Like fly toys, cicadas are usually made with transparent wings. This one isn't painted too well, but the color scheme does match certain species. Cicadas are the loudest of all insects, their mating calls well-known around the world.
A cheaper, smaller cicada in brown and yellow. I'd love to see a toy of the nymph stage one of these days...
The most common type of rubber cicada is quite large, usually sold alongside the large weevil in my beetles page.
A rather uncommon caterpillar mold. It appears to be a species of swallowtail caterpillar, complete with eyespots and tentacles.
Rubber dragonflies aren't really rare, but they are rarely any different from one another. I'm just throwing this in for good measure.
I can't tell what sort of larva this is supposed to be, but it resembles those of certain beetles. This is a wheeled, pull-back toy and very cool.
Another big favorite of mine, this pull-back bug is the only rubber termite I have ever seen, and has a very pleasing all-around shape and color scheme. Interestingly, termites are currently considered highly specialized cockroaches.
Cicadas & Leafhoppers
It's hard to tell if this small bug is supposed to be a cicada or a member of the closely-related (and often gorgeously colored) leafhoppers,
Insect Larvae
Odds and Ends
I'm not generally including wind-up toys here, but I wanted to show this one because of its unique basis; it rather obviously represents a giant waterbug, sometimes called a toe-biter. These aquatic true bugs are among the largest insects that can be found in western climates.
This incredibly crappy rubber trilobite was sold to me at an exorbiant price as a "godzilla movie prop." I didn't really believe it then, and still doubt it. The Trilobita, now extinct, once dominated our planet's seas.
Included in many cheap bags of plastic insects, this specimen stumped me for years until a reader pointed out that this is none other than a Grylloblattid or "rock crawler," a very obscure insect to be so common in toy form!
A somewhat nicer-looking cicada, black with red eyes like several North American species.
This nondescript caterpillar/worm hybrid came attached to a lollipop.
The only toy I've ever seen of a grub-type larva, perhaps that of a beetle or wasp. It actually came with an accessory pack for a line of monster toys you could decorate with different parts.
One of my only rubber butterflies. I've seen others, but nothing about them ever grabs my attention. Maybe I'm just bitter that these are sometimes one of the only insects people don't irrationally hate.
This may actually be some kind of sea snail, but it's hard to tell. It certainly has a neat shape with the long neck and prominent knobby eyestalks.
This little guy is one of only two or three rubber slugs I ever had in my possession. I don't think any real slug comes in these colors, but some tropical slugs are pretty vibrant.
Gastropods
Garden-dwelling slugs and snails are actually mollusks, like bivalves or cephalopods, but end up packaged with rubber "bugs" when they're even manufactured at all, so I'm going to follow suit and lump them in with all my arthropods.
I love everything about this vintage snail, probably made around the 60's or 70's. The transparent body and highly detailed, olive-green shell are a beautiful combination!
Related to the previous snail, this may be the simplest "bug" I own; its eyes are all that even differentiates it from some meaningless plastic strip, which somehow only makes it more endearing to me.
This spiny caterpillar is made of transparent green rubber, but painted over with a very eye-pleasing, swampy sort of color scheme!
This big guy is a highly accurate representation of a puss moth caterpillar, though not quite as vividly colored as the real thing. When frightened, they rear up to startle attackers with their false eyes!
Despite their common name, horseshoe crabs are actually marine arachnids, the only modern survivors of the ancient and diverse "sea scorpions" that once reached gargantuan sizes. This specimen came as an accessory to a playskool octopus toy, and I just adore the anatomical detail of its underside. They could have just as easily left it blank or hollow on the bottom, like so many other animal toys.
This large, bendable Leaf Insect was left in my car a bit too long and was bleached to a much lighter green than when I bought it. Real ones are so perfectly camouflaged that they have notches resembling fake caterpillar bites!
This adorably tiny, skinny snail actually came with a figure of "Oogie Boogie," from The Nightmare Before Christmas!
To me, a priceless collectible and one of my all-time coolest purchases, this "zombie snail" is over three feet in length and produced in a limited run by Frightprops.com!
Produced by frightprops.com, this monstrosity is more than three feet in length! Read more about it on my Halloween collecting blog.
April 2010, Target's dollar aisle - A BREAKTHROUGH! The first toy antlion larva I have seen in my entire life, and beautifully accurate!
The only earwig toy I've found, this little guy comes from "Legend of Nara" and buzzes along the ground when turned on!