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Keyword: Dry


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

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...n which a single egg is deposited. After 2 weeks, the larvae hatch and crawl sluggishly on top of the leaf and eat the tissue under scraping. They skeletonize individual leaf parts without the venation (ribs, leaf veins) and the lower epidermis. The dry leaves go brown or roll up. The larvae (cherry slug) produce no more mucus in the final stage of their development. In July, they drop from the leaf and immediately create an egg-shaped tissue below the soil’s surface, in which they quickly pupate. ...
>> Wasps -> Common Sawflies -> Pear Sawfly
Geomyza tripunctata occur from the coast to high mountains and prefer wet or dry meadows and forests, where they can be found from May to November on grasses and herbaceous plants. In mild winters they may be seen in January.
>> Flies -> Opomyzidae -> Geomyza tripunctata
... develop. They live off captured micro-organisms until they are about 19 mm in length. At the end of their development, the larvae leave the water by crawling up parts of plants. After hatching from their outer shell (exuviae), the adult dragonflies dry and begin to fly. In Central Europe, the scarlet dragonfly produces 1 new generation a year, in the Mediterranean, 2 are possible.
>> Dragonflies -> Scarlet dragonfly
Tenthredo campestris prefer sufficiently moist habitats with bushes, such as forest edges or areas with many hedges, but they can also be found in dry environments. From May to July, they can be encountered on herbaceous plants (especially Umbelliferae) and various shrubs, where they feed, mostly on nectar.
>> Wasps -> Common Sawflies -> Tenthredo campestris
Andrena are found on the northern continents in warm, dry habitats. Andrena nest in sandy soils with free spaces, with a female supplies his nest alone. Sometimes many nests are built in close proximity to each other.
>> Bees -> Andrena
Conops flavipes have a life expectancy of 3 - 4 months. Their preferred habitats are open areas with sufficient and varied vegetation. This includes meadows, dry grasslands or roadsides.
>> Flies -> Thick-headed Flies -> Conops flavipes
At the end of the larval period the caterpillars pupate on their host plants, where they prefer sheltered places such as niches. The pupae hang down from grass fronds near the soil. The pupae are difficult to make out on dry soil and leaf litter because of their camouflage colouration - yellowish green, later brownish-green or brown.
>> Moths & Butterflies -> Butterflies -> Canary speckled wood
Rubytail wasps prefer sunny, dry habitats up to high altitudes. They can be found from May to September on warm stone walls, wooden walls, telegraph poles and fences. The adults live off nectar from plants of the parsley family (Umbelliferae).
>> Wasps -> Cuckoo wasps -> Rubytail wasp
Common field grasshoppers prefer to live in dry, warm habitats. They are found on sandy ground, vacancies on the ground, and on roadsides, clearcuts or fallow land. Occasionally one even finds them in damp places. The females lay their eggs in the ground.
>> Locusts -> Common Field Grasshopper
The oak spider prefers habitats with open, sunny areas of all kinds, especially dry grassland and wasteland, but also wet meadows and forest clearings. It is found at altitudes of up to 2000 metres.
>> Arachnids -> Orb-weaver spider -> Oak spider

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