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jandr 08-31-2022 07:07 AM

Winged Bug???
 
1 Attachment(s)
Anyone know what this is? It's just above our front door. Leave it alone? Spray it?

PugMom 08-31-2022 08:35 AM

i don't what bug it is, haven't seen that 1 before. I'd leave it. will probably be gone soon anyway

pauld315 08-31-2022 08:47 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jandr (Post 2131749)
Anyone know what this is? It's just above our front door. Leave it alone? Spray it?

Looks like a flying cockroach. Very common in Florida. Be thankful it is outside.

gobuck827 08-31-2022 09:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jandr (Post 2131749)
Anyone know what this is? It's just above our front door. Leave it alone? Spray it?

I believe that is a Tersa Sphinx moth.

Tersa Sphinx Moth

Whitley 08-31-2022 11:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jandr (Post 2131749)
Anyone know what this is? It's just above our front door. Leave it alone? Spray it?

It is a harmless tersa moth and does not have a stinger. A hairy brown body may have undertones of green or yellow. Streaks run down the back of the abdomen. Wings have a series of thin lines that reach the wing tip. Adults feed on pollen.

jandr 08-31-2022 12:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Whitley (Post 2131882)
It is a harmless tersa moth and does not have a stinger. A hairy brown body may have undertones of green or yellow. Streaks run down the back of the abdomen. Wings have a series of thin lines that reach the wing tip. Adults feed on pollen.

Thanks!

jandr 08-31-2022 12:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gobuck827 (Post 2131840)
I believe that is a Tersa Sphinx moth.

Tersa Sphinx Moth

Thanks for your info.

joelfmi 09-01-2022 06:52 AM

Knowledge is a good thing
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by pauld315 (Post 2131817)
Looks like a flying cockroach. Very common in Florida. Be thankful it is outside.

YOU ARE WRIGHT A flying cockroach FOUND IN NORTHEASTTHAT IS FOUND A GREAT DEAL FROM SEWERAGE.LEAKS.

RiderOnTheStorm 09-01-2022 07:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pauld315 (Post 2131817)
Looks like a flying cockroach. Very common in Florida. Be thankful it is outside.

No, no, no. We don't have cockroaches in Florida; rather "Palmetto Bugs". Sounds so much nicer, doesn't it?

Betty Wagner 09-01-2022 07:44 AM

Winged bug
 
Yes, that's a Tersa Sphinx. You can download Picture Insect to phone. Click and identify.

Rodneysblue 09-01-2022 08:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jandr (Post 2131749)
Anyone know what this is? It's just above our front door. Leave it alone? Spray it?

That is an insectoid fighter bomber from the Arachnids invasion force. Beware they are controlled by the Brain Bug that has power over all insectoid. You need to call The Starship Troopers to eradicate them and the the advancing swarm. Remember “service guarantees citizenship”🤣🤣🤣🤣

jammaiora 09-01-2022 08:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jandr (Post 2131749)
Anyone know what this is? It's just above our front door. Leave it alone? Spray it?

Looks like a horse fly!

wawriwwawriw 09-01-2022 08:54 AM

insect
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by jandr (Post 2131749)
Anyone know what this is? It's just above our front door. Leave it alone? Spray it?

It is a moth, leave it alone, she/he will leave

ex34449 09-01-2022 09:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RiderOnTheStorm (Post 2132042)
No, no, no. We don't have cockroaches in Florida; rather "Palmetto Bugs". Sounds so much nicer, doesn't it?

We do have cockroaches. We also have palmetto bugs. Palmetto bugs are unable to fly whereas the cockroaches are quite good at it.
Truly apples and oranges in the bug world.

ex34449 09-01-2022 09:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pauld315 (Post 2131817)
Looks like a flying cockroach. Very common in Florida. Be thankful it is outside.

?? Might I suggest a trip to your optometrist. It's a moth.

NoMoSno 09-01-2022 09:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ex34449 (Post 2132097)
We do have cockroaches. We also have palmetto bugs. Palmetto bugs are unable to fly whereas the cockroaches are quite good at it.
Truly apples and oranges in the bug world.

Palmetto bugs can fly, just not very good at it.
Can a Palmetto Bug Fly? Florida Flying Cockroaches | APB

Speedie 09-01-2022 09:39 AM

Fight grocery inflation!!

