INSECTS

Insects that start with B

9 insects starting with the letter B — each with origin, classification, and notes.

If you've been searching for insects that start with B, you'll find 9 detailed insects below. We're not interested in giving you only a list of names — every entry on this page links to a full profile with the kind of detail you'd actually want to know.

For insects, that means taxonomy, habitat, diet, life cycle, and ecological role.

Table of contents 9 entries
Bark BeetleBedbugBeetleBlowfly
Brimstone ButterflyBuff-tip MothBumblebeeBurnet Moth
Butterfly

List of Insects That Start With B

    1

    Bark Beetle

    Ips typographus (European spruce bark beetle) and related Scolytinae

    Tiny beetles that bore beneath tree bark to lay eggs in galleries — under normal conditions they kill only weakened trees, but when populations explode during drought or after storm damage, they can kill millions of healthy trees across entire forests; the European spruce bark beetle has killed more trees than any other insect in European history.

    2

    Bedbug

    Cimex lectularius

    A small reddish-brown blood-feeding insect that hides in mattresses and furniture by day, emerging at night to feed on sleeping humans — making a global comeback since the 2000s after near-eradication in the mid-20th century.

    3

    Beetle

    Lucanus cervus (European stag beetle)

    A large, hard-shelled beetle whose males sport antler-like mandibles used for ritualized combat over females, a member of the most species-rich animal order on Earth.

    4

    Blowfly

    Calliphora vomitoria

    A metallic blue-green fly whose larvae (maggots) are the primary decomposers of carrion — ecologically vital as recyclers of dead matter, useful in forensic entomology, and controversial as both medical tool and livestock pest.

    5

    Brimstone Butterfly

    Gonepteryx rhamni

    The sulphur-yellow butterfly that heralds spring — males are an unmistakable lemon-yellow, females a paler greenish-white; one of the longest-lived British butterflies, spending the winter as an adult hibernating among ivy and evergreen leaves, then emerging on warm February days to become the first butterfly many people see each year.

    6

    Buff-tip Moth

    Phalera bucephala

    One of Britain's most extraordinary camouflaged insects — at rest, the buff-tip moth is almost indistinguishable from a broken birch twig, with its pale yellow-buff wing tips and grey middle aligned to mimic a stub of birch; the hairy, yellow-and-black larvae are gregarious and can strip a tree of leaves in days.

    7

    Bumblebee

    Bombus terrestris (buff-tailed); over 250 species globally

    A large, fuzzy, surprisingly cold-tolerant social bee that pollinates many crops honeybees can't reach — beloved by gardeners, declining alarmingly across multiple species.

    8

    Burnet Moth

    Zygaena filipendulae (six-spot burnet)

    A brilliantly coloured day-flying moth of chalk downland and coastal grassland — the six-spot burnet has six vivid red spots on metallic blue-black forewings, a warning colouration that advertises its toxicity; burnet moths produce hydrogen cyanide from their own tissues as a chemical defence, making them poisonous to predators; conspicuous in sunshine on downland flowers, flying weakly but apparently without concern for predators.

    9

    Butterfly

    Danaus plexippus

    A large orange-and-black butterfly famous for an annual multi-generation migration of up to 4,800 km between Canada and central Mexico.

About insects starting with B

That's our current list of insects starting with the letter B. We add new entries every week — if you have a favorite insect starting with B that isn't on this page, let us know and we'll write it up.

Looking for more? Try insects that end with B, or contain B anywhere in the name.