16 Insect Combination Slide Box Set 6 Square Block Education Specimen SSDD74C1

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Seller: selltotheworld ✉️ (2,465) 99.2%, Location: Hong Kong, HK, Ships to: AMERICAS, EUROPE, ASIA, AU, Item: 153614722953 16 Insect Combination Slide Box Set 6 Square Block Education Specimen SSDD74C1.
  • Insect Collection Set - 6 Insect Combination Mix Specimen Slide (in 6 square clear Lucite Block with a Magnifier)  SSDD74C1  16 genuine different Insects (Bugs) permanently encased in clear lucite material (in 6 separate individual square block). The specimens are crystal clear, indestructible and transparent. Safe, authentic and completely unbreakable product put living Bugs right at your fingertips! Anyone can safely explore the Bugs from every angle.
  • It is clear enough for microscope observation.
  •  
  • There is a Magnifier in each set for close-up observation!
  •  
  • Size of each block is 75x75x9 mm (3x3x0.4 inch).
  •  
  • Weight of each block is 60 g.

    The Nature Garden

    16 Insect Combination Slide Box Set 6 Square Block Education Specimen SSDD74C1

    Insect Collection Set - 6 Insect Combination Mix Specimen Slide (in 6 square clear Lucite Block with a Magnifier)  SSDD74C1

    16 genuine different Insects (Bugs) permanently encased in clear lucite material (in 6 separate individual square block). The specimens are crystal clear, indestructible and transparent. Safe, authentic and completely unbreakable product put living Bugs right at your fingertips!
    Anyone can safely explore the Bugs from every angle.

    It is clear enough for microscope observation.

     

    There is a Magnifier in each set for close-up observation!

     

    Size of each block is 75x75x9 mm (3x3x0.4 inch).

     

    Weight of each block is 60 g.

     

    Total weight of the whole set is 360 g and 520 g with packing box.

    Size of the packing box : 181x121x35 mm (7.1x4.8x1.4 inch)

     

     

    This is a handmade real animal specimen craft. Each one will be a bit different (specimen size, color and posture) even in the same production batch.
    The picture in the listing is just for reference as we are selling multiple pieces with same picture.

     

    *** These insects are all from China.              

    Golden Cockchafer & Blue Cockchafer & Fortune Cockchafer,        

    Nymph of Spotted Lanternfly & Ladybird Beetle & Blister Beetle, 

    Green Leaf Beetle & Blue Leaf Beetle & Shining Leaf Beetle,         

    Nymph of Stink Bug & Sword Bug & Flower Bug,                   

    Termite & Big Head Ant, Mosquito and Fly                         

     

     

    ***

    Golden Cockchafer Beetle – Popillia quadriguttata

    Order: Coleoptera  Family: Scarabaeidae    Subfamily: Rutelinae   Tribe: Anomalini   Genus: Popillia

    Distribution: China, Japan, Korea

    Body size: 9 - 12 mm

     

    Blue Cockchafer Beetle – Popillia mutans

    Order: Coleoptera   Family: Scarabaeidae   Subfamily: Rutelinae   Tribe: Anomalini   Genus: Popillia

    Distribution: China, Japan, Korea

    Body size: 9 - 15 mm

     

    Shining Leaf Beetle - Acrothinium gaschkevitschii

    Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae

    Distribution: Eastern China
    Body size: 4.5 – 9 mm

    This is a really beautiful little beetle with metallic red/green wing cases (elytra). The species occurs throughout China, Japan, Korea and is also found in Siberia. Apparently it’s a pest of grapes, so it appears on the “regulated” lists in the USA and New Zealand.

     

    Blue Leaf Beetle – Chrysochus chinensis

    Order: Coleoptera   Suborder: Polyphaga   Infraorder: Cucujiformia   Superfamily: Chrysomeloidea    Family: Chrysomelidae    Subfamily: Eumolpinae    Tribe: Eumolpini    Genus: Chrysochus

    Distribution: China
    Body size: 7 – 17 mm

     

    13-Star Golden Ladybird Beetle - Synonycha grandis

    Order: Coleoptera    Suborder: Polyphaga    Infraorder: Cucujiformia    Superfamily: Cucujoidea    Family: Coccinellidae    Subfamily: Coccinellinae     Genus: Synonycha    Species: Synonycha

    Coccinellidae is a family of beetles, known variously as ladybirds (British English, Australian English, South African English), ladybugs (North American English) or lady beetles (preferred by some scientists). The family name comes from its type genus, Coccinella. Coccinellids are found worldwide, with over 5,000 species described, more than 450 native to North America alone. Coccinellids are small insects, ranging from 1 mm to 10 mm (0.04 to 0.4 inches), and are commonly yellow, orange, or scarlet with small black spots on their wing covers, with black legs, head and antennae. A very large number of species are mostly or entirely black, gray, or brown, however, and may be difficult for non-entomologists to recognize as coccinellids (and, conversely, there are many small beetles that are easily mistaken as such, like tortoise beetles).

