A small green reptile that is flat and clinging to its body?

Updated on vogue 2024-07-04
21 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    According to your description, this small, green, flat, clinging reptile to its body can be caused by a plant infestation, or it can be caused by house dust or pollution. Here are some possible scenarios:

    1.Plant pests: If you have plants nearby, they could be aphids, locusts, and other pests on the plants, which may fly onto or fall on you from plants. In this case, you can treat it with an insecticide or insect repellent.

    2.House dust: If you have poor air quality in your room, there may be a lot of dust and bacteria that can get stuck on your body and cause discomfort.

    In this case, you need to clean your room frequently and use an air freshener or air purifier to improve the air quality.

    3.Pollution: If your environment is polluted, such as chemicals, heavy metals, etc., these substances may adsorb on your body and cause discomfort. In this case, you need to stay away from the source of the pollution or take appropriate measures to reduce it.

    In either case, it is recommended that you take timely steps to deal with it to avoid discomfort and health risks. If the condition is severe, seek medical attention promptly.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    It is a larva of the flathorn moth. The mature larvae of the flattened moth are flattened and oval, with a slightly raised back, resembling a turtle's back. Green or yellow-green throughout, white dorsal line. There are 10 nodulous protrusions on each side of the body, on which there are prickly hairs, and there are 2 small clumps of prickly hairs on the back of each body segment.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Firefly firefly larvae can also glow, and you can search it with your wide fingers to see if it's the same.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    This is a female clump of some fireflies, and some of the female adults of fireflies have degenerated wings. Some fireflies are similar in appearance to both male and female, and they can fly; The difference in body size between male and female fireflies in some fireflies is extremely large.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    I also found this insect.

    But don't know what it's called?

    But what I found was the yellow one.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    This big brother, the cave slag female fireflies have no wings and can fly without Namin, they secrete gas to seduce the male Namin quietly and then hunt them, what you see may be females.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Mantis, also called Textile Niang, can be checked.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    I can't see clearly, it looks like a grasshopper.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Some of the green-winged leaf carapaces, green-winged gill beetles have the characteristics you mentioned, and the abdomen is yellow. In addition, the Chinese green mantis and the Japanese mantis (green species) have yellow and green parts of the body, which is not pure yellow.

    The friend upstairs was not right, there is no green species of hymenopteran insects, only one orchid bee is blue, it is a cold color, this kind of bee is very rare, not a social insect but a solitary bee, and other hymenopteran insects are generally yellow, orange, red, brown, black These colors are generally warm.

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    There are many Hymenopteran insects.

  11. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Worm blood boiling, it must be this one, I've read it before, but unfortunately I haven't finished reading it, I just searched for it on the Internet, and it seems that there is another beast cultivation book that is similar to this, and I can't find it.

  12. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Worm blood boils, undead evil spirits, reborn into trees.

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Sure enough, it's a whimsical idea**.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    The body of an insect is divided into three parts: head, thorax, and abdomen.

    The head has a pair of antennae, and the chest has three pairs of feet.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    A type of stinging moth. The hairy pepper worm you said is a kind of bug.

    Thorny moths, insects of the family Lepidoptera, about 500 species. The larvae are short and slug-like. There is no gastropod, and instead of a suction cup.

    When sliding during action, some larvae have bright body colors, and the appendages are densely covered with bristles with brown, green, red, or yellow and other warning colors, and the appendages extend out of the cocoon when forming cocoons for protection and camouflage. When disturbed, it will sting people with venomous stingers and cause a rash.

    Although the general stinging moth is not very toxic, but humans and animals are stung by it after the itching is unbearable, scratching after the sting, such as repeated scratching can make the poisonous hair deep into the skin. When treating the affected area, the stinger can be pulled out with medical plaster or a sterilized needle, then the wound can be cleaned with soapy water or lye, and finally applied wind oil essence. Because the stinger is poisonous, if the affected area is red, swollen and inflamed, you should go to the hospital immediately.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    Not necessarily, the blood of arthropods is generally called hemolymph, which is transported without blood vessels, just within the body cavity, called the blood body cavity, and the color is affected by the elements and food.

    Most hemolymph is colorless, but there are a few.

    Lepidopteran larvae appear green because of the mixture of pigment into the blood cavity due to green leafy food. Crickets and the like are food in the stomach rather than body cavities.

    Flies, like mammals, have red blood because hemoglobin contains iron glycolines, some insects are blue blood because they are copper glycolines like their original close relatives, and some have secondary derivatives accumulation, so they appear yellow or other colors such as purple.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    The first and second species are grasshoppers, insects of the family Orthoptera.

    The third type should be crickets, insects of the family Crickets of the order Orthoptera.

  18. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    It may be a variety of flower beetles, such as the white star flower beetle, the convex star flower beetle, the Luo flower beetle, ......It may also be a step beetle, such as a pull beetle, a green beetle, and of course, a green leaf beetle, a percussion beetle, or a gidding beetle......

    Turtles eat fruits that have less moisture, such as pears. The carapace is carnivorous and usually eats other small insects.

  19. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    I did see such a bug before, and I thought it was a mutation of a caterpillar, and generally this small bug is not poisonous.

    It will not affect the child.

    Question Okay, thank you.

  20. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    Amputees, insects, orthoptera, locusts ......

    You are talking about several different locusts, and the common people are collectively called grasshoppers and grasshoppers, and some places with pointed heads seem to be called grasshoppers and grasshoppers.........

    The names of several specific varieties depend on the picture check data......

  21. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    It should be grasshoppers, I played with it when I was a child, and we called it crickets along with crickets there.

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