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Photo#280108
Unidentified Stick Insect - Ranatra australis

Unidentified Stick Insect - Ranatra australis
Naples, Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary, Collier County, Florida, USA
May 25, 2009
Size: possibly 4" / 10 cm OA.
There seems to be a short probiscus, with the front appendages (legs?) held forward; we didn't see it walk, but it supports itself on four legs. The large bulbous eyes seem to be unique, or at least uncommon among stick-type insects that I've researched.

the stick bug
i just found that stick bug on my back patio in Florida.what is it?????

p.s. i love bugs!!

Ranatra Sighting
I just found my beagle investigating this bug on my back deck in Flint, Michigan. I've never seen one before, and lived in michigan all my life.

Moved tentatively
Moved from Ranatra based on the key & remarks in(1)

Moved
Moved from Waterscorpions.

Moved
Moved from True Bugs.

Ranatra -- an aquatic bug [a.k.a. 'water scorpion'] rather
this predator has a strong proboscis and grasping forelegs; walking sticks are herbivores with chewing [not sucking] mouthparts and tiny eyes

 
Ranatra / Water Scorpion
Thank you for that identitication. From Wikipedia:
"Ranatra is a genus of generally slender predatory members of the family Nepidae, known as water stick-insects or water scorpions. Their front legs are strong and are used to grasp prey. They breathe through a pair of long breathing pipes extending from their tails. They eat tadpoles, small fish and other insects, which they pierce with their beak and inject a saliva which both sedates and begins to digest their prey. They overwinter as adults, and lay eggs in spring. The females lay eggs in vegetation. The eggs take typically two to four weeks to hatch, and the young take about two months to mature. When full grown they are 4-5 in."
And it may bite if handled!

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