Ants build massive mounds with built-in ventilation, farming fungi like tiny agriculturists.
Ants build massive mounds with built-in ventilation, farming fungi like tiny agriculturists.
The Jagged Ambush Bug reaches 7.6 to 9.6 mm in length. It has a chunky, angular body in shades of greenish-yellow, white, or brown for camouflage. Short wings tuck under the body. Raptorial front legs feature jagged edges for seizing prey. The fiddle-shaped form blends with flower clusters.
This species occurs in eastern and south-central United States, extending to Mexico. It favors gardens, fields, and woodland edges with abundant flowers. Common on goldenrod and other blooms, where it waits motionless among petals for insects to approach.
Adults perch on flowers, using camouflage and still posture to ambush prey. They lunge with powerful front legs to grasp victims like bees, flies, or wasps. Enzymatic saliva liquefies internals for sucking. Both adults and nymphs hunt actively, aiding pest control but occasionally targeting pollinators.
Eggs lay in flat clusters of dark, barrel-shaped units on leaves or stems, coated in frothy secretion for protection. Nymphs hatch and develop through five instars, preying on small insects. Adults emerge in summer, living several weeks. One generation per year completes in temperate zones.
As a predator, the Jagged Ambush Bug proves beneficial overall. It consumes garden pests like aphids and caterpillars, reducing crop damage without chemicals. Minor drawback includes occasional predation on beneficial pollinators, but net positive for natural balance in agriculture and landscapes.
This preserved specimen highlights the raptorial front legs and ambush strategy, ideal for entomology education and displays. Check it out on BugGuide! https://bugguide.net/node/view/106911