Agriculture professionals applaud the bats, which feed on migratory corn earworm moths, America's number-one agricultural pest. |
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There are several Wainscot moths which can be quite tricky to identify in isolation. |
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There aren't many beekeepers who use them now as they are of a double-walled construction that is time-consuming to use and encourages wax moths. |
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For example, wax moths reduce their sexual displays of wing fanning in response to increased predation risk by bats. |
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Researchers at some locations focus on beneficial insects like wasps to control insect pests such as alfalfa weevils or gypsy moths. |
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After all the years, I'm still keen to watch butterflies and moths, and more recently to collect aculeates. |
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Research shows that bug zappers kill plenty of insects, such as June bugs and moths, but not many mosquitoes. |
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They are known to eat cabbage moths, bollworms, tomato hornworms and broccoli worms. |
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We had a huge infestation of yellow woollybear caterpillars and green clover worm moths and am finding some fall armyworm moths. |
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His book on ecological genetics went through several editions and his monographs on moths and butterflies are still used. |
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Although wool can be damaged by moths, it contains lanolin, a naturally occurring oil that protects it from these insects. |
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Minors and Rustics are extremely small and are often mistaken for micro moths, especially Pyralids. |
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They help to repel leaf miner moths and some gardeners even find them effective against grasshoppers. |
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The researchers trained moths to associate sugar-water with either yellow or blue artificial flowers. |
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It includes the atlas moths Rothschildia, which are the largest in the country. |
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These floral attractants are particularly alluring to moths called loopers. |
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From the talus slopes nearby, she'll dig out army cutworm moths, which are about 60 percent fat. |
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The preferred diet consists of ant pupae, sawfly larvae, beetles, scarabaeids, longicorn beetle larvae, and the larvae of cossid moths. |
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It was far too loud to be attributed to a car engine backfiring, and immediately drew the clientele to rush like moths against the window. |
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In The Temple of Doom, Indy walks through a chamber filled with mantises, beetles, worms, millipedes, moths, slugs, snails, and puppy dog tails. |
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Newly emerged moths scurry to the nearest vertical surface, such as a wall, until their cuticles harden. |
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The sexual activity of moths was continuously observed during the first dusk period and mated pairs were noted. |
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Sam showed slides including salt-tolerant species of sea-lavender and thrift, moving on to moths and butterflies. |
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Male drinker moths, seen in July, are large and reddish-brown with orange veins running through the wings. |
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It was actually quite funny to him how the bullet weapons had seemed so advanced to him a mere seven moths ago. |
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A variety of insects, including some beetles and moths, mimic bees and wasps. |
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The natural enemies can play an essential role in the regulation of the tortrix moths population dynamics. |
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Many interesting moths showed throughout this year including the Brimstone. |
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Orange tortrix moths are fawn or gray and the chevron pattern has less contrast than that of the garden tortrix. |
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A third spray may be needed in late July or early August if tortrix moths are a problem. |
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This is a fantastic site, really helpful for micro moths, especially tortrix moths! |
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Orange tortrix moths are generally found in California, Oregon, and Washington. |
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The large collection includes earthworms, slugs, snails, beetles, earwigs, ants, moths, crickets, spiders, millipedes and centipedes. |
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He says that the caterpillars are ermine moths, which weave silk tents over bird cherry and other fruit trees. |
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There are a number of moon moths with tails varying in length from mere stubs to long streamers. |
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The Spanish moon moth, closely related to tropical silk moths, adds a touch of exoticism to the park's insect life. |
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While the silk of Saturniidae moths is considered inferior to that of Asian silk moths, it is tough and durable. |
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For example, many North American species of giant silk moths do not interbreed because they mate at different times of day. |
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I doubt so, the pages would have been eaten by moths and silverfish long before the work became public domain. |
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These in turn are attracted by night-scented flowers which attract moths and night-flying insects. |
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These bats are strictly insectivorous and may be further limited in diet to moths and butterflies. |
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It won't discriminate between pest caterpillars and those of desirable moths and butterflies. |
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More than half of Britain's 2,500 species of butterflies and moths are found here. |
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Butterflies, moths, hummingbirds, cardinals, bluejays and more visited our gardens. |
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I look at the sodium vapour lamps and the thousands of insects and moths inside them. |
