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Keyword: Plants


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...trong and varied vegetation, at altitudes of less than 2,000 metres. They prefer moderately dry to moist, shady or semi-shady habitats with nutrient-rich soils. Adults can be encountered from the beginning of June to October, mostly on herbaceous plants (especially nettles), where they suck juices from buds and flowers, or eat aphids or honeydew.
>> Bugs -> Capsid bugs -> Plagiognathus arbustorum
Cylindromyia brassicaria have an elongated abdomen. The rear edge of the or upper surface of the chest (postscutellum) bulges. This species of tachinids is diurnal and feeds on the nectar of flowering plants as well as honeydew.
>> Flies -> Tachina Flies -> Cylindromyia brassicaria
Cleridae fly and run well. They are present on different flowering plants or on tree bark, where they prey on other insects or their larvae. Female Cleridae (depending on species) lay 28 to 42 eggs under tree bark. The hatched larvae also prey on other insects.
>> Beetles -> Checkered beetles
The booklice live on different plants, tree trunks, under tree bark, in dead wood, bird nests and even in buildings. They eat fungi, spores, algae and lichens. Occasionally they also eat dead insects. Booklice need a medium to high humidity and temperatures over 15 degrees Celsius and a...
>> Booklice - Barkflies
Valenzuela flavidus live on various plants, tree trunks and tree bark. They feed, amongst other things, on fungus. They have a life expectancy of up to 12 weeks. Females are capable of laying up to 120 eggs in a lifetime. When conditions are favourable (in buildings) they can produce up to...
>> Booklice - Barkflies -> Valenzuela flavidus
Scentless plant bugs mainly feed on soft materials - leaves, flowers, young stems - and herbaceous plants and can cause considerable damage to crops when they occur en masse.
>> Bugs -> Scentless plant bugs
Rhopalus subrufus are diurnal and active from April (or June on and prefer habitats like forest edges, clearings, uncut lawns, meadows, roadsides and banks of water where they particularly favour grass and geranium plants. Their life span is 6-8 months.
>> Bugs -> Scentless plant bugs -> Rhopalus subrufus
By spring or early summer, Rhopalus subrufus have reached sexual maturity and mate. The fertilized females lay their eggs on the underside of the leaves of the preferred food plants of the larvae. The larvae feed on these leaves for about 4 to 5 weeks after hatching (usually in the month of August);later they feed on the fruit. Theygo through 5 stages of development up to autumn time. Rhopalus subrufus overwinter in frost free ...
>> Bugs -> Scentless plant bugs -> Rhopalus subrufus
These spiders build their webs on grassland plants or on shrubs near the ground. Most spiders however, die while landing (eg on water surfaces).
>> Arachnids -> Spiders -> Money spiders
.... Depending on the weather, it produces 2 or 3 new generations a year. Reproduction is normally parthenogenetic (without males). The females of the spring generation leave the soil in early May and lay their eggs, in June, on the leaves of different plants, such as cherry, pear, juneberry, mountain ash, hawthorn, quince, birch or roses. They scratch into the leaf tissue with their ovipositor, forming a small pocket in which a single egg is deposited. After 2 weeks, the larvae hatch and crawl sluggishl...
>> Wasps -> Common Sawflies -> Pear Sawfly

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