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.

Predaceous Diving Beetle

Predaceous Diving Beetle

A sleek, streamlined beetle built for underwater hunting, carrying its own air supply as it patrols ponds in search of prey.

aquatic-insect
Asian Lady Beetle

Asian Lady Beetle

A highly variable orange-to-red ladybird beetle, often bearing many black spots or none at all, famous for swarming into homes in large numbers during autumn.

beetle
Red Flour Beetle

Red Flour Beetle

A tiny, flattened, rust-red beetle found in stored flour and grain worldwide, capable of flight and closely resembling the confused flour beetle apart from the shape of its antennal club.

beetle
American Carrion Beetle

American Carrion Beetle

A broad, flattened black beetle with a striking pale yellow shield behind its head, commonly found on and around small animal carcasses where it feeds alongside fly larvae.

beetle
Lily Leaf Beetle

Lily Leaf Beetle

A brilliant scarlet-red beetle with a jet-black head, legs, and underside that feeds almost exclusively on true lilies and fritillaries, often stripping leaves down to bare stems.

beetle
Net-winged Beetle

Net-winged Beetle

A soft-bodied beetle with broad, ridged wing covers patterned in bold orange or red and black bands, whose netlike wing venation and vivid coloring warn potential predators of its unpalatability.

beetle
Great Silver Water Beetle

Great Silver Water Beetle

One of the largest beetles in Europe, the great silver water beetle is a glossy jet-black giant that rows through weedy ponds carrying a silvery film of air trapped beneath its body.

beetle
Ten-lined June Beetle

Ten-lined June Beetle

A large, brown scarab beetle marked with bold white racing stripes down its wing covers, known for its loud buzzing flight and hissing defensive squeak.

beetle
Devil's Coach Horse Beetle

Devil's Coach Horse Beetle

A large, matte-black rove beetle that raises its flexible abdomen up and over its back like a scorpion's tail and gapes its jaws when threatened, one of the biggest and most dramatic rove beetles in Europe.

beetle
Metallic Wood-boring Beetle

Metallic Wood-boring Beetle

The North American common name for jewel beetles, emphasizing the wood-tunneling habits of their larvae, which leave telltale flattened, D-shaped exit holes in bark of stressed or dying trees.

beetle
Swallowtail Butterfly

Swallowtail Butterfly

A large, showy butterfly named for the elongated, tail-like extensions on its hindwings, often seen gliding gracefully around gardens and flowering meadows.

butterfly
Giant Leopard Moth Caterpillar

Giant Leopard Moth Caterpillar

A jet-black, bristly caterpillar that curls into a tight ball to reveal bright red-orange bands between its segments when disturbed.

caterpillar-larva
Milkweed Tussock Caterpillar

Milkweed Tussock Caterpillar

Rows of dense orange, black, and white hair tufts run down the back of this milkweed specialist, whose young larvae feed in tight groups that skeletonize milkweed leaves before dispersing to feed alone.

caterpillar-larva
Giant Leopard Moth

Giant Leopard Moth

A striking white moth patterned with bold, hollow black rings and dots resembling leopard spots, revealing an iridescent blue-black abdomen marked with orange when its wings part, making it one of the most eye-catching tiger moths in North America.

moth
Sand Wasp

Sand Wasp

A fast, sun-loving solitary wasp with large green or grayish eyes and yellow-striped markings that digs burrows in loose sand and provisions them almost entirely with flies.

wasp
Tube Web Spider

Tube Web Spider

A sleek, cylindrical spider that lives inside a silk-lined tube and dashes out to seize insects that stumble across its radiating trip-lines.

spider
Snake Millipede

Snake Millipede

A slender, glossy, pale millipede that curls into a tight spiral when disturbed and often shows a faint row of reddish spots along its sides.

myriapod
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
Tomato Hornworm

Tomato Hornworm

A large, thick green caterpillar with diagonal white stripes and a distinctive curved horn at its tail end, often found stripping leaves from tomato plants in gardens.

caterpillar-larva
Spider Mite

Spider Mite

A speck-sized arachnid that spins fine silk webbing across infested leaves as it pierces plant cells for their contents, leaving behind a telltale stippled, bronzed appearance. Populations can explode rapidly in hot, dry weather, making it a familiar garden and greenhouse pest.

arachnid
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
June Bug

June Bug

A chunky, reddish-brown to nearly black scarab beetle that bumbles noisily around porch lights on warm late-spring and early-summer evenings.

beetle
Skipper Butterfly

Skipper Butterfly

A stocky, fast-darting butterfly with a large head, hooked antennae tips, and thick furry body, intermediate in appearance between butterflies and moths, named for its quick, skipping flight.

butterfly
Orb Weaver Spider

Orb Weaver Spider

A stout-bodied spider best known for spinning the classic, near-perfect circular "orb" web strung between plants, eaves, or fences, often rebuilt fresh each night.

spider