As Steveroberts resurrected this old (agust 2020) post (where the question of the marbled cat was already discussed shortly after), I checked said post and saw the nightmare that is the insect poster. Besides the errors already mentioned by ElephasMaximus, there are more:
By Dreamland Publications, India
Spiders, scorpions, myriapods, ticks and daddy long legs (named spider) as insects
"Eyed hawk moth" is some species of Saturniidae moth
"American cockroach" is Blaberus
"Hornet" is other wasp, presumably Polistes sp.
"Tiger beetle" is Ground beetle
"Bug" is Eurasian Bee Beetle
Not a Giant dragonfly
Simply "insect" is Pterochroza ocellata
There is no such concepts as "common ant", "leaf caterpillar", "brown caterpillar", "red dragonfly", or "green orange bug", except for any ant that is common, any caterpillar that thrives on leaves (basically every one), any caterpillar that is brown in color, any dragonfly whose males are red, and any bug that is green and orange. The species depicted as "green orange bug" is
Cantao ocellatus and if you want to use a common name for this species, would be "ocellated shield bug". Or just "shield bug" or even simply "bug" would be more correct.
"House fly" is a flesh fly (family Sarcophagidae). Different family, as related with a house fly as a cat with a dog.
"Leaf butterfly" is
Eudocima tyrannus. The many species of the genus
Eudocima are called "fruit-piercing moths". Calling it "leaf butterfly" can only lead to a mistake with the completely different "true" leaf butterfly,
Kallima inachus.
"Dengue mosquito" designates basically the species
Aedes aegypti (a more widely used common name for it would be Yellow fever mosquito". The mosquito in the image is not
Aedes aegypti. Just "mosquito" would have been much better.
The kind of saturnid moth already noticed by Elephas Maximus is
Antheraea polyphemus. It's a extremely well known species because it's North American. "Polyphemus moth" would have been appropiate, as would have been just "moth".
I had to check Google to know what "Giant wood wasp" is it. It's used only for the
Urocerus gigas, that can't be more different from the small crabronid wasp of the image.
The "giant dragonfly" also was noticed by Elephas maximus. I don't know if a real species of dragonfly have the common name of "Giant dragonfly", but I highly doubt it. The species depicted is a
Calopteryx, probably
Calopteryx virgo, the usual common name for it is "Beautiful demoiselle".
"Tiger beetle" is not a tiger beetle (family Cicindelidae) but a ground beetle (family Carabidae) and more precisely a
Carabus, I don't know which one. Not a very giant mistake, as sometimes Cicindelidae are included within Carabidae. It would be roughly the same as to call a red river hog "Peccary".
"Beetle colorado potato" should be "Colorado potato beetle". "Beetle leptura" and "Spider black widow" have similar syntaxis problem.
"Green carab beetle" should be probably "Green scarab beetle". If you write "carab", entomologists would think in Carabus (ground beetles) instead chafers. Anyway, "Green scarab beetle" also would not designate any species, but just any of the hundreds of species of scarab beetles that casually are green in colour. The species depicted could belong to genus
Chrysina.
"Leaf cricket" it's a less used alternative name for "katydid", so, any member of the big family Tettigoniidae. This is not even an Ensifera. It's a nymph of locust, probably Egyptian locust (
Anacridium aegyptium).
"Desert locust" is illustrated with a female
Calliptamus, by the image I think is Calliptamus wattenwylianus. Well,
Calliptamus species are often called locusts (despite being quite small), and this species tend to favour more arid habitats than the other two species of same genus native of my country, however, when one have the name "Desert locust" inmediately the species that is associated with this common name is the completely different desert locust (
Schistocerca gregaria).
While ticks are technically mites (superorder Acari), would have been much better to just call them ticks.
Again there is no such thing as "red mite" except for any mite that is red (the vast majority of free-living mites are red).
In same manner there is no such thing as "flying cockroach" except for any cockroach that is able to fly. The fact the desiccated individual used for photo was prepared with wings spread, don't make it a "flying cockroach".
European buthid scorpion is an
Euscorpius and these were never considered in the family Buthidae.
And the biggest error of all: Use of common names instead scientific names for arthropods
