The colors are usually brown or green but may be grey or shades of red.
What does a baby walking stick look like.
Stripes spots and speckles are more common than solid.
Depending on the species.
What i look like.
I look like a twig and part of the plant i am on so i can hide from birds and other predators.
My specialty is camouflage.
They are also called walking sticks.
I only eat leaves and stems of plants and usually only eat at night.
Walkingsticks belong to the suborder phasmatodea family phasmatidea which includes both walkingsticks which look like sticks and leaf insects which look like leaves.
While reports indicate that actual contact with the walking stick is needed to cause it to spray others report.
Also some are shaded orange but in little places.
Stick insect species often called walking sticks range in size from the tiny half inch long timema cristinae of north america to the formidable 13 inch long phobaeticus kirbyi of borneo.
Males tend to be smaller than females.
They escape predation by blending into plant material.
I will not deal with leaf insects here but they too are interesting insects.
Mostly like an itsy bitsy little stick but with pluck.
There are more than 3 000 species of walking stick bugs all over the world and in diverse climates so it s not surprising that not all walking stick bugs look alike.
These amazing bugs are hard to spot because they look so much like twigs until those twigs get up and walk away that is.
There are several thousand speices of walking stick insects and many are kept as pets.
May 26 2014.
Walking stick bugs from the phasmida family look like sticks with legs and antennae or twigs attached to a small branch.
Walking sticks or stick insects are a group of highly camouflaged insects.
Stick insects are part of the order phasmatodea also known as phasmids and walking sticks and are most often found in subtropical tropical habitats when you can find them that is.
What a baby stick bug looks like.
Walking sticks are long thin and slow moving bugs that looks like a stick twig or branch.
As their name suggests they look just like sticks and may even sway back and forth to more closely resemble a twig moving in the wind.
My size ranges from less than 1 inch to over 1 foot in length depending on my species.
The two striped walking stick anisomortha buprestiordes a.