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Photography with cameras Nikon D3x, Nikon D300, Canon 50D Image editing with Photoshop |
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Keyword: Dead | Overview - a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z | Seite 4 von 4 1 2 3 4 | | | | ...ries considerably. Many species are very slow moving and use animals as a form of transport while sucking their blood. Even the diet of different species varies greatly. Mites live from bacteria etc... or from plants or plant parts, fungi, carrion, dead tissue (eg skin flakes) or fat. | | |
| | ... for their larvae. The hatched larvae feed on spiders captured by the female spider wasps. Some species build nests in human dwellings. Others are parasitoids, living in other spider wasps nests. In the latter case, the female lays its eggs inside a dead spider, which just gets carried into the nest of another female spider wasp. This may be on the itinerary, or even the foreign nest. | | |
| | | ... the young spiders hatch from the eggs. The main enemy of the young are the larvae of the ichneumon wasps Tromatobia lineatoria. Chickadees (Paridae) are the primary natural enemy of adult Philodromus dispar. The spider overwinter behind the bark of dead trees. | | |
| | After mating, the fertilized females fly to sick, injured, healthy or dead trees and shrubs to lay their eggs. The larvae feed on the tree beneath the bark, creating crescent shaped grooves, which can seen if one pulls up the rotten bark. The larvae prefer dogwood and ash. | | |
| | ...ciduous trees, such as hawthorn (Crataegus), plum (Prunus), whitebeam (Sorbus), hazel (Corylus) or elm (Ulmus), as well as on shrubs, hedges (blackberry), and creepers (ivy). They feed on plant juices. In rarer cases, they drink the body fluids from dead insects (for example, leaf beetle larvae). | | |
| | ..., they can make food supplies inedible due to germs and impurities such as animals and human beings are a nuisance and are thus considered a nuisance by humans. The larvae are social and feed on rotting waste materials. They are found under bark, in dead wood, fungi or feces, according to what species they are. Some species live as guests with ants. The larvae breathe with the help of tube-like elongated openings. At the end of the last larval stage, the larvae pupate inside their outer skin. Within... | | |
| | ...a few days. The larvae breathe through a "snorkel", which is attached to the tip of the abdomen and runs up to the surface of the water, hence the name rat-tailed maggots. The larvae can reach lengths of 20 mm and feed on putrid sludge and dead organic matter, which they filter from the water. They make an important contribution to water clarification. | | |
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