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Nemognatha blister beetle

Eastern Washington

Picture of orange Nemognatha blister beetles
Orange Nemognatha blister beetle

Blister beetles in the genus Nemognatha can be seen in mid to late summer feeding on the nectar and pollen of thistles and other composite flowers. Their bright color serves as a warning for predators to avoid them, like other colorful insects such as the toxic monarch butterfly, milkweed beetle, or stinging velvet ant. Nemognatha blister beetles produce a highly toxic substance known as Cantharidin, which blisters skin, causes digestive and urinary problems when swallowed, and can be lethal in small amounts.

The male beetle produces this toxin and transfers some to the female during mating, enabling her to coat her eggs for protection against egg-eating insects. The female beetle lays eggs on flowers where the larvae hatch, find and attach to foraging bees, then ride to nest burrows where the beetle larvae parasitize developing solitary bee larvae.

Photo of orange Nemognatha blister beetles on wavyleaf thistle flower, climbing on a long-horned bee
Orange Nemognatha blister beetle
climbing on the back of a long-horned bee

Photo of orange Nemognatha blister beetles on wavyleaf thistle flower, with bembicine sand wasp
Orange Nemognatha blister beetles
on wavyleaf thistle flower, with Bembicine Sand Wasp

Photo of nemognatha blister beetles with a scoliid wasp
Nemognatha blister beetles
with a scoliid wasp