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There's the butterfly house, a riot of colourful plants and animals with more than 60 species of butterflies and moths. |
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They will turn into chrysalises and, after a few weeks, into butterflies or moths. |
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She brought with her a collection of bees, butterflies, flies, moths, and others. |
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Bats and nocturnal moths take to the wing, while butterflies settle and flowers begin to close their petals. |
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Butterflies, moths, hummingbirds, and other pollinators will come for the banquet too. |
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This is despite it being no more than six feet wide in places and a haven for birds, mammals, butterflies, moths and wild flowers. |
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Damage from moths, mildew or vermin is also not covered, so if the rats eat your clothes, tough luck Charlie. |
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These are the herbs that were used in medieval times to deter moths and fleas from clothing and people. |
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Many yarn manufacturers make mothproof wool, which is chemically treated to repel or kill moths that come in contact with it. |
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My feet sunk into the countless, forgiving blades as a cricket chirped and brown moths battered themselves against the dim porch light. |
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As the seasons came round, they gathered for feasts of bogong moths or bunya nuts. |
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I sense above the rotting bodies of bogong moths in Canberra an especial stench around the events of last Thursday. |
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This manipulation severely diminished the possibility that the unpalatability of the moths affected birds' reactions to them. |
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There aren't very large numbers of macro moths, just a few noctuids, some small pyralids, and a handful of geometrids. |
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Pyralid, snout or grass moths make up a very large family of more than 25,000 species. |
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Female vapourer moths may not be able to fly, but they are egg-laying machines. |
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A few types of insects live on red maples, including weevils, buff-tip moths, and vapourer moths. |
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My picture of the Spanish bayonet flower, with its embedded yucca moths, was unsatisfactory. |
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On another newly renovated floor in the east wing, millions of moths, plant bugs, and spiders rest safely in large, new steel cabinets. |
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Mature larvae burrow into the stalks and pupate, and a summer flight of moths appears from late July to August. |
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He first began eating the brown bogong moths 11 years ago while researching a book on bush tucker eaten by Aborigines. |
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The toxins derived from this variety are toxic only to the larvae of butterflies and moths. |
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These are visited by a diverse array of animals, including bees, hawk moths, beetles, butterflies, long-tongued flies, hummingbirds and bats. |
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Large numbers of butterflies and moths are flying in most fields and another generation of many pests is likely. |
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In his museum at Tring, which is just north-west of London, he had two and a quarter million butterflies and moths alone. |
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Though some plants are pollinated by bats, birds, butterflies, moths, and wasps, most of the work is done by bees. |
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It included specimens of fourteen insect orders, with major holdings of New Zealand moths, butterflies, beetles, stoners, caddis and bugs. |
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Clothes moths and carpet beetles often destroy woolen clothing, furs, rugs and furniture. |
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The life cycle of the carpet moth is very similar to the life cycles of other fabric moths. |
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The information on carpet moths is somewhat contradictory about whether and what they might eat. |
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The new slim line clothes moth traps use a non-toxic pheromone based sticky pad to attract and catch carpet moths and brown house moths. |
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On returning to his hotel one evening, he spied a cluster of moths fluttering about the shrub's small, yellow flowers. |
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Wild horses roam the roads and in the jungle you can find giant moths apparently the inspiration for Mothra, Godzilla's legendary foe. |
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Farmers claim the moths are causing yield losses of up to one tonne a hectare. |
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Flying to several sites to deposit eggs is a strategy used by all moths and butterflies whose caterpillars must hide from predators. |
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Likewise, gypsy moths preferentially feed on oak foliage compared to foliage of red or striped maples. |
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These include large numbers of cockroaches, crickets, other orthopterans and large moths, as well as geckos and other lizards. |
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It was 1913 before convincing cytological evidence for female heterozygosis was produced in moths. |
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Noctuid, owlet, and cutworm moths are also stout-bodied. Their fore wings are narrow, and their hind wings are fan-shaped. |
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Afterwards we'd lie naked on the shadowy porch drinking beer and watching moths batter themselves against the lamp's chimney. |
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In all experiments, the numbers of codling moths, honeybees, and muscoid flies were counted in each trap. |
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The profitability or palpability of beetles and bugs may be greater than that of moths. |
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These range from Gypsy moths to invasive plants and exotic diseases like West Nile virus and Monkey pox. |
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The moths swarm together for a moment, then disappear like candle flames going out. |
