Giant Water Bug - U.S. National Park Service
Apr 2, 2020 · These brown, flattened bugs lurk in freshwater habitat around the world, ambushing their prey and sucking it dry. Giant water bugs represent the family Belostomatidae, a member of the “true bug” order, Hemiptera. All true …
Giant Water Bug (Lethocerus americanus) - Insect …
Sep 20, 2023 · The Giant Water Bug is a large insect with equally large and very noticeable foreleg pincers. These pointy appendages are used to catch similar-sized, underwater prey like small fish, frogs, small newts, snails, and …
Lethocerus americanus - Wikipedia
Belostomatidae - Wikipedia
Lethocerus - Wikipedia
Lethocerus is a genus of the hemipteran family Belostomatidae, known colloquially as giant water bugs, toe biters and electric light bugs, distributed in tropical, subtropical and temperate areas of the world.
Giant Water Bug (Family Belostomatidae) - Field Station
Feb 3, 2009 · Giant Water Bugs (GWBs) are “true bugs” in the order Hemiptera and the family Belostomatidae. They are large, brownish, flat, roughly oval insects with impressive front legs.
Species Lethocerus americanus - Giant Water Bug - BugGuide
Giant Water Bug | Department of Entomology
Giant water bugs are aquatic predators in slow moving water bodies. These insects will eat anything they can catch with their raptorial legs! Giant water bugs have even been found to eat small frogs, fish, and turtles.
Giant Water Bugs, Family Belostomatidae - ThoughtCo
Nov 18, 2019 · Giant water bugs have short heads, and even shorter antennae, which are tucked beneath the eyes. A beak, or rostrum, folds under the head, just as in terrestrial true bugs, like assassin bugs. They breathe by means of two …