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nope 31-03-2010 05:15 AM

Red bugs that i have never seen tham before
 
Hi all, just wondering if anyone could tell me what sort of bug this thing
is ?

Garden Pest or should i leave them alone ?

i'm in Victoria

attachment of a photo of them in next post


SG1[_3_] 31-03-2010 05:27 AM

Red bugs that i have never seen tham before
 
Send the piccie to the department of Ag


"nope" wrote in message
...
Hi all, just wondering if anyone could tell me what sort of bug this thing
is ?

Garden Pest or should i leave them alone ?

i'm in Victoria

attachment of a photo of them in next post




David Hare-Scott[_2_] 31-03-2010 05:56 AM

Red bugs that i have never seen tham before
 
nope wrote:
Hi all, just wondering if anyone could tell me what sort of bug this
thing is ?

Garden Pest or should i leave them alone ?

i'm in Victoria

attachment of a photo of them in next post


This newsgroup will not accept binaries you will have to put it elsewhere
and post a link.

David


SG1[_3_] 31-03-2010 07:51 AM

Red bugs that i have never seen tham before
 

"David Hare-Scott" wrote in message
...
nope wrote:
Hi all, just wondering if anyone could tell me what sort of bug this
thing is ?

Garden Pest or should i leave them alone ?

i'm in Victoria

attachment of a photo of them in next post


This newsgroup will not accept binaries you will have to put it elsewhere
and post a link.

David


I had no probs seeing the jpg and I haven't got a clue what they are.





nope 31-03-2010 09:01 AM

Red bugs that i have never seen tham before
 
Ok nps

thanks for the fast replies

sorry for posting a pic here i dont normally post pics in chat groups

"Send the piccie to the department of Ag"


i'll give them a try thanks


"SG1" wrote in message
...

"David Hare-Scott" wrote in message
...
nope wrote:
Hi all, just wondering if anyone could tell me what sort of bug this
thing is ?

Garden Pest or should i leave them alone ?

i'm in Victoria

attachment of a photo of them in next post


This newsgroup will not accept binaries you will have to put it elsewhere
and post a link.

David


I had no probs seeing the jpg and I haven't got a clue what they are.






David Hare-Scott[_2_] 31-03-2010 09:01 AM

Red bugs that i have never seen tham before
 
SG1 wrote:
"David Hare-Scott" wrote in message
...
nope wrote:
Hi all, just wondering if anyone could tell me what sort of bug this
thing is ?

Garden Pest or should i leave them alone ?

i'm in Victoria

attachment of a photo of them in next post


This newsgroup will not accept binaries you will have to put it
elsewhere and post a link.

David


I had no probs seeing the jpg and I haven't got a clue what they are.




Maybe it is my server

David

nope 31-03-2010 09:45 AM

Red bugs that i have never seen tham before
 
Sorry David i've posted the pic in

alt.binaries.pictures.gardens

i didnt relise there was a bin group

my bad

cheers


"David Hare-Scott" wrote in message
...
SG1 wrote:
"David Hare-Scott" wrote in message
...
nope wrote:
Hi all, just wondering if anyone could tell me what sort of bug this
thing is ?

Garden Pest or should i leave them alone ?

i'm in Victoria

attachment of a photo of them in next post

This newsgroup will not accept binaries you will have to put it
elsewhere and post a link.

David


I had no probs seeing the jpg and I haven't got a clue what they are.




Maybe it is my server

David



John Savage 31-03-2010 10:48 AM

Red bugs that i have never seen tham before
 
"nope" writes:
Hi all, just wondering if anyone could tell me what sort of bug this thing
is ?

Garden Pest or should i leave them alone ?


Most ISPs have their newsservers set to not distribute binary
posts where they appear in these text groups, so most readers
will be unaware of any accompanying pic.

It would be informative to be told what niche the insects are
habitating, what they seem to be feeding on, and how many there
seem to be. Your photo shows them on dead timber, so maybe they
are termites that are normally unseen but which you uncovered?
(Just to show how one can be otherwise left to jump to wild
conclusions.)

I've never set eyes on such colourful bugs.
--
John Savage (my news address is not valid for email)

nope 31-03-2010 12:50 PM

Red bugs that i have never seen tham before
 



theyre actually gathered in a dead clump of grass which i whipper snipped
and poisoned a few weeks ago at the bottom of the hardwood stake thats in
in the pic .there is a tap there but i never use it so the soil underneath
isn't wet

i hope they arent termites, ive got another photo of them all in the grass
..ive got a funny feeling that they are babies and when they mature they
might turn black in one of the pics i think theyre might be an adult i could
be wrong

ill attach a couple more pics in binaries under the original post

thanks for any input



"John Savage" wrote in message
...
"nope" writes:
Hi all, just wondering if anyone could tell me what sort of bug this thing
is ?

