SOME OF THE CREATURES ENCOUNTERED DURING THE WEEK
AT THE
DAINTREE RAINFOREST OBSERVATORY
CONTINUED
Photos by David Rentz and Buck Richardson
Remember: Click on the photo to enlarge
Heading to the Study Site.
Sorting the catch
A rainforest Grasshopper, Desmoptera truncatipennis
A Water Strider, family Gerridae
A Longicorne beetle, family Cerambycidae
The dreaded Orchid Butterfly. The caterpillars are death to the flowers of certain orchids.
A rainforest cockroach, Rhabdoblatta sp.
A Water Strider, family Gerridae
A Longicorne beetle, family Cerambycidae
The dreaded Orchid Butterfly. The caterpillars are death to the flowers of certain orchids.
A rainforest cockroach, Rhabdoblatta sp.
Methana curvigera, female with egg case. A common rainforest cockroach
The Pandanus Cockroach, Megamareta phaneropyga The Pandanus Cockroach, Megamareta phaneropyga on Pandanus. The feeding mark is made by the Peppermint Stick Insect.
A female nymph of a different gryllacridid, Xanthogryllacris punctipennis. Gryllacridid nymphs always have the ovipositor recoiled on the top of the abdomen. With the final moult, the ovipositor becomes straight as in the adult female above.
A last instar female Mastigaphoides tuberculatus- a common understorey katydidAcauloplacella queenslandica.second last instar nymph. Also a common inhabitant of the rainforest understory.
Tailed Emperor Polyura sampronius
Beetle Rhipiphoridae, Trigonodera sp
Anomis sp
Antitrygodes parvimacula
Banisia myrsusalis thyridid
crambid
Crocanthes sidonia
Cryptophasa sp
geometer
hawkmoth
hawkmoth
Homona sp
Hypena gypsospila
Meliattha sp
Mocis trifasciata
Neostauropus viridiissimus
odd crambid
Palpita annulata
Syntonarcha iriastis
Unknown
Utetheisa sp
The snake was not aggressive and was placed in a bucket and moved to another spot where it would not be a threat to students and staff.
A Carpet Snake, a python, abroad at night.
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