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| HEMIPTERA, Phymatidae --  <Images> & <Juveniles>     Description            These bugs are
  group of small wide-bodied insects that have raptorial front legs.  The front femora are short and as broad as
  long.  The tibiae are tiny and
  curved.  Most are about 3-4 cm. long,
  but they are able to capture insects as large as bumble bees.  They stalk them on flowers, mainly
  goldenrod, where they are camouflaged by the plant color.  Their prey includes wasps, large bees and
  flies.             Insects in the subfamily
  Phymatinae are commonly called ambush bugs after their behavior of
  stalking  prey  and relying on their camouflage. They have
  raptorial forelegs with which they area able to capture prey 10 or more times
  their own size. They belong to a subgroup within the assassin bugs.             Phymatinae are 5.1–12.3
  millimetres long. In Phymata, the scutellum is triangular and shorter
  than the pronotum. In Macrocephalus the scutellum is narrow and
  rounded and extends to the tip of the abdomen.               These insects usually have a large
  fore femur and clubbed antennae. The forewing membranes occasionally  lack distinct cells The antennae have 4
  segments, and there are two ocelli. The beak has 3 segments. The tarsi also
  have 3 segments. The rear half of the abdomen extends beyond the edges of the
  wings     References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references
  may be found at:  MELVYL
  Library]   Weirauch, C. &
  James B. Munro (2009). "Molecular
  phylogeny of the assassin bugs (Hemiptera: Reduviidae), based on
  mitochondrial and nuclear ribosomal genes". Molecular Phylogenetics
  and Evolution 53 (1): 287–299.   |