Garden Pest or should i leave them alone ?


Most ISPs have their newsservers set to not distribute binary
posts where they appear in these text groups, so most readers
will be unaware of any accompanying pic.

It would be informative to be told what niche the insects are
habitating, what they seem to be feeding on, and how many there
seem to be. Your photo shows them on dead timber, so maybe they
are termites that are normally unseen but which you uncovered?
(Just to show how one can be otherwise left to jump to wild
conclusions.)

I've never set eyes on such colourful bugs.
--
John Savage (my news address is not valid for email)



terryc 31-03-2010 02:23 PM

Red bugs that i have never seen tham before
 
On Wed, 31 Mar 2010 19:01:19 +1100, David Hare-Scott wrote:



Maybe it is my server


No, usenet doesn't take images except in binaries groups.
Idiots use google groups and think that is usenet.

LindaB 31-03-2010 09:53 PM

Red bugs that i have never seen tham before
 
Look a bit like Termites to me. Google "Termites" and then click the
Images option. Not exactly the same, but close.

Linda

SG1[_3_] 31-03-2010 11:46 PM

Red bugs that i have never seen tham before
 

"terryc" wrote in message
...
On Wed, 31 Mar 2010 19:01:19 +1100, David Hare-Scott wrote:



Maybe it is my server


No, usenet doesn't take images except in binaries groups.
Idiots use google groups and think that is usenet.


Not exactly true. My provider (teranews) is not all that fussy about
binaries in a non-binary group but others like bigpong give you the text
only, that is why I was able to see the image in a text (only) group. BTW
how does one access google groups???





nope 01-04-2010 04:00 AM

Red bugs that i have never seen them before
 
yeh iwas thinking the same thing

i've done that and i couldnt find anything exactly like them.

i was a bit stressed that they may have been termites

they are only very tiny maybe at the largest being about 3mm long



"LindaB" wrote in message
...
Look a bit like Termites to me. Google "Termites" and then click the
Images option. Not exactly the same, but close.

Linda



terryc 01-04-2010 04:03 AM

Red bugs that i have never seen tham before
 
On Wed, 31 Mar 2010 15:15:31 +1100, nope wrote:

Hi all, just wondering if anyone could tell me what sort of bug this
thing is ?

Garden Pest or should i leave them alone ?


Leave them alone.

i'm in Victoria


What was the weather like?
Do you have any other photographs?
Look like an ant to me, but with out better photographs, can not be sure.
IME You do not normally see termites on the surface like that unless they
are winged or nest has been broken open.



attachment of a photo of them in next post



David Hare-Scott[_2_] 01-04-2010 05:11 AM

Red bugs that i have never seen them before
 
"LindaB" wrote in message
...
Look a bit like Termites to me. Google "Termites" and then click the
Images option. Not exactly the same, but close.

Lindanope wrote:

yeh iwas thinking the same thing

i've done that and i couldnt find anything exactly like them.

i was a bit stressed that they may have been termites

they are only very tiny maybe at the largest being about 3mm long




I found the pic through google groups. They do look like termites, we have
some round here that are about that size. There are many species round the
world, you would need to be an expert to say exactly which one.

Is your house timber? fade up music from the movie jaws

David




terryc 01-04-2010 07:10 AM

Red bugs that i have never seen them before
 
On Thu, 01 Apr 2010 15:11:43 +1100, David Hare-Scott wrote:

"LindaB" wrote in message
...
Look a bit like Termites to me. Google "Termites" and then click the
Images option. Not exactly the same, but close.

Lindanope wrote:

yeh iwas thinking the same thing

i've done that and i couldnt find anything exactly like them.

i was a bit stressed that they may have been termites

they are only very tiny maybe at the largest being about 3mm long




I found the pic through google groups. They do look like termites, we
have some round here that are about that size. There are many species
round the world, you would need to be an expert to say exactly which
one.

Is your house timber? fade up music from the movie jaws


Maybe a problem if it is on a slab and soil etc is built up around it AND
the wood has been/is water affected. Or on piers and the ant caps are
not effective..

Also need to be the right species and as far as I know, that ain't them.

If OP says he smashed the log/stick open, and there was chambers in it,
then fine, but he said they were on dead grass. In daylight?

