The underside of a horned passalus
Here are the beetle brows shall blush for me
A weird-looking fly
A red-eyed fly
The eggs, day four
Daddy longlegs
World in a web 1: All the web's a stage
World in a web 2: What's an ant doing here?
World in a web 3: the proprietress
World in a web 4: No, the ant is here on business
World in a web 5: Checking for ripeness?
World in a web 6: The head is the delicacy
World in a web 7: Away with its prize
Hoveringfly
Leopardoptera
Like cattle in a field
It's pretty clearly a wasp
Marmorated stink bug
Red velvet mite vs. something
Hopper to go, hold the flies
Day 5: something new
After a morning rain
Playing around after a rainstorm
Same beetle's pupa
A beetle grub
Lovehoppers
A Scolops sulcipes
By the bite of the silvery bug
Yup, it's a wasp
Spiny spider
Red velvet mites enjoy a leafhopper
Tiny assassin bug dines on microscopic beetle
Baby fungus
Woodland butterfly
Little woodpile spider
Underside of hopper
Today's hopper
A garden friend
Egg watch, third morning
This one didn't turn out perfectly, either
Didn't turn out, like it anyway
The new and improved weevil
A different hopper
The plot thickens
Next morning, still there
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- Photo replaced on 15 Jul 2014
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Collect the entire set!
The whole life cycle here except for the egg. And you can see why the horned passalus is called horned. It's also called the patent leather beetle, and you can see why that's true, too.
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