The print that you refer to is a photogravure by Edward C. Curtis. When I was a wee lad, I would fire rubber tipped darts at the indian in an old picture on the wall. My mother had rescued the photo from an old aunt of hers' garage. The photo was displayed in a beat up old plaster frame. Years later, my parents basement flooded in a flash flood. Amongst the items rescued was that old photo, we removed the photo from its frame to allow it to dry in the sun. We discovered that it was actually a first edition print signed by Edward C. Curtis!!! It was treated with much more care after that discovery.
Found this fellow near my window,need some help with ID.Sorry about the quality-it wasn't ideal situation, me almost on my head and him swinging on his web in the wind. I think it's a spined micrathenas.
_DSC0042 by kutsies pics, on Flickr
Mary,
Your ID is spot on... this is actually another example of a species that uses camouflage that looks like bird poop. I've posted another example over in the spiders thread...
- Bill
Randy. You may be on the correct identification trail with that bug; but there are a few rather similar looking beetles in the Leaf Beetle family (Chrysomelidae).
John.That is an odd shaped mushroom. Did something take a chunk out of it while it was growing?
Phasia hemiptera male
I nearly passed by this fly thinking it was just another Bluebottle type. Then I noticed that from some angles the dark areas of it's wings and abdomen turned blue.
The larvae are parasitic on this species of shieldbug.
Red-legged Shieldbug - Pentatoma rufipes.
ps. there are also some little Pollen Beetles in the first photo.
Last edited by Geoff F; 16th July 2012 at 10:24 AM. Reason: extra line