So I was out prowling around our side yard, checking on our pretty-much-inactive tomato plant and a couple of vines to see which one was going to die first.
When a leaf caught my eye, apparently stuck to the wall.
Now it's a rough stucco wall so I could imagine a leaf having been blown up there and becoming attached.
But when I looked closer, I saw this leaf was actually a critter so I took a couple of more pictures of it.
When I showed the pictures to Judy and suggested it might be a Praying Mantis, she said "No, it's a Cicada."
Well, I went to the omniscient Google and the Cicadas it showed didn't look anything like this critter.
So I asked Google to show me some bugs that look like leaves and it promptly convinced me this was a member of the Tettigoniidae Family.
More commonly known as Bush Crickets or (especially in North America) Katydids!
And, just to put a fine point on it, the Google said they are nocturnal and that during the day when they're "resting" they assume a posture that causes them to resemble a leaf!
So case solved and thus ends today's lesson in Insect Identification.
I can't wait until nightfall when it may start "singing".
As I said to Judy, "It may be good that we're practically deaf!"
14 comments:
tc Ha! That was a great sound of Indiana summer.
I have these and wondered what they were and if they were the bugs that were eating holes in my plants . . .
That does look SO much like a leaf! Great camouflage!!
Hello beastie!
Good catch! Hurray for the internet.
I just love having all the knowledge in the world right there at my fingertips. Got a question? I'm off to see Mr. Google.
I knew it was a cricket right away, because I have seen a few here in my own garden, although none for a year or two now.
That is so cool. It really does look like a leaf.
Aw Katydids! Memories of my youth...
We sometimes called these "leaf hoppers" and sometimes "katydids" back in the 1940s and 50s. I did NOT realize they were a type of cricket. Thanks!
What a wonderful creature - sculpted by millennia of natural evolution.
We call those Leaf-hoppers, for a very apparent reason. They drive my new dog crazy. He nudges them and they whirr off, leaving him bumfuzzled.
It is quite an elegant looking creature.
I don't know what is 'singing; outside here tonight, but it is loud.
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