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I found a bug on a stuffed animal and it was tiny and black. It had bright yellow spots. I was just wondering what type of bug this is and where it comes from.

2007-02-28 18:46:41 · 2 answers · asked by Bon 2 in Science & Mathematics Zoology

2 answers

So hard to say, but by it being round, it could be some kind of beetle.

It also could be a flea of some sort, did it jump?

2007-02-28 18:54:03 · answer #1 · answered by Loulabelle 4 · 0 2

Black Bug With Orange Spots

2016-10-17 03:05:44 · answer #2 · answered by carollo 4 · 0 0

This Site Might Help You.

RE:
what kind of bug is small round black with tiny yellow spots?
I found a bug on a stuffed animal and it was tiny and black. It had bright yellow spots. I was just wondering what type of bug this is and where it comes from.

2015-09-10 00:43:45 · answer #3 · answered by ? 1 · 0 0

lengthy hair is nice but requires maintenance and u have to grow it out for a long time

2017-02-28 01:40:29 · answer #4 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

I prefer hair that is shoulder length or longer, And also since that men who like women are more often then not straight, they like long hair because it looks more feminine, as most guys have short hair.

2017-01-17 00:38:00 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Could be a Lady Bug from the planet Earth

2007-02-28 18:54:54 · answer #6 · answered by alien8zano 2 · 1 4

you are obviously talking about a Rwandian yellow spotted black bug. very dangerous and can chew through a 3 bedroom house in 3 weeks. i would burn the stuffed animal straight away to get rid of any eggs.

2007-02-28 19:36:30 · answer #7 · answered by Richard J 3 · 3 6

It sounds like a carpet beetle. I would check around to make sure you don't have more of them.

2007-03-04 04:26:50 · answer #8 · answered by jmiller 5 · 3 1

I fownd a 6 leg bug but you had to look in a microscop to see the 3 biteing parts it had 3 yellow lines and 9 yellow spots????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????what is the bug?

2014-09-30 14:53:17 · answer #9 · answered by Randall 1 · 0 0

Billbugs are snout beetles in the subfamily Rhyncophorinae. Adults range from 1/5 to 3/4 inch long; they are reddish-brown to black and have a cylindrical curved snout. The grubs are white, fat, humpbacked, without legs, and have a yellow or hard brown head. Billbugs usually over winter in the adult stage. After coming out of hibernation, the billbugs mate and females lay about 200 eggs over a 2-month period; the grubs hatch in 4 to 15 days. The grubs pupate; the adults transform in the autumn and may overwinter inside the pupal cell or they may emerge and go into hibernation. Both the adult and grub can cause injury to crops. The adults eat small holes in the stalk of the seedling plant at ground level, feeding on the young leaf tissue in the center. The grubs tunnel inside the stem which causes plant stunting.

Maize Billbug (Sphenophorus maidis): Adults are around 3/5 inch long, broad-bodied, reddish-brown to black, have raised longitudinal lines on wing covers that run about two-thirds of their length, and are often covered with soil, so they appear invisible. Grubs are white, legless, humpbacked, and have a yellow or hard brown head.

Southern Corn Billbug (Sphenophorus callosus): Adults are around 3/8 inch long, brown with golden reflections, have black elevated bumps, and each wing cover has longitudinal lines, a prominent dent at the base, and an elevation or hump near the tip. Grubs are white, legless, humpbacked, and have a yellow or hard brown head.

Borers are the larvae of moths, weevils, or beetles that eat inside of stems, roots, or fruits.

Beet Petiole Borer (Cosmobaris americana): Adult weevils are slender, dark brown with brown to white hairs, have long legs and long snouts. Larvae are white to greenish and crescent-shaped when young, but the larvae eventually turn yellow.

Clover Root Borer (Hylastinus obscurus): The adult beetles are small and dark brown to black. Grubs are very small, footless, and white; grubs tunnel in roots which cause wilting, browning, and the eventual death of an affected plant.

