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Ensign Coccid
Ortheziidae
This looks like an insect to me, as it seems to have six legs. Beyond that, it does not look like anything I have ever seen before. It is very small, perhaps 3mm long and I found it at the base of a Swamp Gentian (Gentiana douglasiana) I collected in a bog. Any help with the identification is definitely appreciated.
Update 21 September 2007: With help from bugguide.net, I now have a family for this insect.
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(Flower) Rove Beetle
Eusphalerum sp
This species of beetle is easy to find on many different species of flowers during the summer in Sitka. They are quite small, I would say less than .5 cm long. When I have observed them, they never seem to be in any hurry. Even after they have landed, it takes them a little bit of time to get themselves all tucked in under their elytra (the hard outer wing covers).
(Thanks to Francesco Vitali via bugguide.net for help with the identification.)
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Hoverfly
Meliscaeva cinctella
This fly was apparently eating the pollen from the Cow Parsnip flowers. It is a species of hoverfly, but I don’t know of any more specific common name. Thanks to Martin Hauser via bugguide.net for the identification.
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Unidentified Moth
This moth was flying around in the woods. It was fairly small, perhaps a couple of centimeters long.
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Unidentified Ant:
Lasius sp.
There are only 19 species of ants known from Alaska, so I am guessing this is one of them. There were lots of these ants taking advantage of the blooming Cow Parsnip. Presumably it was food related, but I am not sure whether it was pollen or nectar that they were getting.
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