David



Rod Speed 01-04-2010 07:53 PM

Red bugs that i have never seen tham before
 
SG1 wrote
terryc wrote
David Hare-Scott wrote


Maybe it is my server


No, usenet doesn't take images except in binaries groups.
Idiots use google groups and think that is usenet.


Not exactly true. My provider (teranews) is not all that fussy about
binaries in a non-binary group but others like bigpong give you the
text only, that is why I was able to see the image in a text (only) group.


BTW how does one access google groups???


http://groups.google.com/advanced_se...l=en&q=&hl=en&

Its also deeper in the More options in the box in the top left of google itself, Groups.



SG1[_3_] 01-04-2010 10:27 PM

Red bugs that i have never seen tham before
 

"Rod Speed" wrote in message
...
SG1 wrote
terryc wrote
David Hare-Scott wrote


Maybe it is my server


No, usenet doesn't take images except in binaries groups.
Idiots use google groups and think that is usenet.


Not exactly true. My provider (teranews) is not all that fussy about
binaries in a non-binary group but others like bigpong give you the
text only, that is why I was able to see the image in a text (only)
group.


BTW how does one access google groups???


http://groups.google.com/advanced_se...l=en&q=&hl=en&

Its also deeper in the More options in the box in the top left of google
itself, Groups.

Thanks Roddles, I try to avoid Google.



John Savage 30-04-2010 03:57 AM

Red bugs that i have never seen tham before
 
"nope" writes:
theyre actually gathered in a dead clump of grass which i whipper snipped
and poisoned a few weeks ago at the bottom of the hardwood stake thats in
in the pic .there is a tap there but i never use it so the soil underneath
isn't wet


Did anything conclusive come from this thread?

I know [some] termites will eat dead grass. If the ones in your photo
emerged from a termite run that you disturbed, I would expect to see
amongst them some with a resemblance to lobsters: large heads and big
pincers, these are the guards and they always emerge to confront me
when I probe a termite tunnel. Lacking defences, the workers, looking
very much like those in your pics, scurry back into the tunnel to
regroup and begin immediate repairs.

Without guards, I'd say you don't then have termites; at least, not the
sort of termites that I know.

I once witnessed a termite colony on the move along a beach. The line
of ants streamed from the bush and headed directly across the cool sand
to the shoreline where the sand had been left damp by a RETREATING tide.
It followed the damp sand for about 60 meters, then turned and headed
back into another patch of native bush. This occurred in the early
morning, before the sun hit the sand. I have no idea of the number of
individuals in the colony, as the line had already formed when I
chanced upon it, but it was fascinating to watch the tail end of the
stream as it slowly wended its way along the sand. The ants marched 5
or 6 abreast, as I recall; they were not in single file.

You probably won't believe this, but peppered among the throng at
approx one meter invervals were guards in military costume pounding on
tiny drums made of gumnuts ....
--
John Savage (my news address is not valid for email)

SG1[_3_] 30-04-2010 09:46 AM

Red bugs that i have never seen tham before
 

"John Savage" wrote in message
...
"nope" writes:
theyre actually gathered in a dead clump of grass which i whipper snipped
and poisoned a few weeks ago at the bottom of the hardwood stake thats in
in the pic .there is a tap there but i never use it so the soil underneath
isn't wet


Did anything conclusive come from this thread?

I know [some] termites will eat dead grass. If the ones in your photo
emerged from a termite run that you disturbed, I would expect to see
amongst them some with a resemblance to lobsters: large heads and big
pincers, these are the guards and they always emerge to confront me
when I probe a termite tunnel. Lacking defences, the workers, looking
very much like those in your pics, scurry back into the tunnel to
regroup and begin immediate repairs.

Without guards, I'd say you don't then have termites; at least, not the
sort of termites that I know.

I once witnessed a termite colony on the move along a beach. The line
of ants streamed from the bush and headed directly across the cool sand
to the shoreline where the sand had been left damp by a RETREATING tide.
It followed the damp sand for about 60 meters, then turned and headed
back into another patch of native bush. This occurred in the early
morning, before the sun hit the sand. I have no idea of the number of
individuals in the colony, as the line had already formed when I
chanced upon it, but it was fascinating to watch the tail end of the
stream as it slowly wended its way along the sand. The ants marched 5
or 6 abreast, as I recall; they were not in single file.

You probably won't believe this, but peppered among the throng at
approx one meter invervals were guards in military costume pounding on
tiny drums made of gumnuts ....


You are right I don't..........

--
John Savage (my news address is not valid for email)





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