To celebrate #InsectAdvent looking back to Dragonfly season, the balmy days of, er, last week. A ridiculously late record of 19th December on Brownsea Island! @dorsetwildlife.bsky.social @britishdragonflies.bsky.social @georgemcgavin.bsky.social
Latest posts tagged with #InsectAdvent on Bluesky
To celebrate #InsectAdvent looking back to Dragonfly season, the balmy days of, er, last week. A ridiculously late record of 19th December on Brownsea Island! @dorsetwildlife.bsky.social @britishdragonflies.bsky.social @georgemcgavin.bsky.social
Emperor moth (Loepa sp.) A golden emperor moth rests on a perch after gliding in the summer night (c) Marco Chan 2023
π Happy #ChristmasEve π
Thank you to everyone who joined us for #InsectAdvent ππ¦π We hope youβve enjoyed the amazing images captured by photographers celebrated in our #InsectWeek photography competitions.
Hereβs to a bright 2026 filled with curiosity, discovery and wonder of the insect world β¨
π Celebrating Christmas Eve's #InsectAdvent order: #Strepsiptera, bizarre & brilliant parasites, and RES mascot since 1833.
Their morphology & history mean theyβre rarely seen. Many entomologists describe them as one of the strangest insect orders.
π buff.ly/U7pmiwX
Day 24 of #InsectAdvent and the flying reindeer have arrived!
Oh no they havenβtβ¦
Itβs a Ricardia sp (Richardiidae) that I collected from Honduran Cloud Forest, one of the many species of antlered flies.
@royentsoc.bsky.social @dipterists.bsky.social
Day 23 of #InsectAdvent
As the angels spread their wings, so do the flies. Rhamphomyia marginata (Empididae) are found across Europe & unusually for animals, it is the females that form the flirty swarms. Maybe not such angelic behaviour π
@royentsoc.bsky.social @dipterists.bsky.social
π #InsectAdvent Day 23 features jumping #Bristletails!
#Archaeognatha (or #Microcoryphia) are primitive, wingless insects and can leap 30mm to escape predators by flexing their abdomen. They feed mostly on algae, lichens or decaying plant material.
π
Day 21 of #InsectAdvent
Christmas is a time of over-eating. But we're not the biggest feasters. Hermetia illucens (Black-Soldier fly) larvae are capable of eating up to 2x its own body mass in food per day - the best bio recyclers consuming our waste
@royentsoc.bsky.social @dipterists.bsky.social
π It's #InsectAdvent day for #Zygentoma!
These shiny creatures thrive in damp spots feeding on starchy materials or detritus, showing that even the most humble insects play unique ecological roles.
#FunFact: #Silverfish have existed for over 400 million years.
π
Day 20 of #InsectAdvent
Nearly there, eyes on the prize of Christmas Day. Talking of eyes, some of the best eyed creatures are stalk-eyed flies including Plagoiocephalus latifrons (image @bertonemyia.bsky.social) we saw in Costa Rica
@royentsoc.bsky.social @dipterists.bsky.social
π Today's #InsectAdvent spotlight: #Embioptera πΈοΈ
Mostly found in warmer regions, #Webspinners illustrate how even small, secretive insects can carve out highly specialised lifestyles.
#FunFact: These are the only insects with silk glands in their front legs πΈοΈ
π buff.ly/JHeTfEX
Day 19 of #InsectAdvent
Santa has a sac full of presents, so does Villa cingulata but hers is full of sand. Her sac is at the end of her abdomen & here she is twerking to get the sand to coat her eggs (on exit) to prevent desiccation - cool mum π
@royentsoc.bsky.social @dipterists.bsky.social
π #InsectAdvent Day 20 goes to #fleas - #Siphonaptera are highly specialised wingless ectoparasites.
With around 2,600 species worldwide (62 in Britain), fleas show that even the smallest insects can have a massive impact on ecosystems and humankind.
π
Day 18 of #InsectAdvent - LET IT SNOW
Chionea (Limoniidae) are a genus of wingless craneflies commonly called Snow flies (not found in UK but 'strongly suspected' that they are here...). Adults can be seen scuttling across the snow in the winter
@royentsoc.bsky.social @dipterists.bsky.social
π Caddisflies take Day 19 of #InsectAdvent.
