Skip to main content
Crab Louse (Pubic Louse) (Pthirus pubis)
Social
78Six Legs
Bug Bite · From the file on Crab Louse (Pubic Louse)

Modern infestation rates have declined sharply since the 1970s — possibly correlated with increased pubic hair removal practices.

AgencyCenters for Disease Control and PreventionVerified by sources
Read the full file on Crab Louse (Pubic Louse)

More Social bites

Eciton Army Ant (Eciton burchellii)
Social
Six Legs81

Over 100 species of birds, butterflies, and other animals have evolved to follow army-ant raids — the most species-rich animal-following community on Earth.

Eciton Army AntVerified by sources
Bullet Ant (Paraponera clavata)
Social
Six Legs92

Bullet ant colonies are surprisingly small — a few hundred to a few thousand workers — compared with the millions of leaf-cutter or driver ants sharing their forest.

Bullet AntVerified by sources
Buff-Tailed Bumblebee (Bombus terrestris)
Social
Six Legs76

Bumblebee colonies live one year — the queen overwinters alone and founds a new colony each spring.

Buff-Tailed BumblebeeVerified by sources
Death's-Head Hawkmoth (Acherontia atropos)
Social
Six Legs82

The famous Silence of the Lambs poster moth is a chrysalis of Acherontia styx — a death's-head cousin.

Death's-Head HawkmothVerified by sources
African Driver Ant (Dorylus wilverthi)
Social
Six Legs82

Driver ants build no permanent nest — the colony moves continuously and bivouacs as a living ant-ball when it stops.

African Driver AntVerified by sources
Emperor Scorpion (Pandinus imperator)
Social
Six Legs71

Emperor scorpion mothers carry 10-30 live young on their backs for the first month after birth.

Emperor ScorpionVerified by sources