View Full Version : Any idea what this bug is?
nickaballison
06-09-2012, 18:05
Was watching my kids play in the pool today in the backyard when this bug landed on my leg. Any idea what the heck it is? Length from tenticle things to end of stinger is about 6". Lived in Colorado my whole life and never seen one of these.
Great-Kazoo
06-09-2012, 18:41
water skeeter. Nothing serious unless they are stung:)
SideShow Bob
06-09-2012, 18:47
Insect Identification > Description of the Ichneumon Wasp Bee, Ant, Wasp and Similar
Ichneumon Wasp
Authored By Staff Writer
CATEGORY: Bee, Ant, Wasp and Similar
COMMON NAME: Ichneumon Wasp
SCIENTIFIC NAME: Megarhyssa macrurus
TAXONOMY:
KINGDOM: Animalia
PHYLYM: Arthropoda
CLASS: Insecta
ORDER: Hymenoptera
FAMILY: Ichneumonidae
GENUS: Megarhyssa
SPECIES: macrurus
CHARACTERISTICS: There are several different species, each with its own color variations. All have the wasp body shape, a thin waist and an abdomen longer than the rest of the body. Members of the family Ophion have abdomens that are shorter than Megarhyssa, but they are still long in comparison to more familiar wasps.
Females may have a long, needle-like ovipositor which is often mistaken as a stinger. The ovipositor acts like a syringe, injecting eggs deep into wood where the larvae will feed on other insect larvae already deposited there.
Giant Ichneumons tend to live in wooded areas and throughout all of North America, though they do stay away from the arid and hot desert regions and featureless plain states.
Giant Ichneumon adults do not eat at all. Larvae are parasites of Pigeon Horntail larvae, another type of wasp, and receive their nutrients by feeding off the Horntail larvae.
Variations of the Giant Ichneumon include the Eastern Giant Ichneumon, the Lunar Giant Ichneumon and the Western Giant Ichneumon. These can all be found in their respective habitats consisting of Canada, the United States of America and Mexico. ADULT SIZE (Length, not including legs): 10mm to 19mm (0.39in to 0.75in) (Compare Size)
IDENTIFYING COLORS: brown; yellow; black; orange NORTH AMERICAN REACH: Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Delaware, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Missouri, Arkansas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Colorado, Arizona, Utah, New Mexico, Nevada, California, Oregon, Washington, Montana, Mexico, Canada
Dammed aliens are landing, that was a scout, glad you killed him before he was able to report back that there is no intelligent life forms on this planet.
That's a freaky looking bug for sure!
nickaballison
06-09-2012, 19:38
Yeah you guys were right on. Never seen a wasp like that before. Thought his stinger was gonna go right through my calf
On behalf of all White Anglo Saxon Protestants everywhere, I deny any relationship with that creature. To state otherwise will be considered slander and you will be reported to our attorneys and most probably be barred from the club. Thank you. [Flower]
Dammed aliens are landing, that was a scout, glad you killed him before he was able to report back that there is no intelligent life forms on this planet.
They would have reported that anyway, if they landed at the White House :D
On behalf of all White Anglo Saxon Protestants everywhere, I deny any relationship with that creature. To state otherwise will be considered slander and you will be reported to our attorneys and most probably be barred from the club. Thank you. [Flower]
Classic! ^^
[ROFL1][ROFL2][ROFL3]
SideShow Bob
06-09-2012, 20:06
Yeah you guys were right on. Never seen a wasp like that before. Thought his stinger was gonna go right through my calf
Not a stinger, an ovipositor.
So the wasp had sex with your calf ? [ROFL1]
BPTactical
06-09-2012, 22:07
Not a stinger, an ovipositor.
So the wasp had sex with your calf ? [ROFL1]
Bob, you have probably waited your entire life to say "Ovipositor" in a coherent sentence.
Your life is complete.[ROFL3][ROFL2][ROFL3]
Growing up in OK, the most terrifying wasp we had around was the Cicada Killers. Never heard of anybody getting stung by one, but we found a lot of dead ones and they were huge! Had a stinger about 1/4" long, very frightening to look at. Big ol' things, about 1.25-1.5 inches long, they hunted the cicadas. https://www.google.com/search?tbm=isch&hl=en&source=hp&biw=1152&bih=515&q=cicada+killer+wasp&gbv=2&oq=cicda&aq=2s&aqi=g-s10&aql=&gs_l=img.1.2.0i10l10.1442.3365.0.6496.7.6.1.0.0.0. 126.714.0j6.6.0...0.0.C-AcREGqpMw
Another term for the m on the fire crew is stump f*cker
Uberjager
06-09-2012, 22:35
Growing up in OK, the most terrifying wasp we had around was the Cicada Killers. Never heard of anybody getting stung by one, but we found a lot of dead ones and they were huge! Had a stinger about 1/4" long, very frightening to look at. Big ol' things, about 1.25-1.5 inches long, they hunted the cicadas. https://www.google.com/search?tbm=isch&hl=en&source=hp&biw=1152&bih=515&q=cicada+killer+wasp&gbv=2&oq=cicda&aq=2s&aqi=g-s10&aql=&gs_l=img.1.2.0i10l10.1442.3365.0.6496.7.6.1.0.0.0. 126.714.0j6.6.0...0.0.C-AcREGqpMw
A family friend got stung by a tarantula hawk. He said it was the worst pain he ever felt before, and he's been shot before. I guess the pain greatly subsided after the first few minutes though.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.3 Copyright © 2025 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.