Given the sheer variety of insects in the world it is difficult to name the largest, says the charity Buglife, but here are our contenders for the world’s biggest insects

By Buglife

Published: Thursday, 07 September 2023 at 13:28 PM


Determining which insect is the largest is a tricky endeavour; the word large will mean many things depending on who you talk to. It could be the length of an insect or its weight, wingspan – maybe even  general bulk.

Consequently, we’re going to have a look at a number of different species that could fall into the world’s largest insect category and leave it to you to decide which you think comes out on top!

Here are the contenders for world’s largest insect….

World’s largest insects

World’s longest insect

Phryganistria chinensis is often thought of as the world's largest insect
The giant Chinese stick insect © Getty Images

The world’s longest insect is currently the giant Chinese stick insect (Phryganistria chinensis); discovered in China as recently as 2014. The adult female first found in the wild measured 624mm in length with legs outstretched, but was surpassed by one of its captive-bred young that reached 640mm in length!  The jungle nymph stick insect (Heteropteryx dilatata) of Malaysia does not reach the same impressive lengths as its Chinese cousin, but is one of the chunkier ‘sticks’, and is often cited as one of the heaviest, reaching up to 65g in weight.

World’s largest dragonfly or damselfly

biggest dragonfly in the world
Helicopter Damselfly in La Selva Biological Station in Costa Rica © Getty Images

The blue-winged helicopter (Megaloprepus caerulatus), a damselfly from the Central American rainforests, is the largest living member of the dragonfly and damselfly order, Odonata. With a body length of about 130mm and a wingspan of 190mm, it’s almost twice the size of the UK’s emperor dragonfly and makes an easy meal of its chosen prey, orb-weaver spiders, which it plucks straight from a spider’s web.

World’s largest butterfly

© Getty Images
© Getty Images

The Queen Alexandra’s birdwing (Ornithoptera alexandrae) is the largest butterfly in the world.  It is found in eastern Papua New Guinea and adult females can have a body length of about 80mm and a wingspan slightly in excess of 250mm.

World’s heaviest insect

Little Barrier Island giant wētā
© Dinobass, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

The Little Barrier Island giant wētā (Deinacrida heteracantha) could also appear in the world’s largest insects list. Endemic to New Zealand, where it survives only on Little Barrier Island and some predator-free conservation areas that it has been translocated to, this relative of the grasshopper can measure up to 100mm in length. It is often cited as the heaviest insect in the world, with one captive female reaching a mass of 71g.

 

World’s largest beetle

Goliathus regius
Goliathus regius on display at the Museo Civico di Storia Naturale di Milano © Hectonichus, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Many beetles reach great sizes but the royal Goliath beetle (Goliathus regius) is among the largest beetles, measuring up to 115mm in length. Found in western equatorial Africa, this Goliath of insects primarily feeds on tree sap and fruits, and despite its large size it can fly well. Goliath beetle larvae get even bigger and are capable of growing up to 250mm in length and reaching weights in excess of 100g!

World’s longest beetle