Discussion
Loading...

#Tag

  • About
  • Code of conduct
  • Privacy
  • Users
  • Instances
  • About Bonfire
neville park
@nev@flipping.rocks  ·  activity timestamp 6 days ago

#Arachtober 5: the last order of arachnids I have found, pseudoscorpions! They look kind of like scorpions without tails; they are found basically everywhere on earth but Antarctica, but they are absolutely tiny and live in places like under tree bark, under rocks and logs, in leaf litter, etc., so you will rarely see them unless you're looking for them. Sometimes they can be found clinging to the legs of larger flying insects with their little claws, or indoors eating booklice and other tiny household insects.

The ones in my garden are so small you might take them for mesostigmatid mites at first glance. This one has captured a soil-dwelling mite of some kind.

#iNaturalist observation: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/99203146 inaturalist

#ArthroBeauty #arachnids #pseudoscorpions #Pseudoscorpiones #Cthoniidae

Another shot, from above . You can see the delicate sensory hairs on its claws, and hairs sticking out from its round butt (unlike a scorpion, it has no long stinger-tipped tail).
Another shot, from above . You can see the delicate sensory hairs on its claws, and hairs sticking out from its round butt (unlike a scorpion, it has no long stinger-tipped tail).
Another shot, from above . You can see the delicate sensory hairs on its claws, and hairs sticking out from its round butt (unlike a scorpion, it has no long stinger-tipped tail).
A tiny golden-brown arachnid with a pear-shaped body and translucent red-brown pincers similar to a scorpion's. It has seized a white mite of some kind in its chelicerae, which are also pincer-like. Glinting spots on either side of its head might be eyes, but I doubt they are functional beyond being able to see light and dark.
A tiny golden-brown arachnid with a pear-shaped body and translucent red-brown pincers similar to a scorpion's. It has seized a white mite of some kind in its chelicerae, which are also pincer-like. Glinting spots on either side of its head might be eyes, but I doubt they are functional beyond being able to see light and dark.
A tiny golden-brown arachnid with a pear-shaped body and translucent red-brown pincers similar to a scorpion's. It has seized a white mite of some kind in its chelicerae, which are also pincer-like. Glinting spots on either side of its head might be eyes, but I doubt they are functional beyond being able to see light and dark.
  • Copy link
  • Flag this post
  • Block
Log in

bonfire.cafe

A space for Bonfire maintainers and contributors to communicate

bonfire.cafe: About · Code of conduct · Privacy · Users · Instances
Bonfire social · 1.0.0-rc.3.13 no JS en
Automatic federation enabled
  • Explore
  • About
  • Members
  • Code of Conduct
Home
Login