idk but I just saw one in Playa del Carmen on the porch - shooed it away before thought of taking a picture!
Its body is similar to a bee, and the wings are shaped like a moth. I know it is not a dragonfly.
Cancer The Crab
The constellation that is shaped like a scorpion is Scorpius. Which is where we get the star-sign Scorpio.
Hi everybody the answer is flying
A pala is a part of an insect's leg which is spade-shaped and can be used as a scoop for feeding.
If you found a T-shaped, six-legged winged insect and are wondering what it is, it is likely that you have come across a Plume moth. There are more than 150 Plume moth species in the world.
In Utah there is a similar bug except it is slightly larger than a lady bug called, Box Elder Bug
A few aircraft companies, such as Chance-Vought and Sikorsky, have built disc shaped flying vehicles. The main problem with such aircraft (similar to the flying wing) is that they are very unstable and need a lot of effort, and money, to keep them up in the air. It's probably better to build a remote controlled flying saucer aircraft model, than to try and build and fly a real disc shaped aircraft. For references see the Wikipedia article: Military disc shaped aircraft, and the 2007 book; Secret Projects: Flying Saucer Aircraft.
Bat droppings (faeces) is called guano. They are irregularly shaped and usually contain insect parts
The larva's internal organs are re-structured and re-shaped into the adults body shape.
Flying saucers are real aircraft from the planet Earth. Charles Zimmerman is to the flying saucer what Jack Northrup is to the flying wing. Go to Wikipedia Military Disc Shaped Aircraft to read more about aircraft that are saucer shaped. The flying saucers as a spacecraft from another planet is science fiction. There is no known way to travel faster than light. A rocket ship that travels slower than the speed of light would take to long to travel in the universe.
Xylocopa violacea, Violet Carpenter Bee