#TBT: All About the Bugs of Shanghai

By That's Shanghai, April 6, 2017

0 0

Throwback Thursday is when we trawl through the That's archives for a work of dazzling genius written at some point in our past. We then republish it. On a Thursday.

There are more than 300,000 known species of insect in China, yet due to climate and concrete, Shanghai isn’t exactly the entomologist’s ideal place for fieldwork. In fact, there’s never ever been a comprehensive insect species inventory done for the city, says Professor Haisheng Yin of the Shanghai Institute for Biological Sciences. Still, there’s plenty of curious creatures creeping, crawling and taking flight if you keep em’ peeled…

Butterflies

Keep an eye out in coming months for these Shanghai-dwelling eye-catchers

Common bluebottle   

cbb2.jpg

Common tiger 

Danaidae-Common-Tiger-Bangkok-061030-12d-.jpg

Small tortoiseshell

52764146.SmallTortoiseshellButterfly.jpg

Painted Lady

scaleImage.jpg

Peacock pansy

peacock_pansy_1024x768.jpg

Invaders

Red palm weevil

Adult-red-palm-weevil.jpg

Originally from south Asia, this palm-eating fiend is a surefire tree killer. It’ll spend its four-month lifespan inside a trunk, tunneling and destroying the tree from the inside. Trees can collapse within half a year of infestation, without ever showing signs of exterior damage. A female lays 200 eggs during its life and there can be two or three generations per year. First discovered in China in 1997, the red palm weevil has spread to at least 12 provinces. In 2005, more than a thousand canary date palms had to be burned down in Songjiang District to prevent further spread. The effort was successful.

American white moth

sfw_moth_aud0514_m15-1.jpg

This Yankee intruder was first discovered in a munitions factory in Shanxi Province in 1985, presumed to have laid eggs hidden in the grains of wooden boxes carrying imported machinery. It denuded tens of thousands of trees, damaged crops and was seemingly unstoppable, able to survive in temperatures from 40 to -16  degrees Celsius. A menace in Shanghai 10 years ago, they were rooted out but still plague other parts of the country. Last fall 600 million bees were released in Baoding, a city in Hebei Province, to combat the moth menace.

Why are tree trunks painted white?

post6.jpg

The paint is actually insecticide and it keeps cicada and caterpillar larvae from climbing up the tree, preventing potentially tree-destroying infestations. 

Rhinoceros beetle 

A Shanghainese kid’s favorite bug

Japanese-rhino-beetle.jpg

It is big, prehistoric-looking and likes to eat jelly. What more could you want from a companion creepy-crawly? Local kids catch their own or purchase one at a pet stores, while in Japan these popular pets are even sold in vending machines. 

High-stakes hoppers

Cricket fighting with a million-kuai pot

qafdiqcavp-1490861492.jpg

Once the playthings of emperors, crickets still entertain an elite and powerful set in Shanghai. Behind the glass counters stacked with screeching cicadas and languid bunnies, crickets are selling for serious money at the Xizang Nan Lu pet market. “It’s our heritage. It’s a nobleman’s game,” says one cricket dealer, who declined to be named because of his involvement in illegal gambling.
Where casual street-side matches may see five or ten kuai at stake, a serious cricket fighting match usually goes down in a swanky hotel, and the pot can reach in excess of RMB2 million, he says. He wouldn’t say how much serious fighters sell for, only that “If there’s a million-kuai pot, you can imagine how much people will invest to try and win.”


This article first appeared in the April 2012 issue of That's Shanghai. To see more Throwback Thursday posts, click here.

more news

Journalist Stephen Claypole Reflects on His 1972 Trip to China

Peeking behind the bamboo curtain: Stephen Claypole recalls the 1972 press delegation to Shanghai.

Meet the Man Who Exposed a $300 Million Chinese Fraud

An anonymous American investor talks about how he exposed a massive fraudulent funding scandal in China.

Meet the Man Who Cooked for Chairman Mao

The unique culinary history of chef Dong Linfa.

Throwback Thursday: Riding Shanghai's Metro

Underground - The inner workings of our metro

This Day in History: The Founding of the Shanghai Rugby Club

From the 1860s to the final kick of the International Settlement era.

Christopher Makos: Photographer Who Captured Andy Warhol's World

Christopher Makos is the man Warhol described as “the most modern photographer in America,” and the two were close friends and artistic collaborators for many years

Meet the Siberian Weasel, China's Urban Rat Catcher

Shanghai’s number one rat catcher

Throwback Thursday: Window washers of the SWFC

The high life: washing one of the world’s tallest buildings...

0 User Comments

In Case You Missed It…

We're on WeChat!

Scan our QR Code at right or follow us at Thats_Shanghai for events, guides, giveaways and much more!

7 Days in Shanghai With thatsmags.com

Weekly updates to your email inbox every Wednesday

Download previous issues

Never miss an issue of That's Shanghai!

Visit the archives