There some amazingly beautiful, yet little known, insects on our planet. Stuart Blackman picks a few of his favourites

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Published: Friday, 06 September 2024 at 09:54 AM


In the vast world of insects, there are countless hidden gems that often go unnoticed. While butterflies and ladybirds often steal the spotlight, many other species rival them in beauty but remain relatively unknown.

These lesser-known insects boast vibrant colours, intricate patterns, and delicate wings that look as though they’ve been crafted by nature’s finest artisans.

Prettiest insects in the world

Picasso bug

By Alandmanson – Own work, CC BY 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=75139200

Though you could argue that they are more Kandinsky than Picasso, there’s little doubt that these patterns are a work of art. A native of tropical Africa, the Picasso bug belongs to a family of plant bugs that bear an extension to their thorax that protects their wings and abdomen.

This ‘scutellum’ gives the bugs a remarkably beetle-like appearance (though unlike the wingcases of beetles, it is composed of a single piece, not divided down the middle). The patterns adorning this canvas probably serve as a toxicity warning to predators. Indeed the bug’s nymphs feed on the flowers of a plant called bitter leaf, which is sought out by sick chimpanzees to rid themselves of parasitic infections.

Spun glass caterpillar

Andy Reago & Chrissy McClarren, CC BY 2.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

It may resemble a cross between some sort of bizarre alien plant and a funky Christmas decoration, but this is neither.

This is a spun glass caterpillar, a North American member of the slug moth family – a name that clearly flatters terrestrial pulmonates. The adults are rather unremarkable little brown jobs, but the larvae… oh, the larvae!

Many of the family’s 1,700-odd species are adorned with all manner of extravagant, intricate spines, bristles and protuberances. What they do have in common with shell-less molluscs is that they glide rather than crawl.

Their fleshy walking legs have been all but lost and they lubricate their passage over the vegetation with a slippery trail – not of slime, heaven forbid, but liquid silk.