    They are generally considered useful insects as many species feed on aphids or scale insects, which are pests in gardens, agricultural fields, orchards, and similar places. Some people consider seeing them or having them land on one's body to be a sign of good luck to come, and that killing them presages bad luck. A few species are pests in North America and Europe.

     

    Little Blister Beetle - Mylabris cichorii

    Order: Coleoptera   Family: Meloidae  Genus: Mylabris

    Mylabris cichorii is a beetle containing cantharidin. The blister beetle is a traditional medicinal insect recorded in the Chinese Pharmacopoeia. It synthesizes cantharidin, which kills cancer cells efficiently. Only males produce large amounts of cantharidin.

    Mylabris is abundant in China and Eastern India. The beetles are about 25 millimetres long and 9 millimetres broad; wing-cases black, with three broad, wavy, orange-yellow bands, which, when examined under a lens, are seen to bear black bristly hairs. The odour is disagreeable. M. Cichorii, which is often present in the drug, is smaller, and has brighter yellow bands, covered with a yellow downy pubescence, the hairs on the back part being black.

    M. phalerata: With an oblong body, a triangular head, two large compound eyes, whippy and semented antennae. On the chest there is a pair of black leathery elytra with three orange, broad and transverse striae, and two membranous wings under the elytra. Feet in three pairs, usually dropped. Abdomen annularly segmented, covered with black hairs. Unpleasant in odour. M. cichoni: Smaller, with yellow hairs and yellow brown transverse striae on the wings. Both are acrid in taste, cold in nature, strongly toxic, and attributive to liver and stomach channels.

     

    Fortune Cockchafer Beetle - Popillia flavosellata

    Order: Coleoptera   Family: Scarabaeidae   Subfamily: Rutelinae   Tribe: Anomalini   Genus: Popillia

    Size: 4 – 10 mm

    Distribution: China, Vietnam

     

    Nymph of Melon Stink Bug - Coridius chinensis

    Ordo: Hemiptera • Subordo: Heteroptera • Infraordo: Pentatomomorpha • Superfamilia: Pentatomoidea • Familia: Dinidoridae • Subfamilia: Dinidorinae • Tribus: Dinidorini • Genus: Coridius

    This species is very commonly used in China in an aphrodisiacal medicine and is on sale in Chinese medicine shops throughout China.

     

    Sword Bug - Megarrhamphus truncates

    Order: Hemiptera     Suborder: Heteroptera     Infraorder: Pentatomomorpha      Superfamily: Pentatomoidea      Family: Scutelleridae

    Scutelleridae is a family of true bugs. They are commonly known as jewel bugs or metallic shield bugs due to their often brilliant coloration. They are also known as shield-backed bugs due to the enlargement of the last section of their thorax into a continuous shield over the abdomen and wings. This latter characteristic distinguishes them from most other families within Heteroptera, and may lead to misidentification as a beetle rather than a bug. These insects feed on plant juices from a variety of different species, including some commercial crops. Closely related to stink bugs, they may also produce an offensive odour when disturbed. There are around 450 species worldwide.

    Length of body 18 -22 mm, the body color tan, the forehead slightly assumes the triangle, the nose point slender, protothorax back board brown bulging dun streak, small shield board long and narrow yellow vertical strip, is brown, the anterior wing leather nature is red, various feet tan, the first full tibia is red. This kind of distribution in the low elevation mountainous area, often appears on the grasses leaf, the nymphae body color yellow, the body back edge has the black streak. This kind of body is long and narrow, therefore the outward appearance shrimp roe the named big shrimp shells stinkbug, the approximate kind of small shrimp shells stinkbug's build is likely small, the forehead compares the point, is not common.

