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| Amblyteles armatorius prefer habitats such as forest edges, natural gardens, parks, green field boundaries and bush-rich meadows. They are active during the day and visit flowering plants (mostly Apiaceae) from June to September, where they feed on nectar, pollen and honeydew. | | |
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| ...s die. The females care for their brood until the end of May and then they die too. The larvae are left to fend for themselves until June when they pupate. In early July, the adults of the 2nd generation hatch from their pupae. They are active until September when they die. Their offspring overwinter in soil nests, hatching in March of the following year as adults of the new 1st generation. | | |
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| Epiphragma ocellaris prefer moist habitats such as deciduous forests, swamps or wet meadows. They are active in May and June and from September to April and suck blood.
Their larvae, which probably develop in the soil, have hairy pseudopods (feet). They feed on parts of decaying plants. | | |
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| .... The winged juvenile bugs mate very quickly. Egg laying by the first new generation occurs in late June / early July singly in the leaf tissue of herbaceous plants. The nymphs hatch in midsummer. The specimens of the second annual generation during September turn over to the winter host plants. As adults, they for overwintering lay their eggs in the bark tissue of their host plants and the first new generation hatch the following year.
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| Rubytail wasps prefer sunny, dry habitats up to high altitudes. They can be found from May to September on warm stone walls, wooden walls, telegraph poles and fences. The adults live off nectar from plants of the parsley family (Umbelliferae). | | |
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| They fly in the months of July to September. The adult ruddy darter prefers to live on small bodies of water. It feeds on small insects caught during flight. | | |
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| ...prouts of roses. The larvae, hatch in the spring and possess only rudimentary wings. The adult cicadas (fully developed and equipped with wings) move to their summer host plants in June, as well as to plants of the genus Capsicum. From mid-August to September, the females migrate back to the roses to store their eggs in the bark, which then overwinter. | | |
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| ... 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 on (after the 2nd moult). The young bugs have their defense glands on their backs. In September the development of the nymphs is complete and after the last moult they emerge as fully developed adult bugs. | | |
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| The brown argus is diurnal and as an adult butterfly has a life expectancy of 2 - 3 months. It is active from May to September in warm, dry regions, from the coast up to highland in forest edges, clearings, on stony slopes, in heathland, coastal meadows, dry meadows and calcareous grasslands (dry as well as damp) preferably with limestone soils and an abundance of flowering... | | |
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| ...he host plants and after about 60 days they have completed their development. They are greenish and have a pale line lengthwise on each side. When they have reached a length of about 20 mm they pupate. They hatch from the pupae from late July to mid September and produce the second annual generation of caterpillars which overwinter in leaves in frost free places. | | |
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