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The large ears of this species may be an adaptation to foraging on moths or to foraging as gleaners. |
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For most problems with clothes moths or food moths there is no reason to reach for the can of insecticide. |
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If you've seen small moths flying around your closet, you may have been invaded by the common clothes moth. |
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When clothes are not stored and maintained properly, the chances of clothes moths damaging the garments increases. |
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Woolen items injured by clothes moths have holes eaten through them by small, white larvae. |
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The best way to combat carpet beetles and clothes moths is to prevent them from becoming established in the home. |
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Someone pointed a flashlight straight to the sky, enticing moths to flutter through the beam. |
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Insects, especially beetles, caterpillars, moths, and flies, are the most common prey. |
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When the wings were dry the moths were glued ventrally to tiny oval-shaped balls made of cotton wool. |
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One teacher thought the caterpillars might belong to silk ermine moths, but we're not sure. |
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The forewings of the live moths were sprayed with a thin layer of spray glue and then coated with UV-reflecting or UV-absorbing powder. |
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Most of the geometer moths captured were in floral lure traps, while both species of Plusiinae were trapped exclusively in floral lure traps. |
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The body of geometer moths is thin and more fragile looking than in other macromoths. |
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The larva of geometer moths, the familiar inchworms, feed on mulberry leaves. |
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Hepialidae are, in terms of diversity and distribution, the most successful group of homoneurous primitive moths. |
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Into this special domain went winter coats and wool items to be protected against the depredations of moths, silver fish, and their ilk. |
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Flour beetles, saw-toothed grain beetles and Indian meal moths are some of the more common pests. |
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Microlepidopteran families other than pyralids were excluded due to the inability to resolve extremely small moths on video. |
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Greater wax moths are tympanate pyralid moths, with four sensory cells that have similar frequency responses with different thresholds. |
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It's a phenomenon known as bilateral gynandromorphy, and it's been observed in butterflies, moths, and lobsters. |
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These include bush tomato, parakeelya and parrot pea or bird flowers, as well as the dunnart, mala, honeyant, piedish beetle and case moths. |
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For the most part tachinid flies prey on caterpillars, including cutworms, gypsy moths, tent caterpillars, and the ever present cabbage looper. |
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At least two other moths, the mottled umber moth, and the March moth have wingless females. |
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Most bats emit sonar at ultrasonic frequencies around 20-60 kilohertz, and this is the range at which hearing moths are most sensitive! |
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The network of mature hedges, the areas of long grass and the ponds and streams means there are plenty of insects, especially moths, for the bats to feed on. |
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Secondly, reference books, for example the major avifaunas and standard works on the identification of Britain's flowers, bryophytes, moths and other beasties I may encounter. |
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Dead moths had been glued to tree trunks, or moths released in desired positions during daylight, when they are torpid and remain where they land. |
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Animal life includes the one-horned rhinoceros of Java, orangutans, miniature deer, atlas moths and the brilliantly coloured, flightless bird of paradise. |
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A simpler system can now be proposed in the light of wind-tunnel experiments on male summer fruit tortrix moths entering homogeneous pheromone clouds. |
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Secondary pollinators were diurnal hawk moths and butterflies. |
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The carnation tortrix moth is a butterfly of the tortrix moths family. |
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As well as their important compost-creating role, nettles also provide excellent food for some butterflies and moths and are much-loved by ladybirds. |
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In the past, butterflies were distinguished from moths in that they flew during the day, possessed clubbed antennae, were brightly colored, and lacked a frenulum. |
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As we hurtle through the rain and darkness, the music clamouring, the windscreen wipers going full bore, cyclists come at us out of the gloom like pale moths. |
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Bombyx shares this problem with other moths and butterflies. |
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Read about Bill Baker's research into lichen-rock interface biology or the use of lichens and lichen-feeding moths as bioindicators of air pollution. |
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In the experiments described in the last two sections, we purposely made achromatic intensity unreliable, to prove that moths used the chromatic aspect of colour. |
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In the windows passers-by will see a plethora of wildlife, including butterflies, insects and moths, which have lived in the building at one point in its history. |
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We measured the total nocturnal flight time of 60 individual male moths representing seven species of eared moths and five species of earless moths. |
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As expected given low levels of wild codling moths, release of sterile males, and treatment with pheromone, there was no detectable codling moth damage in any orchard. |
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The insecticide spraying programs have wiped out dozens of native moths and butterflies, probably doing more damage than the gypsy moth would have done. |
