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Coffee Shop
Bug ID?
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<blockquote data-quote="Travlr" data-source="post: 1756293" data-attributes="member: 42463"><p>The one on the left is a baby... looks like an aphid as an infant. The one on the right is hard to see well enough but I think it's an adult. Just smaller than the usual squash bug.</p><p></p><p>Of course we may be speaking two different languages. Around here a stink bug is a black beetle that walks around with its butt in the air and smells bad if you touch it. What you call a squash bug might be different from what I call them. Regional differences in what we call stuff.</p><p></p><p>They are still Hemiptera. That's an "order" of insects, a scientific designation.</p><p></p><p>I looked a little further and got this from google: Lygus Hahn insects infest canola. <strong>Adults are 6 to 7 mm (1/4 inch) long; immatures (nymphs) are 1 to 6 mm long</strong></p><p></p><p>The bugs might be getting hungry now that their food was cut.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Travlr, post: 1756293, member: 42463"] The one on the left is a baby... looks like an aphid as an infant. The one on the right is hard to see well enough but I think it's an adult. Just smaller than the usual squash bug. Of course we may be speaking two different languages. Around here a stink bug is a black beetle that walks around with its butt in the air and smells bad if you touch it. What you call a squash bug might be different from what I call them. Regional differences in what we call stuff. They are still Hemiptera. That's an "order" of insects, a scientific designation. I looked a little further and got this from google: Lygus Hahn insects infest canola. [B]Adults are 6 to 7 mm (1/4 inch) long; immatures (nymphs) are 1 to 6 mm long[/B] The bugs might be getting hungry now that their food was cut. [/QUOTE]
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