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Keyword: Food


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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The common green capsid prefers shady, moist habitats. It feeds on herbaceous plants, woody plants and crops. Some examples of food plants are: nettles, sorrel, berries, beets and potatoes. The eggs of the common green capsid overwinter in the bark of 1-2 year old woody plant shoots (eg blackberry). They are 1. 3 mm in length, are cream-coloured, slightly curved and shiny.
>> Bugs -> Common Green Capsid
...o includes water edges with herbaceous vegetation. They feed by sucking plant juices from single cells of leaf tissue (mesophyll). Tiny white spots can then be seen on the leaves as the saliva of Eupteryx aurata destroys chlorophyll. Their preferred food plants include nettles (Urtica), Labiatae (Lamiaceae) and potato (Solanum tuberosum).
>> Cicadas -> Eupteryx aurata
...aying animals or vegetable waste and can thus be found on compost heaps, dung, in toilets, on garbage heaps and so on. They also often appear on or in buildings such as dwellings, sheds or storage facilities. When they appear en masse, 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 ...
>> Mosquitoes -> Dung midges
Eupeodes corollae are active from April to October in open areas, mostly in the mountains. The females lay their eggs in colonies of aphids, which then serve as food for the hatched larvae. Eupeodes corollae reproduce several times a year.
>> Flies -> Hoverflies -> Eupeodes corollae
After mating, the females lay about 150 - 320 eggs in colonies of aphids, which are the food for their larvae. The larvae overwinter and pupate in spring of the following year.
>> Flies -> Hoverflies -> Sphaerophoria scripta
The holly blue prefers to live in forests and is seen from April to September. It produces 2 new generations a year. The females lay their eggs in holly and ivy, the food plants of their caterpillars, and also on Rubus, currants (Ribes), lupines (Lupinus), vetch (Vicia), Prunus, strawberry trees (Arbutus), common buckthorn (Frangula) and blueberries (Vaccinium). The pupae of the second generation overwinter, and the ...
>> Moths & Butterflies -> Butterflies -> Holly Blue
...e ground in sandy slopes, roads, embankments, or even in the sandy joints between sidewalk slabs. The tunnels are 1 - 1. 5 metres in length. At the end are 5 - 7 (sometimes even more) chambers the size of pigeon eggs, which house the brood and their food. The jaws of the bee wolf are particularly robust and strongly built (is this related to the tunnel digging. They also have strong, solid spikes on their front feet which are helpful for digging.
>> Wasps -> sphecoid wasps -> Bee Wolf
Melanostoma scalare produce two new generations a year. The first new generation is active from April to May, and the second new generation, from September to October. The females of the first generation lay their eggs on the larval food plants in late May, and the females of the 2nd generation oviposite in early August. The larvae prey on aphids and other soft-skinned insects. After 2 months, they pupate and shortly afterwards emerge as adults.
>> Flies -> Hoverflies -> Melanostoma scalare
... such as nectar and chew the pollen, they find on members of the parsley family, yellow composite flowers, ivy, grasses, plantain, mints or hogweed. You often encounter Melanostoma mellinum in damp, cool weather because there is less competition for food.
>> Flies -> Hoverflies -> Melanostoma mellinum
...o new generations a year. The first is active from April or May, the second from September or October. The females of the first generation lay their eggs in late May, and the females of the second generation do the oviposition in early August on the food plants of the larvae. The larvae are initially blind. They prey on aphids, flies and other soft-skinned insects. After 2 months, they pupate and shortly thereafter emerge as adults.
>> Flies -> Hoverflies -> Melanostoma mellinum

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