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Not only will this enhance your carpet's appearance, but it will also minimise the likelihood of carpet moths or carpet beetles establishing themselves. |
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But it turns out that the moths do not rest on tree trunks during the day. |
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These are not the carpet moths that feed on the fibers in rugs. |
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Little is known of the life history of the larvae of geometer moths. |
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However, it sounds like you have an infestation of clothes moths. |
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Instead of using fabric softener and to deter clothes moths, rinse your clothes with a solution made from 2 litres of white vinegar and 50 ml of eucalyptus oil, shaken. |
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To the uninitiated, mothballs are marble size balls of a campher-like substance that one puts in drawers or presses to prevent moths eating holes in clothes. |
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This insect has pale gray forewings with many cross-lines and bands of color in a pattern characteristic of many of the Larentiinae or so-called carpet moths. |
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Because this food source could abruptly disappear at any time, cutworm moths cannot be counted on to replace pine nuts. |
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There are other ghost moths that are larger, which may have an even higher fecundity, but I've found no literature on egg number in these species. |
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Jacamars prefer to eat large, showy, flying insects such as blue morpho butterflies, hawk moths, and venomous insects such as wasps, ants, and sawflies. |
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State and federal government agencies blanketed neighborhoods with poisons in an attempt to eradicate pests like gypsy moths and Japanese beetles. |
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Who would support him if he chose controversially to burn off part of the Lane Cove River Park that was home to a distinctive family of bogong moths? |
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Shama, the bright candle, the eternal enchantress in Urdu poetry that claims the lives of hundreds of moths, her victims, came into AB's life to illume it with love. |
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There were suggestions to get rid of carpet moths and bed bugs. |
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And, always, global warming could push the cutworm moths north, out of the park, by heating up the region. |
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The flowers of both sexes appear in late spring or early summer, and pollination occurs thanks to bees, wasps, ants, yellow jackets, and night-flying moths. |
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It lures male codling moths on to a sticky platform to limit fertilisation of the females and reduce the number of grubs, which feed inside developing fruits. |
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We found that these pads, if placed too close to prickly pears infected by Cactoblastis, would soon be discovered by the moths and eaten by caterpillars. |
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Using a phylogenetically based selection of wild moths collected from a Nearctic site, we report that earless species fly less throughout the night than eared species. |
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Plume moths have wings consisting of five or more parts each. |
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Some of the atlas moths and a Noctuid moth have wingspans over 300 mm. |
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The sachets will impart a pleasant scent as well as keep moths away. |
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It's not glamorous, but I must say that if I had to metamorphose into an insect, I could have done far worse, such as a meal-worm or one of those creepy luna moths. |
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They note that the snow flea antifreeze proteins do not resemble the antifreeze proteins of moths and beetles, which are rich in another amino acid, threonine. |
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Another scientist reported grizzlies flipping over rocks to lick up army cutworm moths, a fat-bodied insect that hides by day in the high-altitude talus slopes in the Rockies. |
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When the hawk moth proboscises were long compared to the length of the flower tube, the hawk moths did not efficiently pick up pollen, and the flowers did not reproduce well. |
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There are ways to deal with coddling moths and apple maggots. |
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An abundance of parasites, such as viruses, bacteria, fungi, nematodes, tapeworms, and the larvae of flies, wasps, and moths, are known to infect bumblebees. |
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This dumpy little brown owl, with its icing sugar spots, can sometimes be seen perched on street lights, snapping up the moths that whirl around them dementedly. |
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There aren't very large numbers of macro moths certainly nowhere near the diversity we see in New England, a few noctuids, some small pyralids, and a handful of geometrids. |
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Both bats and martins, it turns out, prefer larger insects such as beetles, moths, flies, wasps and bees, which give a better return on their energy efforts. |
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It lunges at anything small enough to eat that passes in front of its nose, mostly grasshoppers, but also bumblebees, moths, and sometimes its own young. |
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But for now, the garden is sunlit and, as ever at the Regent's Park Open Air Theatre, this play weaves its own summer magic as dusk turns to night and the moths take wing. |
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In Australia in 1988 pyralid moths native were introduced to control the invasive rubber-vine weed, Cryptostegia grandifloras. |
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In moths, their antennae are known to be responsible for the sensing of Coriolis forces in the similar manner as with the halteres in flies. |
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Dried and sealed in pouches, lavender flowers are placed among stored items of clothing to give a fresh fragrance and to deter moths. |
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The silk farmers then heat the cocoons to kill them, leaving some to metamorphose into moths to breed the next generation of caterpillars. |
