Results 251 to 260 of about 22,255 (294)
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Annual Review of Entomology, 1989
The family Nabidae, or damsel bugs, is a small family of the true bugs (Hemiptera: Heteroptera) containing 31 genera and approximately 380 species (70, 72). While all known species are terrestrial, some species are found in moist areas on the ground or at the edge of streams, ponds, and marshes (fresh and saline) (77, 107). Nabidae prey on a variety of
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The family Nabidae, or damsel bugs, is a small family of the true bugs (Hemiptera: Heteroptera) containing 31 genera and approximately 380 species (70, 72). While all known species are terrestrial, some species are found in moist areas on the ground or at the edge of streams, ponds, and marshes (fresh and saline) (77, 107). Nabidae prey on a variety of
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Annual Review of Entomology, 1999
▪ Abstract The family Anthocoridae (Hemiptera:Heteroptera) contains between 400 and 600 species distributed worldwide, chiefly on the continents but also on oceanic islands. They are small (1.4–4.5 mm) and common to a wide variety of habitats. Many are found in cryptic habitats such as galls, several widespread genera are surface feeders on small ...
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▪ Abstract The family Anthocoridae (Hemiptera:Heteroptera) contains between 400 and 600 species distributed worldwide, chiefly on the continents but also on oceanic islands. They are small (1.4–4.5 mm) and common to a wide variety of habitats. Many are found in cryptic habitats such as galls, several widespread genera are surface feeders on small ...
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Annual Review of Entomology, 1993
Thrips are mainly phytophagous, mycophagous, or predatory insects that inhabit a wide range of habitats, generally in the tropical, subtropical, and temperate regions. Their adaptive diversity has enabled successful exploitation of diverse niches, so that they have not only established themselves in a variety of plant formations, but in fungus-infested
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Thrips are mainly phytophagous, mycophagous, or predatory insects that inhabit a wide range of habitats, generally in the tropical, subtropical, and temperate regions. Their adaptive diversity has enabled successful exploitation of diverse niches, so that they have not only established themselves in a variety of plant formations, but in fungus-infested
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Bionomics of Bagworms (Lepidoptera: Psychidae)
Annual Review of Entomology, 2009The bagworm family (Lepidoptera: Psychidae) includes approximately 1000 species, all of which complete larval development within a self-enclosing bag. The family is remarkable in that female aptery occurs in over half of the known species and within 9 of the 10 currently recognized subfamilies.
Rhainds, M. +2 more
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1988
The Eurasian huchen and beyond doubt the whole genus Hucho may be included in the ecological group of lithophilous, brood-hiding species (group A.2.1, Balon 1975a). In this respect there is practically no difference between the huchen and the taimen, nor between populations of these two forms in different river systems.
J. Holčík +3 more
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The Eurasian huchen and beyond doubt the whole genus Hucho may be included in the ecological group of lithophilous, brood-hiding species (group A.2.1, Balon 1975a). In this respect there is practically no difference between the huchen and the taimen, nor between populations of these two forms in different river systems.
J. Holčík +3 more
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THE BIONOMICS OF COPROPHILIC PROTOZOA
Biological Reviews, 1946SummaryThe coprophilic Protozoa are forms capable of living in faeces. They form a loose ecological group of considerable practical and economic importance.The development of the conception of coprophilic Protozoa is traced in the article, and it is shown that at first they were frequently confused with or taken for parasitic species, many of them ...
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Bionomics of Leaf-Mining Insects
Annual Review of Entomology, 1991Recapitulation des donnees portant sur le cycle de vie, l'ecologie, les parasites des insectes mineurs de feuilles, ainsi que leurs relations avec les plantes ...
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Bionomics of Micronecta scutellaris
1977(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
Ahmad, Muzaffer,, Khan, Nawab H
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