Canadian Geographic Photo Club - Brown Water Scorpion
  

Brown Water Scorpion

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by Virginia Anne MacDonald from Welland CA on 11 Jun 2020
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I love my pond this time of year, it comes alive with nature. The other day I saw this skinny thing sitting on a lily pad with it's butt in the water. So I zoomed in to see this. I have never seen one before. At first I was told it is a stick bug but this is different, so I looked it up. The long (about 2″), lean, well-camouflaged Brown Water Scorpion (Ranatra fusca [probably]) is in the order Hemiptera (half-wings), referring to fore-wings that are membranous at the tip and leathery at their base, and thus can legally be called a “bug.” Hemipterans have simple/incomplete metamorphosis, looking when they hatch pretty much like they will as adults, adding a few parts (the wings and the “naughty-bits”) as they mature. Both immature and adult water scorpions live in the same habitats in ponds and streams, and both dine on “bug juice.” Despite their resemblance to the terrestrial herbivorous walking sticks, the carnivorous water scorpion ambushes aquatic invertebrates like backswimmers, spotting its prey with protruding compound eyes, nabbing it with long, mantis-like front legs, stabbing it with a short beak (which is also capable of piercing human skin) and injecting tranquilizers and tenderizers.They hang out, usually head-down, on aquatic vegetation and in the detritus just off-shore;their passage through the water is sloth-like, and swimming is not their forte. In fact, in A Guide to Common Freshwater Invertebrates of North America, J. Reese Voshell, Jr. says that water scorpions are so sedentary that not only do algae and micro-invertebrates form colonies on them, but other aquatic insects may deposit eggs on them! This immobility is part of their “stealth” hunting tactic. They are equipped to fly, and fly they do, but not often, and they must spread and dry their wings before take-off. They are known to bask in the sun (and take your pick: some references say they fly only at night, but others say they fly during the day). The two long filaments on their trailing end are not stingers (a nod to the “scorpion” part of their name); they lock to form a breathing tube, the tip of which the bugs position just at the air-water interface. They can store air in their thorax when they want to go deeper than their “snorkels” will reach (and the structure of the filaments doesn’t allow water to enter). Their eggs, which are laid in submerged vegetation or in damp spots, like moss, near the water’s edge, also have respiratory filaments which protrude from the egg!

  • Camera: Canon EOS 7D Mark II
  • Focal: 400 mm
  • Shutter speed: 0.000625 sec
  • Aperture: f/ 10
tagged: brown water scorpion life nature wildlife niagara falls ontario canada

1 comment


Jeff Aelick posted 2020-06-12 7:31pm

that is a good one of this scorpion are to do you got it

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