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Some of the species of moths and insects show evidence of having been indigenous to the area from as long ago as the Alpine orogeny. |
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Native bluebells, lesser-spotted woodpeckers, scarlet tiger moths and spotted flycatchers dwell there too. |
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Tussah moths are harder to raise than Bombyx moths, which have been selected for thousands of years for domestication. |
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Like the eyes of moths, legs of water striders, and leaves of the lotus plant, the cicada wings have natural microstructures. |
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Specialists said the caterpillars are likely to be mopane worms, the larvae of emperor moths, which are commonly eaten in Africa. |
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The last few years have been bad for wildlife, with low numbers of moths, spiders and crane flies. |
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Tubular flowers tend to attract insects with long tongues, such as long-tongued bees, butterflies and moths. |
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The caterpillars of a number of moths such as the Dark Arches and Vapourer moths feed on the foliage. |
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He saw the deserted bark huts which the Aborigines had temporarily erected when collecting the bogong moths for their feasts. |
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Apple ermine moths lay egg masses on 1-3 year-old branches from mid to late summer. |
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Early that summer, pupae of apple ermine moths harboring wasp larvae were rounded up in Shanxi Province, China. |
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County moth recorder Tom Tams said the caterpillars were most likely the larval stage of some of the less common ermine moths. |
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A Pea moths spend the winter as caterpillars in the soil and then pupate in spring. |
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My favourites were a pair of six-belted clearwing moths, rarely found in North Wales, and the most westerly record by 40 miles. |
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Mints are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species, including buff ermine moths. |
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He found that senitas were pollinated not by hawk moths, as most biologists believed, but by a small pyralid moth. |
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The researchers let inchworm moths of two species to land on a tree bark and to freely choose the final resting spot and body orientation. |
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Hummingbird clearwing and snowberry clearwing are two of the most common hummingbird moths in the United States. |
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Oil-soluble dye in larval diet for tagging moths, eggs, and spermatophores of tobacco budworms. |
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Additionally, presence of exuvia and frass suggest that the moths are emerging late summer or early fall. |
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There are previous reports of PAA being attractive to other insects, including several noctuid moths and sphecoid and scoliodid wasps. |
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Infotactic trajectories feature 'zigzagging' and 'casting' paths similar to those observed in the flight of moths. |
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The insects that attack inshell peanuts consist of several species of beetles and of moths. |
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For example, the allele for black colour in a population of moths becoming more common. |
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In 1999, entomologist Lauri Kaila described 48 new species of Elachista moths and named 37 of them after Tolkien mythology. |
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Insects diversified during the Cretaceous, and the oldest known ants, termites and some lepidopterans, akin to butterflies and moths, appeared. |
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In Australia, introduced elm trees are sometimes used as foodplants by the larvae of hepialid moths of the genus Aenetus. |
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Codling moths and apple maggots are two other pests which affect apple trees. |
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Wax moths are a serious honeybee pest whose larvae consume wax and pollen, often completely destroying honeycomb. |
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Wax moths usually appear in weak or sick colonies, but do not directly contribute to bee deaths. |
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If it is so weak that wax moths have taken the hive over, it is almost impossible to save. |
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Lesser horseshoe bats mainly eat small flying insects such as midges but they also take crane flies, moths and caddis flies. |
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Tortrix moths returned to the list after a decade, causing grief with caterpillars that eat fruit and flowers, indoors and out. |
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Citrus canker, gypsy moths, medflies, witchweed, and exotic animal and poultry diseases all have constituency-based programs. |
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Anyone wishing to learn more about moths can attend the Woggles and Wildlife event in the woods at Bodlondeb, Conwy, between 12pm and 5pm today. |
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On spring nights, Yucca moths pollinate the trees' flowers, which look like popcorn bouquets. |
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By the 1980s, golden tansy ragwort flea beetles, cinnabar moths and seed head flies had largely decimated the weed's Western Oregon population. |
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The basic distinction between moths and butterflies, is moths don't have antennal clubs. |
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At Neston he saw the caterpillars of oak eggar and drinker moths, while newly emerged cinnabar moths were on the seawall at Leasowe. |
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Diversity and ensemble composition of geometrid moths along a successional gradient in the Ecuadorian Andes. |
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Effects of temperature, photoperiod, and light intensity on the calling rhythm in arctiid moths. |
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Local plants have already had to deal with defoliation from forest tent caterpillars and gypsy moths. |
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A third of the rarest moths of the collection for the man of India were antennaless, legless, wingless, and often headless. |
