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Fulgora laternaria, peanut head bug. How the peanut head bug got its name is self-evident. Its spectacular head is shaped like a peanut and, at six centimetres or so, is almost as long as its body
Fulgora species, South American lantern flySpecies of South American lantern fly: Fulgora graciliceps 1; Fulgora laternaria 2 and Fulgora castresii 3. Handcolored engraving by Fournier after an illustration by Blanchard from Charles d
Azure hawker and exotic insectsAzure hawker, Aeshna caerulea 1, Lampyris gigantea 2, Phoraspis picta 3, and lantern fly, Phrictus diadema 4. Handcoloured lithograph from John O
Lantern fly, locust, mantis, cicada and beetlesLantern fly, Fulgora laternaria 1, migratory locust, Grillus migratorius 2, European mantis, Mantis religiosa 3, common cicada, Cicada plebeia 4, Hercules beetle, Dynastes hercules 5, and cockchafer
Lanthorn fly or Lantern fly in its luminous state, Fulgora lanternaria.. Handcolored copperplate engraving from Ebenezer Siblys Universal System of Natural History, 1794
Peanut-headed lanternfly, alligator bug, great lanthorn-fly or firefly, Fulgora laternaria.. Handcolored copperplate engraving from George Shaw and Frederick Nodders The Naturalists Miscellany, 1800