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Keyword: Plant


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
Plants

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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
Eupteryx aurata prefer habitats with rich vegetation. This also 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
After mating, the fertilized females lay their eggs in plant tissue. The larvae of Eupteryx aurata develop into adult cicada in 5 stages. The body structure of the larvae is roughly equivalent to that of the adults. In Central Europe, the 2nd generation each year overwinter as eggs.
>> Cicadas -> Eupteryx aurata
Half-spotted stink bugs prefer warm, sunny coastal areas with sandy soils, dunes and rich deposits of flowering plants, in particular the parsley family (Apiaceae). From April to September the half-spotted stink bug can be found mainly on beach thistle (Eryngium maritimum). It feeds on various plant parts. The half-spotted stink bug is ready to reproduce in September.
>> Bugs -> Stink Bugs -> Half-spotted stink bug
Adult Anthaxia podolica settle on flowering plants. where they specialized are limited to certain plant species. They are oligophagous. Sometimes they only settle on yellow flowers. They feed on flower petals, or on the herbaceous components of their host plants.
>> Beetles -> Jewel beetles -> Anthaxia podolica
...low land, and parks and gardens, where they can be found on deciduous 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).
>> Bugs -> Stink Bugs -> Rhaphigaster nebulosa
After mating in late spring, the fertilized females lay about 40 eggs on plant parts. The eggs are initially yellowish-white, later brown, about 1. 5 mm in length, and are glued to stripes and disc formation. The hatched larvae (nymphs) are a variety of colours and have no wings at first. These grow from the 3rd larval stage o...
>> Bugs -> Stink Bugs -> Rhaphigaster nebulosa
Eristalis lineata are active from April to October. The females lay their eggs in shallow, standing, muddy waters with a lot of decaying plants. After hatching, the larvae live in this water which they help to clean by eating rotting plant substrates.
>> Flies -> Hoverflies -> Eristalis lineata
The females lay their eggs on plant stems above the faeces of cattle. The hatched larvae then drop and burrow into the excrement and feed there. Within days, the larvae pupate in the soil near the manure and then hatch as adults. One month later, they are also sexually mature. Insecti...
>> Flies -> Hoverflies -> Heineken Hoverfly
...he oak spider spins its web near the ground, between bushes or corn stalks with the hub is covered by a dense white tissue. The spider itself sits in another web, which has a bowl-like shape, is open upward and attached near to the upper edge of dry plant parts, or even larger flowers. If there is interference or danger the oak spider may fall to the ground, returning to its observation post after some time.
>> Arachnids -> Orb-weaver spider -> Oak spider

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