    Ecology habit: The prosopon appears in the spring, the summer two seasons, the low elevation area is obvious. Host food is the gramineae weed, also often perches the activity on the awn leaves of grass.

    Distribution: Southern China

     

    Nymph of Camellia Shield Bug - Poecilocoris latus

    Order: Hemiptera     Suborder: Heteroptera     Family: Scutelleridae    Genus: Poecilocoris

    Distribution: Southern China, India, Vietnam, Myanmar.

    Size: 16 -22 mm

    Camellia Shield Bug (Poecilocoris latus,family Pentatomidae, order Hemiptera) is a very attractive and spectacular shield bug to be found on the foliage of Camellia and tea bushes on various hillside slopes in tropical and sup-tropical regions. This insect can produce strong defensive odours from their thoracic glands. Females lay clusters of barrel-shaped eggs on plants. There are five nymphal stages. Nymphs start life as herbivores but later become predators or mixed feeders.

    Adults 16-20 mm body length, width 10.5-14 mm wide oval egg diameter of 1.8-2.0 mm, nearly round, beginning at the yellowish-green, a few days later showed two purple long grouper, orange yellow before hatching . Nymph general of 3 mm long, nearly circular, orange yellow, with metallic luster, the age of five. In Jiangxi, Fujian, Guangxi and are 1 year to the end of larvae in the soil crevices or under deciduous winter.
    Egg stage 7-10 days, the nymph stage seven, two adult life, or longer.
    Damage tea, Camellia oleifera. Nymph on smoking in the tea fruit juice, fruit development impact, and to reduce oil production rate, but also because of the smoking-induced tea in the anthrax, but also cause fruit drop.

     

    Big-head Ant - Pheidologeton diversus

    Family: Formicidae   Subfamily: Myrmicinae   Tribe: Pheidolini   Genus: Pheidole   Species: diversus

    Distribution: Tropical and sub-tropical Asia (China, Taiwan, Japan)

    Description: Total length between 1.3 and 2.5 mm in minor workers. Body color yellowish brown to reddish brown in minor workers: reddish brown to blackish brown in majors. In minor workers: head rectangular with weakly convex posterior margin in full face view; mandibles each with 5 teeth; antennal scapes short, not exceeding posterior margin of head; each of the apical two funicular segments long, their combined length longer than the rest of funiculus; promesonotum relatively strongly convex in profile; metanotal groove deeply incised; dorsum of propodeum convex; propodeal spines long, with acute apices. In major workers: head proportionately large, almost square, with convex posterior margin in frontal view; anterior margin of clypeus straight, with a shallow median notch; mandibles large, triangular, with an acute apical tooth; masticatory margins without distinct teeth; eyes relatively small; ocelli present; antennal scapes 0.5 times as long as head; subpetiolar process present.

     

    The Termite - Macrotermes bellicosus

    Order: Macrotermitinae Family: Termitidae Subfamily: Macrotermitinae

    Genus: Macrotermes

    Macrotermes bellicosus is one of nearly 2000 species of termites, and the genus Macrotermes is widely distributed throughout Africa and South-East Asia. The species M. bellicosus is one of the largest termites, with a complex, highly evolved colonial organization. All termites live in colonies, those of M. bellicosus reaching a size of hundreds of thousands over many years. Although termites are sometimes called "white ants", they are not ants, nor are they closely related to them.

     

    House Fly - Musca domestica

    Order: Diptera   Family: Muscidae   Subfamily: Muscinae   Tribe: Muscini   Genus: Musca   Species: M. domestica

    The housefly (also house fly, house-fly or common housefly), Musca domestica, is the most common of all flies found in homes, and indeed one of the most widely distributed insects, found all over the world; it is often considered a pest that can carry serious diseases.

    The adults are 8–12 mm long. Their thorax is gray, with four longitudinal dark lines on the back. The underside of their abdomen is yellow, and their whole body is covered with hair-like projections. The females are slightly larger than the males, and have a much larger space between their red compound eyes.

    Like most Diptera (meaning "two-winged"), houseflies have only one pair of wings; the hind pair is reduced to small halteres that aid in flight stability. Characteristically, the media vein (M1+2 or fourth long vein of the wing) shows a sharp upward bend.

     

    Yellow-banded Crane Fly – Ctenophora flavibasis

    Order: Diptera   Suborder: Nematocera   Infraorder: Tipulomorpha   Superfamily: Tipuloidea   Family: Limoniidae   Subfamily: Chioneinae   Genus: Ctenophora

    They are large with long deciduous legs and are found throughout South China.

