What's the collective noun for a group of vegetable bugs? Mine seem to be all clustering together this afternoon.
I'm pretty sure these are the young of the 'Southern Green Stink Bug'
Nezara viridula, originally from Ethiopia, but which has now made itself at home almost everywhere. They spray a toxic, foul-smelling substance when disturbed.
Pretty, aren't they? They are about a cm long each.
Just don't eat them along with your lettuce. I can assure you from first-hand experience, you need only the rear end in your salad in order to have an extremely memorable experience.
Ours here are just plain green, but probably with the same smell. They try to come indoors for winter, but Cro says No.
ReplyDeleteThese will be green when they are grown-up Cro. The ties that bind us ...
DeleteThe collective noun is from the Latin 'Buggered' - pronounced: bug - 'erd (bug - herd).
ReplyDeleteHa ha Alden. Very good.
DeletePretty awful !
ReplyDeleteThey stick their little mouthparts in my tomatoes Helsie. And the passionvine hoppers suck the stems. And yet I still have the biggest harvest in years! I can afford to be generous a little.
DeleteI squashed a stink bug once accidentally on the veranda. Hmmm.
ReplyDeleteA 'squash' of bugs? Yep, that works. Hard to get the smell off your hands Geeb?
DeleteThis goes to show that globalization stinks. Many creatures have hooked rides around the world and become invasive species.
ReplyDeleteYes Red. Although, species travel long distance on wind currents too, and have for millions of years, so it might not be due to humans in this case. Although it might be too!
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