Any idea what this insect is?

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The Bear

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Any idea what this insect is? About 20mm long any pale green in the flesh. Got quite a few of them indoors. House is a building site at the mo so lots of places for them to get in. Mrs bear is concerned they may be the carpet or clothing eating type so am keen to identify

Cheers

Mark
 

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Stop eating my Woolen Cardigan put away in storage you *****.
 
The brilliant thing about the lacewing is that it has developed a method of avoiding being caught by a bat by folding its wings at the last moment so that it drops out of the flight path & the bat overshoots.
 
Robbo3":jtc0lnn0 said:
The brilliant thing about the lacewing is that it has developed a method of avoiding being caught by a bat by folding its wings at the last moment so that it drops out of the flight path & the bat overshoots.

How does it detect the bat? Is it hearing the ultrasonic clicks, perhaps? Sight would seem unlikely given this arms race is happening in the dark.
 
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"A more realistic picture of behavior emerged from studies on freely flying green lacewings and bats (Figure 3). Bat signals at low repetition rates, possibly combined with low intensities, cause insects to fold their wings and passively dive. The green lacewing shows this nondirectional early-warning response to bats' searching signals (Figure 3, between flashes 2 and 3). The bat increases its call rate as it approaches a falling insect (Figure 3, flashes 3 to 4). Just before capturing its prey, the bat increases its repetition rate to a maximum of about 200 signals per second in the terminal phase for most bats (Figure 3, flash 5). During the terminal phase, the insect suddenly flipped open its wings (Figure 3, flash 5 arrow), presumably in response to the high repetition rate signals. This last-chance response breaks the dive and foils the bat in this case, after which the insect continues its dive (Figure 3, flash 6). Artificial bat signals mimicking the sequence shown in Figure 3 evoke the same behavior (Miller and Olesen 1979). By repeating the experiments with deafened green lacewings, we showed that the selective advantage of reactors over nonreactors was 47%, or about the same as that found for moths (see Miller 1982). Unidentified neurons in the prothoracic ganglion respond to ultrasound, but their role in eliciting behavior is unknown (Miller 1984)."

- https://academic.oup.com/bioscience/art ... 570/268256

Lots of info & studies by looking up how insects avoid bats.

I remember being shown a film at school back in the 60s, from the Moody Institute I think, showing a bat passing through moving fan blades, where the speed was adjustable & when the bat knew the blades were moving too fast. It also included a clip of a lacewing avoiding a bat.
 

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