The shape is very much like that of a spotted wire, it's too fuzzy and there's no reference to know how big it is.
Also, insects must be 6-legged. Biologically, this is a very strict definition of an insect, that is, an adult has three pairs of legs.
So this bug must have 6 legs.
To give you a picture of a spotted worm, or what we commonly call a fart bug. It does have a greenish, yellowish-green liquid in its stomach.
And then additionally, I'm answering this not for the question, but for the fact that your behavior brings back memories of my childhood. There were three large acacia trees in my old neighborhood, all of them kind of tall and tall. I could climb the trees when I was five or six years old, and every year I climbed up to get enough acacia flowers to eat. My mom would wash the flowers, wrap them in batter, and fry them in a little bit of oil. For the poor in the 80s, this was a rare delicacy. Before acacia flowers, there was elm money. I have never eaten elm money rice (middle school text called "elm money rice", vaguely remember that Liu Shaotang wrote, and Zhang Jie's "digging chestnut"), elm money we usually eat raw. Sophora is more beautiful, sweeter, rarer and tastier than elm money.
Alas, childhood is no more, I am already a father of two children ......