    The larvae are horticulturally notorious. They live in soil and damage high-quality turf (bowling greens, golf courses, etc) and at times in temperate countries can be very serious economic pests, particularly in the past when there was more pasture for them to inhabit. They are elongate with biting mouthparts and respiratory spiracles at the posterior end only (metapneustic).

     

    Nymph of Spotted Lanternfly - Lycorma delicatula

    Order: Hemiptera   Superfamily: Fulgoroidea   Family: Fulgoridae   Genus: Lycorma

    The spotted lanternfly or Lycorma delicatula (order Hemiptera, family Fulgoridae) is a planthopper native to China, India, and Vietnam. Although it has two pairs of wings, it jumps more than it flies. Its host plants are grapes, pines, stone fruits, and Malus spp. In its native habitat it is kept in check by natural predators or pathogens. It was accidentally introduced in Korea in 2006 and is since considered a pest. In September 2014, it was first spotted in the U.S..

    The spotted lanternfly is originally native to parts of China, India, Vietnam and eastern Asia. It is an 1 inch long and a half inch wide planthopper belonging to the family of the fulgorid insects. The lantern analogy stems from the inflated front portion of the head, that was thought to be luminous. Adult lantern flies have a black head and grayish wings adorned with the name giving black spots. Their wing tips look like they are covered with tiny black bricks and grey mortar in between. In flight it displays red hind wings with black spots on the proximal third, a white wedge in the middle of the wing and a solid black wing tip. The abdomen is yellowish with black and white bands on the top and bottom. The lanternfly is a strong jumper and hops from location to location more than it flies. In Chinese medicine the spotted lanternfly is regarded poisonous and used for relief from swelling. It feeds on woody plants and non-woody plants, piercing the phloem tissue of foliage and young stems with its specialized mouth parts, and sucking its sap. The sugary fluid leaks and coats leaves and stems, which can encourage mold growth. It does not feed on fruit or the leaves per se. The lantern fly has a wide host range and innumerable host plants are known, including grapes, pines, the Rosaceae with stone fruits, and apple species.

     

    Item Specifics
    Country of Manufacture : China
    Type : Collector Plate
    Animal : Insect
    Insect Breed : Beetle
    Material : Resin
    Country/Region of Manufacture : China
    Modified Item : No
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    By Paypal

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    We send the goods to USA, Canada, UK, Australia, New Zealand, EU countries and some other European and Asian countries by E-express, a kind of fast postal service by Hong Kong Post. It usually takes about 6 to 10 working days for delivery.

    We send the goods to other countries by registered airmail and will take about 8 to 14 working days for delivery.

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    16 Insect Combination Slide Box Set 6 Square Block Education Specimen SSDD74C1

    Insect Collection Set - 6 Insect Combination Mix Specimen Slide (in 6 square clear Lucite Block with a Magnifier)  SSDD74C1

    16 genuine different Insects (Bugs) permanently encased in clear lucite material (in 6 separate individual square block). The specimens are crystal clear, indestructible and transparent. Safe, authentic and completely unbreakable product put living Bugs right at your fingertips!
    Anyone can safely explore the Bugs from every angle.

    It is clear enough for microscope observation.

     

    There is a Magnifier in each set for close-up observation!

     

    Size of each block is 75x75x9 mm (3x3x0.4 inch).

     

    Weight of each block is 60 g.

     

    Total weight of the whole set is 360 g and 520 g with packing box.

    Size of the packing box : 181x121x35 mm (7.1x4.8x1.4 inch)

     

     

    This is a handmade real animal specimen craft. Each one will be a bit different (specimen size, color and posture) even in the same production batch.
    The picture in the listing is just for reference as we are selling multiple pieces with same picture.