Elder Borer (Desmocerus palliatus): The adult beetle is dark blue and has a yellow 'cloak' thrown over the upper part of the elytra. Adults sometimes eat foliage. Larvae are around an inch in length and creamy white.

European Corn Borer (Ostrinia nubilalis): The adult moths are yellow-brown with waxy dark bands and have a wingspread of 1 inch; the adult moths usually fly at night. The larvae are caterpillars that are flesh colored with small, round, brown spots on the body and around 1 inch in length.

Lesser Cornstalk Borer (Elasmopalpus lignosellus): The adult moths are rownish-yellow with gray margins and black spots and have a wing expanse of almost 1 inch. Larvae are slender, greenish, brown-striped worms that bore into the lower part of stems.

Lima Bean Pod Borer (Etiella zinckenella): The adult moths are small, grayish with dark yellow markings and a broad white band. Larvae are white to greenish or reddish caterpillars that are 1 inch long; larvae bore into pods and attack seeds.

Potato Stalk Borer (Trichobaris trinotata): Adult snout beetles are bluish-gray to black, 1/5 inch long, and have 3 black spots at the base of the wing covers; adults eat deep holes in the stems in late spring and deposit eggs singly in such cavities. Grubs are yellowish-white, wrinkled, legless, about 1/3 inch long, and have brownish colored heads; grubs hollow out the stems for several inches.

Potato Tuberworm (Phthorimaea operculella): The adult moths are gray-brown, mottled with dark brown, small, narrow winged, and about 1/2 inch across the wings. Larvae are pinkish-white with brown heads, about 3/4 inch long, and burrow into stems, petioles, or tubers or mine in leaves.

Southern Cornstalk Borer (Diatraea crambidoides): Adult moths are straw colored and have a wing expanse of 1 1/4 inches. Larvae are dirty grayish-white to yellowish and around 1 inch long; larvae have very pale spots during the winter, while during the summer, larvae are spotted with eight, rounded, brown or black spots in a transverse row on the front of each body segment and two others behind these. Larvae usually burrow in the lower part of the stem.


Southwestern Cornstalk Borer (Diatraea grandiosella): Resembles the southern cornstalk borer in appearance and injury.

Squash Vine Borer (Melittia cucurbitae): The adult moths are wasplike, have clear wings with copper-green fore wings, reddish-orange and black abdomens, and are 1 to 1 1/2 inches across the wings. Larvae are white wrinkled caterpillars that are around 1 inch long, have a brownish colored head, six short slender legs on the thorax, and five pairs of short prolegs. A sign of their presence within a stem is the appearance of greenish-yellow excrement protruding from holes in the stem.
Adult moth
Larvae and damage to squash


Stalk Borer (Papaipema nebris): The adult moths are grayish-brown with white spots on the fore wings and have a wing expanse of 1 inch. Young larvae are cream colored with a dark brown or purple band around the body and have several brown or purple lengthwise stripes. As the larvae get older, the band and stripes disappear; the mature caterpillar is grayish or light purple and around 1 1/2 inches long.

Sugarcane Borer (Diatraea saccharalis): The adult moths are straw colored, the fore wings are marked with black dots in a V-shaped pattern, and have a wing expanse of 1 inch. Larvae are yellowish-white with brown spots and about 1 inch in length.


Tobacco Stalk Borer (Trichobaris mucorea): Resembles the potato stalk borer in appearance and injury.

Alfalfa Plant Bug (Adelphocoris lineolatus): Nymphs are yellowish-green with a tinge of brown, while the adults are pale yellow with a tinge of brown.

Big-footed or Big-legged Plant Bug (Acanthocephala femorata): This bug is large, slender, shield shaped, brown, and the hind legs are greatly enlarged.

Chinch Bug (Blissus leucopterus): This is a very small bug, around 1/16 inch in length; it has red legs and is black with white wings with a triangular black patch in the middle of the outer margins.

