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Photography with cameras Nikon D3x, Nikon D300, Canon 50D Image editing with Photoshop |
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Keyword: Example | 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 3 von 3 1 2 3 | | | | ...r, they prefer warm moist environments. Most species live in the soil. Others live in the hair of animals, theirorifices or even their skin. Some species specialize in birds and their plumage. Other species are found in the vicinity of people, for example, in beds (place of preference), or upholstered furniture, carpets, textiles, etc. | | |
| | ...h 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). | | |
| | | The females lay their eggs in muddy, often heavily polluted, stagnant water (for example, cesspools, septic tanks or clarifiers). The larvae hatch after 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... | | |
| | ...h brown to amber. In spring and autumn Bibionidae often swarm en masse. They do not sting and they feed on nectar or honeydew. They contribute to the pollination of fruit trees. The insects mate within the swarm, and the males of the Bibio marci for example can become very aggressive. While the Nematocera are generally good flyers, i. e. the Bibio hortulanus are sluggish and slow.
The female Bibionidae lay up to 3, 000 eggs, individually or in small groups in the soil, where they are buried. The ha... | | |
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