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.

Thrips

Thrips

A minuscule, slender insect with fringed, feather-like wings, often noticed only as a fast-moving dark speck darting across a flower petal or windowsill.

other
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
Rat-Tailed Maggot

Rat-Tailed Maggot

Named for its long, thin, telescoping breathing tube, the rat-tailed maggot is the aquatic larva of the drone fly, thriving in stagnant, low-oxygen water where few other insects can survive.

aquatic-insect
Eastern Tailed-Blue

Eastern Tailed-Blue

A tiny gossamer-wing butterfly with a delicate thread-like tail on each hindwing and a small orange spot near the tail base, common in open weedy habitats throughout the eastern half of North America.

butterfly
Fork-tailed Bush Katydid

Fork-tailed Bush Katydid

Slimmer and greener than its treetop relatives, the fork-tailed bush katydid lives among shrubs and garden plants, with males identified by the distinctive forked appendages at the tip of the abdomen that give the species its name.

grasshopper-cricket
Brown-tail Moth

Brown-tail Moth

A pure white moth with a tuft of brown hair at the tip of its abdomen, whose gregarious, hairy caterpillars overwinter communally in silken webs on tree branches.

moth
Minute Pirate Bug

Minute Pirate Bug

A tiny, black-and-white patterned true bug barely visible without close inspection, the minute pirate bug is a voracious predator of thrips, mites, and insect eggs on flowers and foliage.

true-bug
Common Clubtail

Common Clubtail

This river-loving dragonfly gets its name from the noticeably widened, club-shaped tip of its abdomen, which it displays as it rests on sunlit waterside vegetation.

dragonfly
Common Whitetail Dragonfly

Common Whitetail Dragonfly

A stocky pond-side dragonfly whose mature males sport a broad, chalky white abdomen that flashes conspicuously against boldly banded wings.

dragonfly
Water Scorpion

Water Scorpion

An elongated, twig-like aquatic true bug with grasping raptorial forelegs and a long, thin breathing tube at the tail end, resembling a slender scorpion as it lies in ambush among submerged plants.

aquatic-insect
Flat Rock Scorpion

Flat Rock Scorpion

An extraordinarily flattened, long-tailed scorpion that squeezes into paper-thin rock crevices, among the largest scorpions in the world by length.

arachnid
Mud Dauber

Mud Dauber

A slender, non-aggressive solitary wasp with a distinctively long, thread-like waist, known for constructing tube- or pot-shaped nests out of mud pellets on walls and eaves.

wasp
Purseweb Spider

Purseweb Spider

A secretive, tube-dwelling spider that spends nearly its entire life hidden inside a silk-lined burrow extension camouflaged with soil and debris on the surface.

spider
Southern Flannel Moth (Puss Caterpillar Moth)

Southern Flannel Moth (Puss Caterpillar Moth)

A small, densely furred tan-to-orange moth best known for its unusual larva, a soft-looking, cat-tailed caterpillar whose fluffy coat hides rows of venomous spines.

moth
Banded Hairstreak

Banded Hairstreak

A gray-brown, tailed hairstreak marked by a postmedian band of white-edged dark spots on the hindwing underside and a small orange-capped blue spot near the tail, closely tied to oak and hickory woodlands.

butterfly
Grape Leaffolder Caterpillar

Grape Leaffolder Caterpillar

This small green caterpillar stitches grape leaves together with silk into a rolled shelter, feeding hidden inside its own leafy tube and leaving skeletonized patches behind.

caterpillar-larva
Mud Wasp

Mud Wasp

A slender, thread-waisted solitary wasp famous for plastering rows of tube-shaped mud cells under eaves and porch ceilings, each one stocked with paralyzed spiders for its larva.

wasp
Eastern Subterranean Termite

Eastern Subterranean Termite

A pale, soft-bodied social insect that lives in vast underground colonies and builds mud tubes to reach and feed on wood cellulose, including structural timber.

other
Mud Dauber Wasp

Mud Dauber Wasp

Slender, long-waisted wasps that build distinctive nests from mud, mud daubers stock their cells with paralyzed spiders. Their tube or urn-shaped mud nests are common under eaves and bridges.

wasp
Water Scavenger Beetle

Water Scavenger Beetle

Rounded and glossy, water scavenger beetles paddle through weedy ponds gathering air with a short antenna rather than a snorkel-like tube, feeding mostly on decaying plant matter and algae.

beetle
Funnel Weaver Spider

Funnel Weaver Spider

Nearly invisible until dew or morning frost outlines it in silver, the funnel weaver's sheet-and-tunnel web is a familiar sight across lawns and gardens, with its owner watching from the safety of a silken tube.

spider
Scorpion

Scorpion

An ancient, armored arachnid with grasping pincers and a segmented tail carried curled over its back, tipped with a stinger used to subdue prey.

arachnid
Anopheles Mosquito

Anopheles Mosquito

A slim, mottled-winged mosquito best known for the distinctive head-down, tail-up posture it strikes while resting on walls and vegetation.

fly
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