The iNaturalist app is pretty good to at least get you a family or genus at minimum. It works for plants, animals, bugs, pretty much anything. I once used it to identify some pink foamy caviar looking stuff, which it identified as snail eggs.
bugs
A casual place for Arthropoda.
Submission Examples:
- Share a cool picture of a bug.
- Ask about cockroaches.
- Tell a story about a scary wasp.
- Solicit amateur identification.
Rules:
- Relate posts to Arthropods.
- Note if an ID is keyed or a guess.
- If bit/stung, get medical help!
The Peterson first guide to caterpillars of north America is easy to use and compact for travel. Obviously just does caterpillars pupa and moths/butterflies
This one is very easy to use for identification, a little bulkier but still could fit into the side pocket of a backpack. It is not great as far as learning a great deal about the bugs, but you would at least know what it was to look it up later.
Thanks for the suggestions! I actually found the National Wildlife Federation field guide like two or three weeks ago and it’s been helpful. Do you think there’s a significant difference? I’ll definitely try to get my hands on the other book you recommended too.
I haven't tried the NWF one, but i bet the NAS one is at a library nearby