Fry it with some teriyaki sauce. Tastes just like chicken

ex34449 09-01-2022 09:45 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by NoMoSno (Post 2132101)
Palmetto bugs can fly, just not very good at it.
Can a Palmetto Bug Fly? Florida Flying Cockroaches | APB

Negative! What a floridian considers a Palmetto bug is incapable of flight. Too many people from other parts of the US consider anything in Florida a palmetto bug including a moth? Go figure.
You gotta have wings to fly. A palmetto bug is a wingless, segmented roach.
EDIT: This is a Palmetto Bug as we Floridians know them.
Florida woods cockroach - Eurycotis floridana (Walker)

gobuck827 09-01-2022 10:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ex34449 (Post 2132097)
We do have cockroaches. We also have palmetto bugs. Palmetto bugs are unable to fly whereas the cockroaches are quite good at it.
Truly apples and oranges in the bug world.

Almost everything about this post is incorrect. Palmetto bugs are cockroaches and can, indeed, fly.

How are Cockroaches and Palmetto Bugs Different? | Orkin

ex34449 09-01-2022 10:09 AM

"Almost everything about this post is incorrect. Palmetto bugs are cockroaches and can, indeed, fly."
I'm pretty confident you aren't from Florida. lol

The Orkin site doesn't even show a picture of one. Here, let's use the UF link instead. Technically yes, they have wings but so do penguins... it doesn't mean they can take flight.
Show me the wings please??

Florida woods cockroach - Eurycotis floridana (Walker)

NoMoSno 09-01-2022 11:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ex34449 (Post 2132115)
"Almost everything about this post is incorrect. Palmetto bugs are cockroaches and can, indeed, fly."
I'm pretty confident you aren't from Florida. lol

The Orkin site doesn't even show a picture of one. Here, let's use the UF link instead. Technically yes, they have wings but so do penguins... it doesn't mean they can take flight.
Show me the wings please??

Florida woods cockroach - Eurycotis floridana (Walker)

Which is exactly what the link I posted stated, if you took the time to read it.
They have wings, but use them for gliding not taking flight.

ex34449 09-01-2022 12:18 PM

I'll leave it at this. For what a Floridian would term as a Palmetto bug. They cannot fly, glide etc. I've seen a few fall from bushes and their glide path was similar to a walnut flying out of a tree. They are ground dwelling bugs incapable of any type of flight but like anything, they fall pretty well.
They cannot fly, they cannot glide. Period!

Florida woods cockroach (aka palmetto bug)

Quote/s from the UF entomology site (they kinda know bugs) :

"but lacks effective flight wings and is slow moving."

"species also lacks developed wings in either sex, instead having reduced wing pads and absent hind wings."

"Figure 3. Vestigial wing formation on an adult Florida woods cockroach"

Vestigial definition:
(of an organ or part of the body) degenerate, rudimentary, or atrophied, having become functionless in the course of evolution.
"the vestigial wings of kiwis are entirely hidden"
Rather like the tail bone we all have. We wont be hanging from trees anytime soon.

If you have a palmetto bug that is capable of gliding, I would suggest you contact the UF's bug people right away. Maybe you'll get to name the new sub species.

gobuck827 09-01-2022 05:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ex34449 (Post 2132115)
"Almost everything about this post is incorrect. Palmetto bugs are cockroaches and can, indeed, fly."
I'm pretty confident you aren't from Florida. lol

The Orkin site doesn't even show a picture of one. Here, let's use the UF link instead. Technically yes, they have wings but so do penguins... it doesn't mean they can take flight.
Show me the wings please??

Florida woods cockroach - Eurycotis floridana (Walker)

From the link @ UF that you provided;

"However, palmettobug may also describe any large cockroach that may frequently be encountered as a peridomestic pest, and has included several members of Eurycotis and Periplaneta (Gurney & Walker 1976) such as the American cockroach, Periplaneta americana (Linnaeus), and the smokybrown cockroach, Periplaneta fuliginosa"

Both of these species are capable of adult flight.

SilverMema 09-01-2022 11:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rodneysblue (Post 2132061)
That is an insectoid fighter bomber from the Arachnids invasion force. Beware they are controlled by the Brain Bug that has power over all insectoid. You need to call The Starship Troopers to eradicate them and the the advancing swarm. Remember “service guarantees citizenship”🤣🤣🤣🤣

Omg you had me laughing like crazy 😂

sloanst 09-02-2022 07:01 AM

This is not a cockroach of any kind. It is a Tersa Sphinx moth 100%.

Frodo 09-02-2022 12:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jandr (Post 2131749)
Anyone know what this is? It's just above our front door. Leave it alone? Spray it?

They look like Hummingbird moths. Harmless to us but maybe not for plants

Frodo 09-02-2022 12:29 PM

It looks like a Hummingbird Moth. Harmless to us but, perhaps, not for plants

ex34449 09-02-2022 01:08 PM

Educating is like pushing a rope.


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