Our planet depends upon the vast diversity of hissing, flying, crawling, and pollinating creatures we sometimes call "bugs." The O. Orkin Insect Zoo — the oldest continuously operating insect zoo in the United States, opened in 1976 — features many species of live insects, a "nursery" room where visitors can peek at insect larvae and pupae, and lots of opportunities to interact with volunteers and examine insects up close.
The O. Orkin Insect Zoo is free.
Tarantula Feedings
Public tarantula feedings have been temporarily canceled.
Eastern lubber grasshopper. Photo by Rosa Pineda, Smithsonian.
Leaf insect (family Phylliidae). Photo by Rosa Pineda, Smithsonian.
Malayan jungle nymph (Heteropteryx dilatata). Photo by Rosa Pineda, Smithsonian.
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Did you know?
Kids can climb through a life-size, 14-foot-tall model of an African termite mound!
Photo by Rosa Pineda, Smithsonian.
Spotlight: Tobacco Hornworm Caterpillar
The tobacco hornworm caterpillar, Manduca sexta, likes to feed on tobacco, tomato, and pepper plants. These caterpillars will turn into Carolina sphinx moths, but when they pupate, they do not spin a cocoon; instead they burrow into the soil. This is how they overwinter in colder regions.