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RE: A FEW WORDS ABOUT ORYCTES NASICORNIS - for the Butterfly Day and Insect Day Giveaway - Week 48

in #steemstem4 years ago

This is an interesting question, how others experience their existence. :) Would be cool to have some psychic power that let you experience that for a moment .... Maybe to them that feels like a very active chewing and munching in the dark. Maybe it's a bit like the life in the womb. :) Or maybe it is like watching the TV, and always the same channel with the same larval Big Brother show on it.

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What a great response...material for at least two stories.

Maybe it's a bit like the life in the womb. :) Or maybe it is like watching the TV, and always the same channel with the same larval Big Brother show on it.

Absolultely wonderful.

#love it when the comments are as interesting as the original post - and LOVE this rhino beetle! Well, the photos, anyway. Maybe I wouldn't want their larvae feeding in my garden 2-4 years, but if they're eating compost, not all my native flora, they're ok by me. @ryo-6414posted a Japanese beetle here that looks nothing like the invasive, destructive marauder I've been assassinating every summer in the Midwest. I'd be less eager to kill the awesome looking rhino beetle!

image.png

The Japanese beetle (Popillia japonica) is a species of scarab beetle.The adult measures 15 mm (0.6 in) in length and 10 mm (0.4 in) in width, has iridescent copper-colored elytra and a green thorax and head. It is not very destructive in Japan, where it is controlled by natural predators, but in North America, it is a noted pest of about 300 species of plants including rose bushes, grapes ... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_beetle

Japanese beetle
The Japanese beetle (Popillia japonica) is a species of scarab beetle. The adult measures 15 mm (0.6 in) in length and 10 mm (0.4 in) in width, has iridescent copper-colored elytra and a green thorax and head. It is not very destructive in Japan, where it is controlled by natural predators, but in North America, it is a noted pest of about 300 species of plants including rose bushes, grapes, hops, canna, crape myrtles, birch trees, linden trees, and others.The adult beetles damage plants by skeletonizing the foliage, that is, consuming only the leaf material between the veins, and may also feed on fruit on the plants if present, while the subterranean larvae feed on the roots of grasses.

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