#Trichoptera are natureβs tiny architects, building homes from silk, twigs, stones & leaves. They stabilise riverbeds, support food webs & monitor water quality π
#FunFact: Their cases inspire jewellery by artist Hubert Duprat β¨π½
Day 17 of #InsectAdvent.. Big day is almost upon us. Have you hung your baubles yet?
What about this specimen belonging to the most bauble of flies Celyphidae (beetle flies or beetle-backed flies). Mostly metallic with their enlarged scutellum grown over their abdomen
@royentsoc.bsky.social
π #InsectAdvent Day 18 is for #Raphidioptera - #Snakeflies get their name from a long, slender βneckβ π These predators' larvae often live under bark or leaf litter & adults hunt in tree canopies.
#FunFact: Raphidioptera have ancestors dating back over 140 million years.
π
Day 16 #InsectAdvent
The Nativity story is set in a stables in Bethlehem where the People were surrounded by animals, not all of them welcome. The stable fly Stomoxys calcitrans (Muscidae) gives the gift of a painful 'bite' to all attending mammals
@dipterists.bsky.social @royentsoc.bsky.social
π Day 17 of #InsectAdvent - #Lacewings & #antlions.
#Neuroptera are a diverse order. Their larvae, and often adults, are predatory, making them excellent pest control for gardens & crops.
#FunFact: Antlion larvae dig conical pit-traps in sandy soil to catch prey.
π
Day 15 #InsectAdvent
And even the flies are getting festive. Sporting massive antlers akin to Moose or Reindeer, Phytalmia sp (Tephritidae) males, will use them to fight for their right.......to PARTY (with the opposite sex...)
@royentsoc.bsky.social @dipterists.bsky.social
π #InsectAdvent Day 16 is for the tiny but mighty #Thysanoptera, pollinators, herbivores & important ecological players.
#FunFact: #Thrips are tiny - 1β3 mm long. Many feed on plants or fungi, & are much more ecologically diverse than their size suggests.
π
Day 14 #InsectAdvent & Christmas cards are being sent/ received
Can you imagine having to write a card to this soldierfly - Parastratiosphecomyia stratiosphecomyioides. It has the longest name in the Animal Kingdom. Luckily the address is short..
@royentsoc.bsky.social @dipterists.bsky.social
π Day 15 of #InsectAdvent appreciates #Alderflies - #Megaloptera are a small but fascinating insect order with roughly 330 known species worldwide (3 in Britain), whose larvae live in freshwater streams and rivers.
Learn more about alderflies π½
π
Day 13 #InsectAdvent & have you decorated the tree yet?
What about this tree? This in fact the hairy whorls of a male Chaoborid or Phantom midgeβs antennae. Packed full of sensors, this βtreeβ is more than a mere decoration
@royentsoc.bsky.social @dipterists.bsky.social
π #InsectAdvent Day 14 is #Dermaptera appreciation day!
#Earwigs have cerci at the rear. These are curved in males and straight in females.
#FunFact: Unusually for insects, many #earwigs are devoted parents, cleaning & guarding their eggs & young.
Day 12!!! Of #InsectAdvent
Day 11 of #InsectAdvent - its Saturday night so XMAS PARTY (maybe romance..)
Lets put on some perfume. This female Megaselia (Phoridae) releases from her dorsal abdominal glands, a fragrance so strong the males just have to immerse themselves in it
@royentsoc.bsky.social @dipterists.bsky.social
π #InsectAdvent Day 13 - #Phasmatodea, the masters of disguise πͺ΅ Their bodies mimic twigs, leaves or bark so well they almost vanish against foliage.
#FunFact: Some #phasmids reproduce by #parthenogenesis (females produce offspring without mating).
π
Day 11 of #InsectAdvent & one of my favs
Cephenemyia trompe aka The reindeer nose botfly
If you are a reindeer & this is your view be prepared to have eggs squirted into your nostrils! Mothers track hosts over long distances before firing her eggs
@royentsoc.bsky.social @dipterists.bsky.social
π An honorary #InsectAdvent mention to the Praying Mantis #Mantodea, featured in the same group #Dictyoptera with unlikely sisters cockroaches & termites, a testament to the diversity of insect evolution.
#FunFact: The #Mantis can turn its head 180Β°.
π
π #InsectAdvent Day 11 - #Dictyoptera πͺ³
Only a few species of cockroach become pests in buildings. Termites digest wood, breaking down dead plants and recycling nutrients.
#FunFact: Termites actually evolved from cockroaches.
π½