Hawaiian Insects

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Toxorhynchites brevipalpis Kaluaa 6536

Toxorhynchites brevipalpis Kaluaa 6536.jpg Titanochaeta spider eggs Kokee 1793ThumbnailsTrupanea arboreae Hale Pohaku 5555Titanochaeta spider eggs Kokee 1793ThumbnailsTrupanea arboreae Hale Pohaku 5555Titanochaeta spider eggs Kokee 1793ThumbnailsTrupanea arboreae Hale Pohaku 5555Titanochaeta spider eggs Kokee 1793ThumbnailsTrupanea arboreae Hale Pohaku 5555Titanochaeta spider eggs Kokee 1793ThumbnailsTrupanea arboreae Hale Pohaku 5555

Toxorhynchites brevipalpis, a predatory, non-biting mosquito introduced in an attempt to control biting mosquitos. Unfortunately they never really took off and it's fairly rare to see them. But when you do, they're quite a striking sight - they're big (the body is over half an inch long, and the span of the legs is close to an inch), metallic blue, strong fliers, and make a buzz similar to a regular mosquito but audible from at least five feet away. Two of them kept coming back to a particular paperbark tree near the start of the Kaluaa trail (a pretty dry area) for some reason.

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