Cotton Stainer Bug (Dysdercus suturellus): This bug is narrow, around 3/5 inch long, long legged, has a bright red thorax, and brown wings crossed with yellow.

Eggplant Lace Bug (Gargaphia solani): This bug is large, dark brown and yellow, and mostly found on solanaceous crops.

False Chinch Bug (Nysius ericae): Resembles the chinch bug except that they are smaller.

Fourlined Plant Bug (Poecilocapsus lineatus): Nymphs are bright red to orange, have black dots on the thorax, and in the last stage, a yellow stripe appears on each side of the wing pads. Adults are greenish-yellow with 4 wide black stripes down the wings, and around 1/4 to 1/3 inch long.

Garden Fleahopper (Halticus bractatus): Nymphs are greenish and of various sizes. Adults are black, very slender, around 1/10 inch long, have long legs and antennae longer than the body. Adult females are of two kinds: a long-winged form which is 1/12 inch long by about one-third as wide with the overlapping tips of the wings transparent and a short-winged form which is 1/10 inch long, more than half as wide as long, oval bodied, and lacks the transparent tips of the wings.


Green Stink Bug (Acrosternum hilare): Nymphs are light green with reddish markings and of various sizes. Adults are large, flattened, shield shaped, bright green, and give off a foul odor.


Harlequin Bug (Murgantia histrionica): Adults are black with bright red markings, about 3/8 inch long, flat, shield shaped, and have a foul odor. Nymphs are similar in appearance to the adults except that they are smaller.


Horned Squash Bug (Anasa armigera): Similar to the squash or pumpkin bug in appearance and injury produced.

Leaffooted Bug (Leptoglossus phyllopus): This bug is dark brown with a transverse yellow line across the wing covers, around 3/4 inch long, and the hind legs are expanded like a leaf.


Lygus Bug (Lygus hesperis): Young nymphs are first very pale green and have an orange spot on the middle of the abdomen; later they turn to a darker green color and have four black spots on the thorax. Adults are flattened, oval, vary in color from a pale green to a yellowish-brown, and are 1/4 inch long by 3/32 inch wide.

***** Bug (Corimelaena pulicaria): Adults are short, broad, oval, black, up to 1/10 inch long, and have an enlarged hard thoracic shield that makes them look like small beetles; they give off a vile odor when crushed. Nymphs can be black or reddish.

Onespot Stink Bug (Euschistus variolarius): This bug is brown, flat, broad, shield shaped, and about 3/4 inch long.


Rapid Plant Bug (Adelphocoris rapidus): This bug is small and is similar in appearance to the lygus bug or tarnished plant bug.

Say Stink Bug (Chlorochroa sayi): This bug is bright green with three orange spots and very small white specks, flat, and around 1/2 inch long.

Southern Green Stink (Nezara viridula): Nymphs are bluish with red markings. Adults are light green, large, flattened, shield-shaped, and give off a foul odor.

Squash or Pumpkin Bug (Anasa tristis): Nymphs are grayish-white, around 3/16 to 1/2 inch long, and have black legs. Adults are brownish-black, flat-backed, hard-shelled, around 5/8 inch long, and give off a foul odor when crushed.

Tarnished Plant Bug (Lygus lineolaris): Nymphs are small, yellowish-green, around 1/25 inch long, oval, long legged, and marked with 4 black dots on the thorax and 1 on the abdomen. Adults are brown mottled with small, irregular spots of white, reddish-brown, yellow, and black; they are 1/4 inch long, flattened, oval, and a clear yellow triangle, marked with a black dot appears on the lower third of each side.


Western Leaffooted Bug (Leptoglossus zonatus): Nymphs are bright green and black. Adults are large, almost flat, brown with yellow markings, and the hind legs are expanded like a leaf.

2007-02-28 19:37:39 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 5 1

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