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Home > Archive > UK gardening > June 2005 > Nasty biting insect?
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Nasty biting insect?
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| Chris Bacon 2005-06-29, 6:25 pm |
| I found an insect the other day that I don't recognise. It was
like a sort of mosquito, but bigger and nastier looking. Length
16mm. The head, thorax, and abdomen were well defined segments.
The head was comparatively small, 2mm long, with two small
feelers right at the front, coming from a point and diverging,
like an upside-down Fu Manchu moustache. The eyes were large on
each side of the head, and pink-looking. There was a big nasty-
looking black proboscis (length 4mm), which could move from a
position under the head to one sticking out towards the front.
The thorax had a top which had a "combed" or reeded appearance
front-back, browny-black, 3mm long. The straight abdomen was
possibly 2mm wide, less in vertical cross-section. There was a
small pointy bit at the rear end, less than 1mm long. There were
dark grey/lighter grey bands from side to side of the abdomen.
The wings were shiny, colourless and transparent, with rounded
ends like oar blades.
Was this a nasty biter, or just a nasty looker? Any pointers
to possible pictures?
A bite on my forearmhas just healed - there was first a small
red hole, like a very enlarged pore, which developed a raised
doghnut-with-a-hole appearance. The skin around this blistered
and the area became inflamed. A hardened lump 1" across could
be felt under my skin. This took nearly a fortnight to heal.
It was very itchy! What abstrad could have been responsible?
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| Chris Bacon 2005-06-29, 6:25 pm |
| Chris Bacon wrote:
quote:
> I found an insect the other day that I don't recognise. It was
> like a sort of mosquito, but bigger and nastier looking. Length
> 16mm. The head, thorax, and abdomen were well defined segments.
> The head was comparatively small, 2mm long, with two small
> feelers right at the front, coming from a point and diverging,
> like an upside-down Fu Manchu moustache. The eyes were large on
> each side of the head, and pink-looking. There was a big nasty-
> looking black proboscis (length 4mm), which could move from a
> position under the head to one sticking out towards the front.
> The thorax had a top which had a "combed" or reeded appearance
> front-back, browny-black, 3mm long. The straight abdomen was
> possibly 2mm wide, less in vertical cross-section. There was a
> small pointy bit at the rear end, less than 1mm long. There were
> dark grey/lighter grey bands from side to side of the abdomen.
> The wings were shiny, colourless and transparent, with rounded
> ends like oar blades.
I re-open this to add that it had quite long (12mm) spindly black
legs, the very ends of which could form tight curls or hoohs.
quote:
> Was this a nasty biter, or just a nasty looker? Any pointers
> to possible pictures?
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Chris Bacon wrote:
quote:
> I found an insect the other day that I don't recognise. It was
> like a sort of mosquito, but bigger and nastier looking. Length
> 16mm. The head, thorax, and abdomen were well defined segments.
> The head was comparatively small, 2mm long, with two small
> feelers right at the front, coming from a point and diverging,
> like an upside-down Fu Manchu moustache. The eyes were large on
> each side of the head, and pink-looking. There was a big nasty-
> looking black proboscis (length 4mm), which could move from a
> position under the head to one sticking out towards the front.
> The thorax had a top which had a "combed" or reeded appearance
> front-back, browny-black, 3mm long. The straight abdomen was
> possibly 2mm wide, less in vertical cross-section. There was a
> small pointy bit at the rear end, less than 1mm long. There were
> dark grey/lighter grey bands from side to side of the abdomen.
> The wings were shiny, colourless and transparent, with rounded
> ends like oar blades.
>
Two wings or four?
Jo
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| Chris Bacon 2005-06-29, 6:25 pm |
| Totty wrote:
quote:
> Chris Bacon wrote:
>
> Two wings or four?
Two, although I didn't look *too* closely at them. They overlapped
when the insect was at rest. They were very clear, and as I said,
very rounded at the ends.
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| Tim Challenger 2005-06-30, 4:25 am |
| On Wed, 29 Jun 2005 15:57:04 +0100, Chris Bacon wrote:
quote:
> I found an insect the other day that I don't recognise. It was
> like a sort of mosquito, but bigger and nastier looking. Length
> 16mm. The head, thorax, and abdomen were well defined segments.
> The head was comparatively small, 2mm long, with two small
> feelers right at the front, coming from a point and diverging,
> like an upside-down Fu Manchu moustache. The eyes were large on
> each side of the head, and pink-looking. There was a big nasty-
> looking black proboscis (length 4mm), which could move from a
> position under the head to one sticking out towards the front.
> The thorax had a top which had a "combed" or reeded appearance
> front-back, browny-black, 3mm long. The straight abdomen was
> possibly 2mm wide, less in vertical cross-section. There was a
> small pointy bit at the rear end, less than 1mm long. There were
> dark grey/lighter grey bands from side to side of the abdomen.
> The wings were shiny, colourless and transparent, with rounded
> ends like oar blades.
>
> Was this a nasty biter, or just a nasty looker? Any pointers
> to possible pictures?
Could it have been a sort of scorpion fly ?
There are a number of similar animals which don't have the "sting" at the
end of the abdomen.
http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/...orpion_fly.html
Alternatively a small wasp, something like this?
http://www.invasive.org/browse/deta...?imgnum=0805062
quote:
> A bite on my forearmhas just healed - there was first a small
> red hole, like a very enlarged pore, which developed a raised
> doghnut-with-a-hole appearance. The skin around this blistered
> and the area became inflamed. A hardened lump 1" across could
> be felt under my skin. This took nearly a fortnight to heal.
> It was very itchy! What abstrad could have been responsible?
That's what happens to me when I get bitten by a horsefly.
--
Tim C.
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| Chris Bacon 2005-06-30, 12:25 pm |
| Tim Challenger wrote:
quote:
> On Wed, 29 Jun 2005 15:57:04 +0100, Chris Bacon wrote:
>
> Could it have been a sort of scorpion fly ?
> There are a number of similar animals which don't have the "sting" at the
> end of the abdomen.
> http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/...orpion_fly.html
No, it wasn't this shape, and didn't have bright colour - it
was grey/dark grey. It vaguely resempled a rigid thickened
mosquito, but it's sections were very defined.
quote:
> Alternatively a small wasp, something like this?
> http://www.invasive.org/browse/deta...?imgnum=0805062
No, nothing like that. The abdomen was slightly bristly-looking
IIRC.
quote:
>
quote:
> That's what happens to me when I get bitten by a horsefly.
Ossd, absolute *ossd*.
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| Tim Challenger 2005-06-30, 12:25 pm |
| On Thu, 30 Jun 2005 11:59:38 +0100, Chris Bacon wrote:
quote:
> Tim Challenger wrote:
>
> No, it wasn't this shape, and didn't have bright colour - it
> was grey/dark grey. It vaguely resempled a rigid thickened
> mosquito, but it's sections were very defined.
>
>
> No, nothing like that. The abdomen was slightly bristly-looking
> IIRC.
Does it resemble anything here, even in the slightest?
http://www.glaucus.org.uk/Flies2.html
Is a robber fly a possibility?
http://creatures.ifas.ufl.edu/benef...s/robber_03.htm
--
Tim C.
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