Brown lacewing

Micromus variegatus

The Micromus variegatus is an insect from the brown lacewing family, Hemerobiidae. It has a long slender body, long antennae and veined wings, may have brownish spots.
Some lacewing larvae hold debris (including the bodies of their victims) on their backs with hooks or bristles. This camouflage allows the lacewing larva to surprise its victims and also protects it from enemies.
Micromus cf. variegatus larva having lunch Not 100% certain of ID, but very probably Micromus variegatus ... just being a complete Vlad about having lunch. Brown lacewing,Hemerobiidae,Larva,Micromus,Micromus variegatus,Neuroptera

Distribution

Worldwide distribution
Micromus variegatus The smallest of our Micromus species, readily identifiable by the very narrow wings and distinctive pattern with big the black spots in these fixed locations. Brown lacewing,Hemerobiidae,Micromus,Micromus variegatus,Neuroptera

Food

The larvae of Lacewings eat all kinds of harmful insects that damage plants, such as plant lice and leaf lice. They are cultivated and set free in green houses to consume the leaf lice on cucumbers and tomatoes, in order to use less chemicals.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/327159/lacewing
Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionArthropoda
ClassInsecta
OrderNeuroptera
FamilyHemerobiidae
GenusMicromus
SpeciesMicromus variegatus
Photographed in
Netherlands