Photo Gallery Updates
| Aug 10 - A brand new Portfolio added showing select photos for 2007 and 2008.. |
| Jul 27 - New images and gallery showing the Namtok Pha Charoen National Park in Tak added. |
| Jul 11 - New images and gallery showing the Chaloem Rattanakosin National Park in Kanchanaburi added. |
| Jun 29 - New images showing the murals of Wat Khongkharam in Ratachaburi, Thailand added. |
Articles
- Uthai Thani's prehistoric paintings
- Flatid Planthoppers (Flatidae) in Thailand
- Tak and Mae Hong Song
- Buddhist Cave Shrines in Kanchanaburi
- Insects in Khao Yai - a Muek Lek sidetrip
- Caves of Phetchaburi and Ratchaburi
- What does the Nikon D3 and D300 mean for a Nikon D2x user
- Pollution in the Gulf of Siam
- Khao Ang Rue Nai Wildlife Sanctuary
- Plea to assist the protection of bears in Thailand
- Wild Thailand, a highly recommended book
- The weather in Thailand - rain, leeches and insects
- The new Nikon D3x, what should it deliver?
- Website Updates for June 2007
- Review of the Sigma 500 HSM EX (2006 Model)
- Welcome to Images of Thailand
- Wat Khao Tam Talu, Ratchaburi
- Khmer Temples in Thailand
- Sukhothai, the weather and waiting for blue skies
- PhotoShelter - online sales of licenses, images and prints
| Flatid Planthoppers (Flatidae) in Thailand |
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One insect that is often seen in Thai forests is a species of the Flatid (Flatidae) Planthoppers, or to be more precise the nymph of a Flatidae bug. It is the white filamentous body covering of the nymph that causes first interest and then amazement as one realizes that is it in fact an animal. Younger specimens are often mistaken for a fungus or a plant and it is not until the nymph moves that you realize the mistake. As the nymph grows it develops a more insect like appearance, even though keeping the hairy filamentous covering, and it body, legs and face become apparent.
Another odd behaviour the nymph shows is that of aggregation - it can sometimes been seen in large aggregations on bushes on the forest floor - it is assumed that as these agrregations are of the nymphs then the aggregation may be food driven or pre-metamorphosis. They can be seen throughout Thailand and indeed is reportedly eaten as a delicacy in some parts of the country. The photographs here represent sightings in a) Khao Yai National Park, Nakorn Ratchasima b) Maenam Pha Chi Wildlife Sanctuary, Ratchaburi and c) Khao Ang Rue Nai Wildlife Sanctuary, Chachoengsao. A plant hopper is any insect in the infraorder Fulgoromorpha within the Hemiptera. The name comes from their remarkable resemblance to leaves and other plants of their environment and from the fact that they often "hop" for quick transportation in a similar way to that of grasshoppers. However, these planthoppers generally walk very slowly so as not to attract attention. Distributed worldwide, all members of this group are plant-feeders. There is a belief that one of their main defenses is that of mimicry. As can be seen from the picture of the adult it quite clearly mimics a leaf and it could be assumed that the nymph mimics a flower or fungal growth. Click here for more Flatidae pictures |
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One insect that is often seen in Thai forests is a species of the Flatid (Flatidae) Planthoppers, or to be more precise the nymph of a Flatidae bug. It is the white filamentous body covering of the nymph that causes first interest and then amazement as one realizes that is it in fact an animal. Younger specimens are often mistaken for a fungus or a plant and it is not until the nymph moves that you realize the mistake. As the nymph grows it develops a more insect like appearance, even though keeping the hairy filamentous covering, and it body, legs and face become apparent.





