     

    *** These insects are all from China.              

    Golden Cockchafer & Blue Cockchafer & Fortune Cockchafer,        

    Nymph of Spotted Lanternfly & Ladybird Beetle & Blister Beetle, 

    Green Leaf Beetle & Blue Leaf Beetle & Shining Leaf Beetle,         

    Nymph of Stink Bug & Sword Bug & Flower Bug,                   

    Termite & Big Head Ant, Mosquito and Fly                         

     

     

    ***

    Golden Cockchafer Beetle – Popillia quadriguttata

    Order: Coleoptera  Family: Scarabaeidae    Subfamily: Rutelinae   Tribe: Anomalini   Genus: Popillia

    Distribution: China, Japan, Korea

    Body size: 9 - 12 mm

     

    Blue Cockchafer Beetle – Popillia mutans

    Order: Coleoptera   Family: Scarabaeidae   Subfamily: Rutelinae   Tribe: Anomalini   Genus: Popillia

    Distribution: China, Japan, Korea

    Body size: 9 - 15 mm

     

    Shining Leaf Beetle - Acrothinium gaschkevitschii

    Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae

    Distribution: Eastern China
    Body size: 4.5 – 9 mm

    This is a really beautiful little beetle with metallic red/green wing cases (elytra). The species occurs throughout China, Japan, Korea and is also found in Siberia. Apparently it’s a pest of grapes, so it appears on the “regulated” lists in the USA and New Zealand.

     

    Blue Leaf Beetle – Chrysochus chinensis

    Order: Coleoptera   Suborder: Polyphaga   Infraorder: Cucujiformia   Superfamily: Chrysomeloidea    Family: Chrysomelidae    Subfamily: Eumolpinae    Tribe: Eumolpini    Genus: Chrysochus

    Distribution: China
    Body size: 7 – 17 mm

     

    13-Star Golden Ladybird Beetle - Synonycha grandis

    Order: Coleoptera    Suborder: Polyphaga    Infraorder: Cucujiformia    Superfamily: Cucujoidea    Family: Coccinellidae    Subfamily: Coccinellinae     Genus: Synonycha    Species: Synonycha

    Coccinellidae is a family of beetles, known variously as ladybirds (British English, Australian English, South African English), ladybugs (North American English) or lady beetles (preferred by some scientists). The family name comes from its type genus, Coccinella. Coccinellids are found worldwide, with over 5,000 species described, more than 450 native to North America alone. Coccinellids are small insects, ranging from 1 mm to 10 mm (0.04 to 0.4 inches), and are commonly yellow, orange, or scarlet with small black spots on their wing covers, with black legs, head and antennae. A very large number of species are mostly or entirely black, gray, or brown, however, and may be difficult for non-entomologists to recognize as coccinellids (and, conversely, there are many small beetles that are easily mistaken as such, like tortoise beetles).

    They are generally considered useful insects as many species feed on aphids or scale insects, which are pests in gardens, agricultural fields, orchards, and similar places. Some people consider seeing them or having them land on one's body to be a sign of good luck to come, and that killing them presages bad luck. A few species are pests in North America and Europe.

     

    Little Blister Beetle - Mylabris cichorii

    Order: Coleoptera   Family: Meloidae  Genus: Mylabris

    Mylabris cichorii is a beetle containing cantharidin. The blister beetle is a traditional medicinal insect recorded in the Chinese Pharmacopoeia. It synthesizes cantharidin, which kills cancer cells efficiently. Only males produce large amounts of cantharidin.

    Mylabris is abundant in China and Eastern India. The beetles are about 25 millimetres long and 9 millimetres broad; wing-cases black, with three broad, wavy, orange-yellow bands, which, when examined under a lens, are seen to bear black bristly hairs. The odour is disagreeable. M. Cichorii, which is often present in the drug, is smaller, and has brighter yellow bands, covered with a yellow downy pubescence, the hairs on the back part being black.

    M. phalerata: With an oblong body, a triangular head, two large compound eyes, whippy and semented antennae. On the chest there is a pair of black leathery elytra with three orange, broad and transverse striae, and two membranous wings under the elytra. Feet in three pairs, usually dropped. Abdomen annularly segmented, covered with black hairs. Unpleasant in odour. M. cichoni: Smaller, with yellow hairs and yellow brown transverse striae on the wings. Both are acrid in taste, cold in nature, strongly toxic, and attributive to liver and stomach channels.

     

    Fortune Cockchafer Beetle - Popillia flavosellata

    Order: Coleoptera   Family: Scarabaeidae   Subfamily: Rutelinae   Tribe: Anomalini   Genus: Popillia

    Size: 4 – 10 mm

    Distribution: China, Vietnam

     

    Nymph of Melon Stink Bug - Coridius chinensis

    Ordo: Hemiptera • Subordo: Heteroptera • Infraordo: Pentatomomorpha • Superfamilia: Pentatomoidea • Familia: Dinidoridae • Subfamilia: Dinidorinae • Tribus: Dinidorini • Genus: Coridius

    This species is very commonly used in China in an aphrodisiacal medicine and is on sale in Chinese medicine shops throughout China.

