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Monday Night Mystery

February 15, 2010 by myrmecos

What’s going on here?

Five points for naming the organism, and five points for the behavior.

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Posted in fun, Insect Links, Nature | Tagged metazoa | 8 Comments

8 Responses

  1. on February 15, 2010 at 8:03 pm Tim Eisele

    I expect that it is a case of ‘reflex bleeding’ to deter predators, but I don’t know which beetle species this is in particular. Maybe a lady beetle?


  2. on February 15, 2010 at 8:38 pm Ainsley S

    Yeah, I would say reflex bleeding but it doesn’t look like a coccinellid– adult beetles are almost always biungulate. Or is it that a clever illusion? Setae look like a spider or a mordellid.


  3. on February 15, 2010 at 11:12 pm Neil

    Photuris exuding chemical defenses (“reflex bleeding”) acquired from Photinus prey?


  4. on February 16, 2010 at 4:39 am Pete Yeeles

    Im going to go with reflex bleeding in a blister beetle (Epicauta?).


  5. on February 16, 2010 at 7:38 am TGIQ

    Autohaemorrhaging, yes. Coccinellidae? There are some pretty hairy lady beetles but there also seems to be a well-developed tibial spur (which I’m not used to seeing) and this critter just seems to “leggy” to be a coccinellid. Blister beetle is a more likely candidate…I agree with Peter’s Epicauta and I’ll raise him a pardalis.


  6. on February 16, 2010 at 8:32 am Dave

    Hmmm. Certainly looks like reflexive bleeding, but what has both monodactyl claws and semi-scale-like hairs? Beetles are best known for reflexive bleeding (coccinellids, blister, darkling, lampyrid, chrysomelid etc.), although I think I read that even froghoppers can do it, but my impression of insects is that they have two tarsal claws. Looks like a spider to me, but spiders are usually bidactyl too. Opilionids, millipedes and centipedes, and proturans have a single claw, but none of these look right.

    I suppose I should guess a likely cocinellid 9like Stethorus) or a weevil, but I’m going to throw logic to the winds and guess a jumping spider. It looks spidery to me, people like to photography jumping spiders (and perhaps Alex managed to overcome his phobia for a moment), and perhaps that single claw is on a palp (which would make sense). This could be my first trail of false logic of the day. On to the next.


  7. on February 16, 2010 at 9:16 am James C. Trager

    I can’t quite figure out the orientation and identity of all the parts, but I think this is a squished spider exuding venom through a chelicera.


  8. on February 16, 2010 at 6:50 pm Answer to the Monday Night Mystery « Myrmecos Blog

    […] 16, 2010 by myrmecos I am impressed. Several of you* figured out the mystery behavior: reflex bleeding, a defensive response employed by some arthropods with especially nasty hemolymph […]



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