Openai/696dc380-4cb8-8009-b0f9-590283c79b5f


This conversation was exported from ChatGPT[1]

gpt-5-2 edit

User: What's this thing? edit

What's this thing?

Assistant: From what I can see in the photo, this is very likely a tick a nymph stage — the kind that attaches to animals or somet… edit

From what I can see in the photo, this is very likely a tick (a nymph stage) — the kind that attaches to animals (or sometimes people) and feeds on blood.

Here’s why that’s the best match based on your image:

What I can see in your photo

  • A small, oval/rounded, brown body
  • No obvious segmented “tail” or pinchers
  • Thin legs radiating out around the body rather than concentrated at the front
  • It looks slightly dome-shaped rather than flat

Those features fit a tick nymph much better than a spider, beetle, flea, or bed bug.

Why not other things:

  • Not a spider: spiders have a clearly defined head section and leg arrangement — this doesn’t.
  • Not a bed bug: bed bugs are flatter, more reddish, and more elongated.
  • Not a flea: fleas are narrower, jump, and have a very different body shape.
  • Not a woodlouse/pill bug: those are grey and clearly segmented.

If it is a tick (most likely):

  • They’re commonly found on pets, in grass, or on clothing after walking outside.
  • The nymph stage is about the size of a poppy seed (which this looks close to).

If you want, I can be more certain — two quick things that would help:

  1. Rough size (mm or compared to something like a grain of rice), and
  2. Where you found it (on a pet? in your house? on you? outside?).

User: Give it a hat edit

Give it a hat

References edit

  1. "Identifying a Tick Nymph". ChatGPT. Retrieved 2026-01-20.