     

    Sword Bug - Megarrhamphus truncates

    Order: Hemiptera     Suborder: Heteroptera     Infraorder: Pentatomomorpha      Superfamily: Pentatomoidea      Family: Scutelleridae

    Scutelleridae is a family of true bugs. They are commonly known as jewel bugs or metallic shield bugs due to their often brilliant coloration. They are also known as shield-backed bugs due to the enlargement of the last section of their thorax into a continuous shield over the abdomen and wings. This latter characteristic distinguishes them from most other families within Heteroptera, and may lead to misidentification as a beetle rather than a bug. These insects feed on plant juices from a variety of different species, including some commercial crops. Closely related to stink bugs, they may also produce an offensive odour when disturbed. There are around 450 species worldwide.

    Length of body 18 -22 mm, the body color tan, the forehead slightly assumes the triangle, the nose point slender, protothorax back board brown bulging dun streak, small shield board long and narrow yellow vertical strip, is brown, the anterior wing leather nature is red, various feet tan, the first full tibia is red. This kind of distribution in the low elevation mountainous area, often appears on the grasses leaf, the nymphae body color yellow, the body back edge has the black streak. This kind of body is long and narrow, therefore the outward appearance shrimp roe the named big shrimp shells stinkbug, the approximate kind of small shrimp shells stinkbug's build is likely small, the forehead compares the point, is not common.

    Ecology habit: The prosopon appears in the spring, the summer two seasons, the low elevation area is obvious. Host food is the gramineae weed, also often perches the activity on the awn leaves of grass.

    Distribution: Southern China

     

    Nymph of Camellia Shield Bug - Poecilocoris latus

    Order: Hemiptera     Suborder: Heteroptera     Family: Scutelleridae    Genus: Poecilocoris

    Distribution: Southern China, India, Vietnam, Myanmar.

    Size: 16 -22 mm

    Camellia Shield Bug (Poecilocoris latus,family Pentatomidae, order Hemiptera) is a very attractive and spectacular shield bug to be found on the foliage of Camellia and tea bushes on various hillside slopes in tropical and sup-tropical regions. This insect can produce strong defensive odours from their thoracic glands. Females lay clusters of barrel-shaped eggs on plants. There are five nymphal stages. Nymphs start life as herbivores but later become predators or mixed feeders.

    Adults 16-20 mm body length, width 10.5-14 mm wide oval egg diameter of 1.8-2.0 mm, nearly round, beginning at the yellowish-green, a few days later showed two purple long grouper, orange yellow before hatching . Nymph general of 3 mm long, nearly circular, orange yellow, with metallic luster, the age of five. In Jiangxi, Fujian, Guangxi and are 1 year to the end of larvae in the soil crevices or under deciduous winter.
    Egg stage 7-10 days, the nymph stage seven, two adult life, or longer.
    Damage tea, Camellia oleifera. Nymph on smoking in the tea fruit juice, fruit development impact, and to reduce oil production rate, but also because of the smoking-induced tea in the anthrax, but also cause fruit drop.

     

    Big-head Ant - Pheidologeton diversus

    Family: Formicidae   Subfamily: Myrmicinae   Tribe: Pheidolini   Genus: Pheidole   Species: diversus

    Distribution: Tropical and sub-tropical Asia (China, Taiwan, Japan)

    Description: Total length between 1.3 and 2.5 mm in minor workers. Body color yellowish brown to reddish brown in minor workers: reddish brown to blackish brown in majors. In minor workers: head rectangular with weakly convex posterior margin in full face view; mandibles each with 5 teeth; antennal scapes short, not exceeding posterior margin of head; each of the apical two funicular segments long, their combined length longer than the rest of funiculus; promesonotum relatively strongly convex in profile; metanotal groove deeply incised; dorsum of propodeum convex; propodeal spines long, with acute apices. In major workers: head proportionately large, almost square, with convex posterior margin in frontal view; anterior margin of clypeus straight, with a shallow median notch; mandibles large, triangular, with an acute apical tooth; masticatory margins without distinct teeth; eyes relatively small; ocelli present; antennal scapes 0.5 times as long as head; subpetiolar process present.

