Stink Bug Eats Stink Bug - Observation of the Week, 7/12/22

Our Observation of the Week is this bug-on-bug predation, seen in the United States by @denisewill!

“Like so many other iNat users I’ve been fascinated by insects since childhood,” says Denise Williams, a biology teacher who grew up on a farm in Virginia. Now living in North Carolina, she tells me she has a native plant garden and started it mostly to attract insects. 

I spend a great deal of time around my house photographing arthropods of all kinds that come to my plants. My principal interests rotate every few years. For the last several years, my main focus has been on bees and wasps, but I was already starting to take more interest in hemipterans, especially the leafhoppers and stink bugs. After this observation, my interest has grown even more.

While looking for bees to photograph in her yard, Denise noticed the bug duo photographed above.

At the time, I assumed they were different instars of the brown marmorated stink bug with the younger, smaller one simply standing behind the older, larger one. Brown marmorated stink bugs are a drab brown as adults, but they are quite colorful when they hatch, so they can appear as different species as they progress through their molts. They are also so common here that I might have ignored them both, but I went ahead and snapped a few photos thinking I could at least document the stink bugs in my yard. It wasn’t until I downloaded the photos that I could see the proboscis of the smaller bug had pierced the larger one and the larger one was in the process of being consumed!

I still assumed the smaller bug was a brown marmorated stink bug, and that maybe I had just captured a case of cannibalism, so I posted the photo on iNat with that ID. @trisha24 verified the larger bug as a brown marmorated stink bug and identified the smaller one as a species of Podisus, another common stink bug in my area, but one that is predatory rather than plant-eating. Another user, @lupoli_roland, pointed out that the discoloration of the larger bug was due to it being digested.

Bugs (Order Hemiptera) have proboscis that is used for sucking. Many bugs, like the brown marmorated stink bug, use theirs to ingest plant liquids, but there are quite a few species (such as the predatory stink bug here) that slurp up the innards of other animals.

Native to Asia, brown marmorated stinkbugs have become a noted agricultural pest in North America and other places where they have been introduced. A generalist when it comes to feeding, they’ve caused tens of millions of US dollars worth of damage to crops in the past few decades.

Denise (above) really got into iNat after participating in a bumblebee project in 2018, and she quickly realized it was a great tool for helping her learn. 

I’ve learned so much about my local flora and fauna because of it and I’ve become a better and more focused observer…

Without iNaturalist, I might not have bothered to take the photograph of these insects, I might not have had access to these experts who could identify the insects in my photo and explain what was happening, and I certainly would not have fully appreciated what I got the chance to observe.


- New Yorker staff writer Kathryn Schulz wrote an entertaining piece about brown marmorated stink bugs for the magazine back in 2018.

- Here’s an informative video about predatory stink bugs. 

Publicado el julio 13, 2022 02:47 MAÑANA por tiwane tiwane

Comentarios

Fascinating!

Publicado por vireyajacquard hace alrededor de 2 años

Very interesting. Thank you.

Publicado por doug263 hace alrededor de 2 años

Stink bugs will prey on eggs as well. Great observation! There's an amazing world of stink bugs out there. https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/seeking-all-southern-california-stinkbugs

Publicado por jbryant hace alrededor de 2 años

Do they inject a paralyzing agent?

Publicado por pfau_tarleton hace alrededor de 2 años

AH! Fascinating! Good observation!!

Publicado por katharinab hace alrededor de 2 años

@pfau_tarleton There are non-proteinaceous compounds present in the saliva of asopine bugs that cause paralysis. For one species of Podisus, N,N-dimethylaniline and 1,2,5-trithiepane were found to be the toxins responsible for prey paralysis and death.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ibmb.2015.11.006

Publicado por ameeds hace alrededor de 2 años

Great stuff and a great photo. Well done!

Publicado por susanhewitt hace alrededor de 2 años

I've seen a lot of these tiny ones attacking a large insect and the large one was very much alive. Was the large stink bug able to move still?

Publicado por rayray hace alrededor de 2 años

Great observation and photo and I call it "Karma". I hate stink bugs. Ha ha! The plant eaters kill our zucchini and the predators eat my swallowtail caterpillars.

Publicado por daverogers hace alrededor de 2 años

Excellent post, observation, and observer! And massive thanks to @lupoli_roland and @ameeds that devote lots of time to curating and identifying these stink bugs on iNat. :)

Publicado por sambiology hace alrededor de 2 años

Very cool 'right place, right time' shot!

Publicado por greenjay6 hace alrededor de 2 años

Wow! What a great photo. Isn't it amazing what you can see when your ready to notice unusual shapes or movement or relationships? And that one will lead other discoveries at later times. So cool.

Publicado por vmlk hace alrededor de 2 años

So cool!

Publicado por gatorhawk hace alrededor de 2 años

So cool!

Publicado por alanarama3 hace alrededor de 2 años

Glad to see native insects preying on invasives!

Publicado por dmantack hace alrededor de 2 años

My gosh did I learn a lot from following your winning photo and observation into the article. Thank you for following through and connecting with others to broaden our understanding! We have stink bugs in Oregon, too. What camera did you use? A phone?

Publicado por mollio hace alrededor de 2 años

@mollio if you click on the "i" button on bottom of the photo (on the observation page) you'll be taken to the photo's page on iNat. There's photo metadata there: https://www.inaturalist.org/photos/209469988

Publicado por tiwane hace alrededor de 2 años

Good to catch an asopine in the act, excellent photo thanks!

Publicado por dustaway hace alrededor de 2 años

Creepy cool. Look no further than the natural world, esp. bugs, for movie-making material/ideas. Uggh. Great photo and interesting biology!

Publicado por seaheart88 hace alrededor de 2 años

Amazing photo and explanations!

Publicado por susanne-kasimir hace alrededor de 2 años

I, too was surprised when I observed the Podisus on Gum bumelia in connection with my iNat project, "Arthropods on Sideroxylon lanuginosum, Gum Bumelia". It actually took a few observations before I observed the predation.

Publicado por waltermellon hace alrededor de 2 años

Very nice!

Publicado por ken-potter hace alrededor de 2 años

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