Fangeddeer
Songster
- Apr 23, 2023
- 333
- 421
- 146
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
That’s enough dw! And it’s probably the size of my thumb, located in California Bay Area. I found it on the grass but put it on a plant. It didn’t move much, nor on the ground. It’s furless and thornless, but it has spots all the way down it’s body.Identifying bugs is a fun pastime. You would have more luck using search engines such as Google than asking here what it is. But if you want to enlist others here in an exercise of curiosity, which I certainly enjoy, you need to provide a frame of reference. That means taking a very closeup photo of it along with something everyone can recognize so we can know its size. Or measure it accurately and tell us.
Then tell us your location in the world and where you found it. Was it on a tree? Was it buried in the soil? Was it in a sack of grain?
There are literally millions upon millions of moths and butterflies and beetles that this larva could turn into, and there are still millions of these larvae that have not even been identified and named by scientists yet.
So, not knowing your location or its size, we can only take our wildest guesses. Mine is that it could be a moth, but that's about the extent of it. Is that enough?
I agree. Grubs turn in to beetles and live underground, not on tree or plants.It looks like a grub of some sort.
Heads look differentIs this what you have?