I know exactly what you mean. Trying to determine the species right now. The antennae are much longer than the body if it's the one I'm thinking of. I will let you know if I come up with an answer. Do you happen to know if it makes sound. I was messing around with the one I'm thinking of and it makes an almost squeaking noise
An insect with long antennae and six legs is typically a type of beetle or grasshopper.
Insects have six legs, three body parts, and antennae, while spiders have eight legs, two body parts, and no antennae.
The bug with long antennae and six legs is likely a type of insect called a beetle.
The bug I spotted in my garden yesterday had long antennae and 6 legs.
A spider fits this description. Spiders have 8 legs, a cephalothorax and abdomen as their two body sections, and they do not have antennae.
A crustacean is an arthropod that has two or three body sections, five or more pairs of legs, and two pairs of antennae. Arachnids are arthropods with two body sections, four pairs of legs, and no antennae. Arachnids are arthropods with two body sections, four pairs of legs, and no antennae.
These could be legs or antennae.
A bug with 6 legs typically has 6 legs and 2 antennae.
Butterflies and wasps are not crustaceans, they are insects. They have a pair of antennae, 3 body parts and 6 legs unlike crustaceans that have 2 pairs of antennae, varied number of legs and body segments.
Spiders are arachnids, not insects. The main differences are that spiders have eight legs, two body segments, and no antennae, while insects have six legs, three body segments, and antennae.
Niaaga
arachnids all have 8 legs, 2 body sections- the head and abdomen, and no antennae.