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Silver-Y moths and red admirals were numerous after the recent hot weather. |
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Common garden plants that attract moths include red campion, sedum, hebe and nicotiana. |
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Formica neogagates opportunistically feeds on a wide range of caterpillars, including gypsy moths and eastern tent caterpillars. |
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The atlas moth, one of the largest silk moths, is so big that it can be mistaken for a bat when flying. |
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One of the largest moths in the world, the atlas moth, or Attacus atlas, is found in the tropical forests of Southeast Asia. |
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Cats, the Times told us, are a pestilence akin to gypsy moths and kudzu. |
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Jobs for the week Easy2 Hang pheromone traps in apple trees to attract and catch male apple-worm producing codling moths. |
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Environmental Protection Agency says it will ban a pesticide that pear and apple growers use to kill codling moths. |
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Unless, that is, our crops this year have been hindered by such nasties as codling moths, maggots, sawfly or scab. |
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A minimalist phase would account for redwing blackbirds, luna moths and striped skunks. |
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The British Entomological Society is surveying bumblebees, cinnabar moths, and glow-worms. |
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They also feed on beetles, moths, leaf-hoppers and other insects that cost farmers and foresters billions of dollars every year. |
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Brokenhearted, I culled some of the honey to eat and wrapped the remaining honey-filled frames, again sealing them tightly so no ants or wax moths could infest them. |
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However, when these passions meet the reality of bull thistle, coddling moths and pondscum many newer rural property owners become deeply frustrated. |
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During two subsequent walking transects, perpendicular to and intersecting the flight path of the Bobolink flocks, I flushed Pyralid moths with every step. |
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However, some species of moth have exploited this, such as the tiger moths which produces aposematic ultrasound signals to warn bats that they are chemically protected. |
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Newly hatched codling moths lay eggs on immature fruits throughout summer. |
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The flycatchers will catch insects, moths, sawflies, beetles and aphids. |
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The diet of an insectivorous bat may span a wide range of species, including flies, beetles, moths, grasshoppers, crickets, termites, bees, wasps, mayflies and caddisflies. |
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The mint root borer's attractant contains an unusual blend of four chemicals, one of which had never been detected before in Pyralid moths, says McDonough. |
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Now gypsy moths are invading the Appalachian uplands, where white, red, black, scarlet, and chestnut oaks became kings of the forest when the chestnuts disappeared. |
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Mites, moths, spiders and tiny insects called springtails make their homes in festive firs, with many using them as a place to sleep through the winter. |
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Cabbage fields surrounded by collards required 75 to 100 percent fewer sprays to control diamondback moths than fields treated conventionally with pesticides. |
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Trapping noctuid moths with synthetic floral volatile lures. |
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There will also be a display of pest species affecting museum artefacts, some of which are also found in homes, such as woodworm, carpet beetles and clothes moths. |
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However, there are some commonalities as well, with flies, thrips, chalcid wasps, coccid bugs, and a few beetles and moths inducing gall formation. |
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Indiana myotis normally feed on dipterans, homopterans, small beetles, and moths, whereas evening bats feed heavily on beetles, hemipterans, and moths. |
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The total wing area of these moths were essentially the same. Consequently, wing-loading of the noctuids was about twice as high as in the geometrids. |
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Bacillus thuringiensis is now used to control gypsy moths, tent caterpillars, leaf rollers, canker worms, and other pests that attack garden plants, corn, and other crops. |
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Veteran entomologists, curator Chris Darling and technician Brad Hubley primarily focus their efforts on geometrid moths and the cicadas of Mulu's forests. |
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The ephemeral life cycle of geometrid moths, including our very similar native fall canker worm, is completed here on warm evenings from Thanksgiving onward. |
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Sandved and other lepidopterologists, suspect, for instance, that the circles or O's seen on so many moths and butterflies evolved to appear as eyes. |
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Female moths lay about 40-100 eggs one on top of the other to form an eggstick that is attached to the tip of a cactus spine or directly to a cladode. |
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Would-be informants came crawling out of the woodwork, drawn to McCarthy as moths to light, each peddling a new version of Lattimore's evil deeds. |
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Spray BT on your young oak to protect against gypsy moths, and you wipe out future lunas, cecropias, and everything else on the leaves, along with the pests. |
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Evidences for a far infrared electromagnetic theory of communication and sensing in moths and its relationship to the limiting biosphere of the corn earworm, Heliothis zea. |
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Recovery of chromosome aberrations from natural populations of corn earworms and tobacco budworms subjected to daily releases of partially sterile moths. |
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The Park supports at least 397 species, including butterflies, moths, bees, spiders, shield bugs, pond life, and a long list of plants including two species of orchid. |
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