The world's newest Order of Class Insecta, and insofar as is known at this time, the only species in this Order. All of the details of this creature and its classification will be published next Tuesday in the esteemed scientific journal Nature, but information is already leaking out. The new Order is to be called Lepidonata, as the strange new beast clearly has lineages that can be traced to moths (Lepidoptera) and dragonflies (Odonata).
Discoverer Elroy Joe Hatfield, a field researcher with the University of West Virginia, has already branded the creature with a common name: the Luna-Hawk. In this closeup of the anterior end of the animal, we can clearly see strong grabbing-type legs armed with raptorial spines. These adaptations, along with powerful biting and chewing mouthparts, mark the Luna-Hawk as a predatorial insect. The exceptionally large eyes have evolved to allow the Luna-Hawk to see clearly in the darkest of conditions.
Says Hatfield of its initial discovery: "We was surveyin' moths and whatnot outside a latrine in Burnwood State Park. Them boys what run the place, they keep the lights on on the outside of the johns, and more weird bugs'n you can shake a stick at come in dere dat place". Adds colleague and co-finder Dr. Rufus "Skeeter" Harley: "Yes, yes, around 2 am on the night of July 31, 2010, Elroy Joe and myself were visibly startled by the sudden appearance of a very large, fast-moving insect quite unlike anything that I had ever seen in my 37 years of studying the insect fauna of West Virginia. This insect flew into the blizzard of moths surrounding the latrine's lights, and proceeded to lay siege to the hapless insects". In this tight shot, we can see the posterior end of the new insect quite well. The long tubular segmented abdomen clearly points to an ancestry with the dragonflies, yet the delicate scaled wings are obviously evolved from moths. Speculation is that the two closest living relatives of the newly discovered Luna-Hawk is the dragonfly Erythemis simplicicollis, the Eastern Pondhawk, and Actias luna, the Luna Moth.
24 comments:
I'm envisioning what other potential members of this new order might look like.
I think one that would be an awesome sight would be a Regal Comet (Citheronia regalis and Anax longipes)
Just think of the larval implications as well...
Brian
Hee hee...I am going to New River...and I demand to see one or I want my money back! :0
THAT is some SERIOUSLY GOOD photoshop work. No joke. Very impressive!
PhotoShop? Never heard of it. This critter is real, real I say! Photos don't lie! Anyone who won't believe these probably doesn't' accept the Bigfoot photos, either!
Oh Jim, You will pay!
So you decided not to post a Tufted Puffin being found in Toledo like you have on past April Fool's days, I see.
The somewhat loosely attached head allows it to scan 180 degrees in search of its prey, I would imagine. I will be leading a Big Bug Sit at Burnwood Latrines at the next festival. We'll convene at midnight and sit there until the biscuits and gravy arrive. Be there or be square!
I would have dismissed this as an April Fool's joke, if it hadn't been posted on March 31.
Jim: Great post about this exciting new discovery. Julie: Sitting at the latrine until the biscuits and gravy arrive, really?
Haha! I couldn't agree more with Ned! When I woke up to read this I immediately thought, "Yea, right!"
What an incredible find! Just goes to show you how little we really do know. Who knows how many more things are waiting to be discovered!
Why is it always West Virginia? Lol. Happy April 1st! Fool. . . .
Another great April Fools post! Always look forward to what you come up with.
Why does everyone think this is a 4/1 prank? This animal, the Luna-hawk, is like totally real, for sure! The astounding unretouched photo proves it!
Ah think y'all was tipplin moonshine and mebbe smokin weed in them thar West Virginny hollows. Still, yer Photyshop skills are gittin better. Y'all look out fer them swallowhawks and skipperskimmers and clubstreaks and checkerspot forktails down along that New River, y'hear.
Funny...the older I get, the more skeptical I get! If this is legit, then WOW!!!
New? I have these all the time in my back yard in New Mexico. Habitat is just like West Virginia and everything!
Shame on you! You had me, hook-line-and sinker, for a while! haha
very funny !
Wonder how long them two fellers was sittin' in that outhouse together, waitin'?
If that is Actually a Real Bug, and not a joke, then Name it After Yourself man... I can't find Anything about that creature... Keep me posted>>
B. KACZ
wow...is it real?? i want to know more about it...
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