Bug Identifier

Bug Encyclopedia

Search and identify bugs & insects — beetles, butterflies, moths, ants, bees, spiders and more — with size, habitat, danger, behavior, and how to tell them apart.

Cabbage Looper

Cabbage Looper

A pale green caterpillar with thin white stripes that arches its back into a loop as it inches along cabbage and other garden leaves.

caterpillar-larva
Fall Webworm

Fall Webworm

A pale, hairy caterpillar that spins loose, messy silk webs enclosing entire leaf clusters at the tips of tree branches, becoming especially noticeable in late summer and fall.

caterpillar-larva
Hickory Horned Devil

Hickory Horned Devil

An enormous, blue-green caterpillar armed with long, curved orange-red horns tipped in black, giving it a fearsome dragon-like appearance despite being completely harmless.

caterpillar-larva
Pine Processionary Moth

Pine Processionary Moth

An unremarkable grey-brown moth known almost entirely through its larvae, which build large silken nests in pine trees and travel to feed in long, head-to-tail processions covered in fine defensive hairs.

moth
Tobacco Hornworm

Tobacco Hornworm

A large, chunky green caterpillar with diagonal white stripes and a curved red-orange horn at its tail end, often found stripping tomato and tobacco plants.

caterpillar-larva
Silkworm

Silkworm

Plump, pale, and utterly dependent on humans, the silkworm is the domesticated caterpillar behind thousands of years of silk production, spinning a single continuous thread of silk to form its cocoon.

caterpillar-larva
Fox Moth

Fox Moth

A stout, reddish-brown moth with a pale diagonal band across each forewing, closely resembling a fox in color, most often noticed as its large, densely furred dark caterpillar basking on open ground in spring.

moth
Inchworm

Inchworm

A slender, twig-mimicking caterpillar that travels by looping its body into an arch and releasing a strand of silk to drop and dangle at the slightest disturbance.

caterpillar-larva
Sod Webworm

Sod Webworm

A dull, grayish-green caterpillar that hides in silk-lined burrows by day and emerges at night to chew grass blades down to the thatch.

caterpillar-larva
Salt Marsh Moth

Salt Marsh Moth

A fluffy white tiger moth with black-speckled forewings and an orange-and-black abdomen, best known through its fast-moving, densely bristled caterpillar that wanders widely in late summer.

moth
American Grasshopper

American Grasshopper

A large, strong-flying grasshopper related to the locusts of the Old World, the American grasshopper can occasionally form dense, damaging aggregations across the southern United States.

grasshopper-cricket
Tussock Moth

Tussock Moth

A moth with a striking split lifestyle: winged, drab gray-brown males fly to seek out flightless, grub-like females, while the ornate caterpillars sport dense tufts of colorful bristly hair.

moth
Banded Woolly Bear Moth

Banded Woolly Bear Moth

Best known as the black-and-rust-banded fuzzy caterpillar that famously curls into a ball when disturbed, this species matures into a plain golden-orange to tan tiger moth.

moth
Death Watch Beetle

Death Watch Beetle

A mottled brown wood-boring beetle famous for the faint ticking sound it taps out inside old timbers, once thought by superstitious listeners to be an omen of death.

beetle
Diana Fritillary

Diana Fritillary

A large southern Appalachian fritillary famous for extreme sexual dimorphism — males are burnt-orange and black while females are an iridescent blue-black that mimics a distasteful swallowtail.

butterfly
Book Scorpion

Book Scorpion

A tiny, flattened arachnid that looks like a scorpion in miniature, minus the tail, scuttling sideways through old paper and dusty corners while hunting even smaller pests.

arachnid
Deathwatch Beetle

Deathwatch Beetle

A small, mottled brown wood-boring beetle famous for the faint ticking sound it makes by tapping its head against wood, historically associated with old timber-framed buildings.

beetle
Hercules Beetle

Hercules Beetle

One of the largest beetles in the world, with males bearing dramatic, forceps-like horns nearly as long as the rest of their armored, olive-green body.

beetle
Comet Moth (Madagascan Moon Moth)

Comet Moth (Madagascan Moon Moth)

One of the largest and most spectacular silk moths in the world, with pale yellow-to-red wings and extraordinarily long, ribbon-like tails on the hindwings.

moth
Goliath Stick Insect

Goliath Stick Insect

One of the largest stick insects in the world, this vivid green giant unfurls startling crimson underwings when startled, briefly abandoning its disguise as foliage.

mantis-stick
Tarantula Hawk Wasp

Tarantula Hawk Wasp

A giant metallic-blue wasp with rust-orange wings, the tarantula hawk is one of the largest wasps in the world. Females hunt tarantulas as living food for their single offspring.

wasp
Tarantula

Tarantula

The tarantula is the heavyweight of the spider world, a densely furred, ground-hugging hunter that spends most of its long life waiting in a silk-lined burrow for prey to wander past.

spider
Tarantula Hawk

Tarantula Hawk

One of the largest wasps in the world, with a glossy metallic blue-black body and vivid burnt-orange wings, famous for hunting tarantulas to provision a single underground burrow for its larva.

wasp
Pseudoscorpion

Pseudoscorpion

A tiny, tail-less relative of true scorpions, complete with a pair of oversized pincers on a body barely bigger than a grain of rice. Often overlooked entirely, it spends its life hunting even smaller arthropods in leaf litter, bark, and sometimes old books.

arachnid