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Photography with cameras Nikon D3x, Nikon D300, Canon 50D Image editing with Photoshop |
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Keyword: Human | 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 2 von 2 1 2 | | | | Cobweb spiders are found in almost every environment where there is vegetation. Some species live in human environments, e.g. houses, basements, barns, sheds and greenhouses. They prefer dark, shady, protected habitats where they can find shelter. | | |
| | It overwinters as an adult without food and without reproducing. These fliessearch for small cavities in attics and storage areas in human settlements to overwinter, often in droves. They wake up on warm sunny days or when the heating is turned on and are then guided to the light. In early spring, they appear, often en masse, in skylights or on the window panes of barns and sheds. | | |
| | | The common cluster fly poses no threat to humans, as it doesn’t lay eggs in human food stores. Nevertheless, it can be annoying, especially when it occurs en masse. Insectivores are natural enemies of the common cluster fly. | | |
| | The pseudoscorpion Chelifer cancroides, which also resides in human environments is a natural enemy of the booklouse. Psocoptera have a life expectancy of up to 12 weeks. A female booklouse is capable of laying up to 120 eggs. Thus, in favourable conditions (in buildings) booklice can produce 8 new generations in ... | | |
| | After mating, the fertilized females lay hundreds of large, light coloured eggs on meat, often on living or dead earthworms. For this reason they also penetrate rooms where meat is stored for human or animal consumption or processing. Egg laying also takes place on open wounds. Meat that has come into contact with such flies should never be consumed by people, for the oviposition of flies carry various pathogens into food. The metabolic produc... | | |
| | ...heir eggs and the developing offspring. Therefore often serve them cavities in the soil. Inside the nests they erect breeding cells 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 ... | | |
| | Philodromus dispar prefer to live in sunny habitats. They can be encountered in spring and summer in deciduous forests, coniferous forests, copses, forest edges and occasionally in the vicinity of human settlements. They live on trees and bushes at different heights, especially on tree trunks or on taller plants in the undergrowth. | | |
| | ..., 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 feces, according to what species they are. Some species live as guests with ants. The larvae breathe with the help of tube-like elongated ... | | |
| | En masse they (is this the beetle or the larvae) can cause considerable damage to textiles in houses or in storage. Moreover, they contaminate food stocks, making them unfit for human consumption. | | |
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