find a firefly during the day (yes, I know, this is the second time this week), so I am taking advantage of the opportunity. It's not my fault the bug wouldn't sit still. Well, actually, yes, it is my fault, but I couldn't help it.
Nice look at the glowing apparatus. I am sure there is a name for that...
This is when it landed on my monopod. I was able to take my camera off and get this shot before it flew away... and landed on my shirt.
Thrips again, either a different species than the other day, or more mature ones.
The paler one is more like the ones from the other day.
Sometimes I take pictures of bugs without even trying. Or without even knowing. I didn't see the bugs when I took the picture, only when I looked at it on the computer. Can you see them?
More thrips!
Damselfly
Same one. I couldn't decide whether to post the one with the natural setting, or the one that's a better picture of the damselfly, so you're getting both.
I tried to look this up, but there are a couple of bugs that look kind of like this, and none that look exactly like this in the book. I can narrow it down to Plant Bug in the order Hemiptera
It looks like something has laid eggs on it
... and wings open. I used to think that these were called skippers because they look like sailboats when they sit on leaves like this, but apparently the name has to do with the way they fly. And I don't think a skipper is a kind of sailboat anyway. But it should be.
Leaf hopper
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