     

    The Termite - Macrotermes bellicosus

    Order: Macrotermitinae Family: Termitidae Subfamily: Macrotermitinae

    Genus: Macrotermes

    Macrotermes bellicosus is one of nearly 2000 species of termites, and the genus Macrotermes is widely distributed throughout Africa and South-East Asia. The species M. bellicosus is one of the largest termites, with a complex, highly evolved colonial organization. All termites live in colonies, those of M. bellicosus reaching a size of hundreds of thousands over many years. Although termites are sometimes called "white ants", they are not ants, nor are they closely related to them.

     

    House Fly - Musca domestica

    Order: Diptera   Family: Muscidae   Subfamily: Muscinae   Tribe: Muscini   Genus: Musca   Species: M. domestica

    The housefly (also house fly, house-fly or common housefly), Musca domestica, is the most common of all flies found in homes, and indeed one of the most widely distributed insects, found all over the world; it is often considered a pest that can carry serious diseases.

    The adults are 8–12 mm long. Their thorax is gray, with four longitudinal dark lines on the back. The underside of their abdomen is yellow, and their whole body is covered with hair-like projections. The females are slightly larger than the males, and have a much larger space between their red compound eyes.

    Like most Diptera (meaning "two-winged"), houseflies have only one pair of wings; the hind pair is reduced to small halteres that aid in flight stability. Characteristically, the media vein (M1+2 or fourth long vein of the wing) shows a sharp upward bend.

     

    Yellow-banded Crane Fly – Ctenophora flavibasis

    Order: Diptera   Suborder: Nematocera   Infraorder: Tipulomorpha   Superfamily: Tipuloidea   Family: Limoniidae   Subfamily: Chioneinae   Genus: Ctenophora

    They are large with long deciduous legs and are found throughout South China.

    The larvae are horticulturally notorious. They live in soil and damage high-quality turf (bowling greens, golf courses, etc) and at times in temperate countries can be very serious economic pests, particularly in the past when there was more pasture for them to inhabit. They are elongate with biting mouthparts and respiratory spiracles at the posterior end only (metapneustic).

     

    Nymph of Spotted Lanternfly - Lycorma delicatula

    Order: Hemiptera   Superfamily: Fulgoroidea   Family: Fulgoridae   Genus: Lycorma

    The spotted lanternfly or Lycorma delicatula (order Hemiptera, family Fulgoridae) is a planthopper native to China, India, and Vietnam. Although it has two pairs of wings, it jumps more than it flies. Its host plants are grapes, pines, stone fruits, and Malus spp. In its native habitat it is kept in check by natural predators or pathogens. It was accidentally introduced in Korea in 2006 and is since considered a pest. In September 2014, it was first spotted in the U.S..

    The spotted lanternfly is originally native to parts of China, India, Vietnam and eastern Asia. It is an 1 inch long and a half inch wide planthopper belonging to the family of the fulgorid insects. The lantern analogy stems from the inflated front portion of the head, that was thought to be luminous. Adult lantern flies have a black head and grayish wings adorned with the name giving black spots. Their wing tips look like they are covered with tiny black bricks and grey mortar in between. In flight it displays red hind wings with black spots on the proximal third, a white wedge in the middle of the wing and a solid black wing tip. The abdomen is yellowish with black and white bands on the top and bottom. The lanternfly is a strong jumper and hops from location to location more than it flies. In Chinese medicine the spotted lanternfly is regarded poisonous and used for relief from swelling. It feeds on woody plants and non-woody plants, piercing the phloem tissue of foliage and young stems with its specialized mouth parts, and sucking its sap. The sugary fluid leaks and coats leaves and stems, which can encourage mold growth. It does not feed on fruit or the leaves per se. The lantern fly has a wide host range and innumerable host plants are known, including grapes, pines, the Rosaceae with stone fruits, and apple species.

     

    Item Specifics
    Country of Manufacture : China
    Type : Collector Plate
    Animal : Insect
    Insect Breed : Beetle
    Material : Resin
    Country/Region of Manufacture : China
    Modified Item : No
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    • Condition: New
    • Country of Manufacture: China
    • Type: Collector Plate
    • Animal: Insect
    • Insect Breed: Beetle
    • Material: Resin
    • Country/Region of Manufacture: China
    • Modified Item: No
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