10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «CLERID»
Discover the use of
clerid in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
clerid and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington
In one subfamily, the Aseminae, it is definied by a muscle ps-i [represented in the
Cerambycinae figure (Plate 8)] and in the clerid and many other Coleoptera, it is
well defined by two muscles dpl-s and dpl-i (of Boving) one extending to the ...
Entomological Society of Washington, 1917
2
Miscellaneous Publication
The Black-Bellied Clerid (Enoderus lecontei Wo/c.) The black-bellied clerid is
predaceous on various species of engraver beetles (Ips spp.), twig beetles (
Pityophthorus spp.), and bark beetles (Dendroctonus spp.), but in California,
Oregon, ...
John Martin Miller, Frederick Paul Keen, 1960
3
Journal of Economic Entomology
A CLERID LARVA PREDACEOUS ON CODLING MOTH LARV/E (Second Note)
By D. E. Mebbill, State College, N. M. In the Journal of Economic Entomology, vol.
VII, No. 2, April, 1914, on pages 251-252, appeared a first note on the clerid ...
4
Complex Population Dynamics: A Theoretical/Empirical ...
this theoretical exercise is that the likelihood of the clerid model is much higher
than the likelihood of the parasitoid or (especially) the tree models. Strictly
speaking, our argument in favor of the clerid model cannot be extended more
broadly to ...
When those that escape fly away to settle on the living trees, this little clerid
enemy evidently does as other clerid species do. It accompanies them and
continues its work until the escaping beetles have burrowed into the bark. The
adult clerid ...
6
The Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales Vol.I
TILLUS. Olivier. 34 48 dux Westw. Proc. Zool. Soc. 1852, p. 46, t. 24, f. 11. Swan
River, W. Australia. 3449 hilaris White. Clerid. IV. p. 48 ; Westw. Proc. Zool. Soc.
1852, p. 50, t. 26, f. 12. Tasmania. OPILO. Latreille. 3450 apicalis White. Clerid.
7
Economic Entomology: Pamphlets
15— A Clerid beetle and larva predaceous on the codling moth. (Cynmtotlera
aethlops.) , A CLERID BEETLE AND LARVA PREDACEOUS ON THE CODLING
MOTH. Among the insect enemies of the codling moth a species of the clerid
beetle ...
8
Insect Enemies of the Spruce in the Northeast: A Popular ...
When those that escape fly away to settle on the living trees, this little clerid
enemy evidently does as other clerid species do. It accompanies them and
continues its work until the escaping beetles have burrowed into the bark. The
adult clerid ...
Andrew Delmar Hopkins, 1901
When those that escape fly away to settle on the living trees, this little clerid
enemy evideutly does as other clerid species do. It accompanies them and
continues its work until the escaping beetles have burrowed into the bark. The
adult clerid ...
United States. Bureau of Entomology, 1901
10
The Red-cockaded Woodpecker: Surviving in a Fire-Maintained ...
Thus, rapid population growth is more likely in the warmer months than during
winter, when the extended life cycle provides more time for predators to reduce
the size of the beetle population within a tree. ENEMIES ARRIVE Checkered
clerid ...
Richard Conner, D. Craig Rudolph, Jeffrey R. Walters, 2010
5 NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «CLERID»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
clerid is used in the context of the following news items.
Controlling bark beetle infestation
... some insects that can control bark beetle populations under non-infestation conditions include the blackbellied clerid, the trogositid beetle, ... «Alpenhorn News, Jun 15»
Scientist enlists forest fungi to save their own habitat
... but it poses little danger to other wildlife. Hofstetter has found the fungus may kill one non-target insect species, the clerid beetle, yet that's still ... «Mother Nature Network, Apr 15»
When Life Gives You Beetle-Killed Forests, Make Biofuel
The beetles have natural predators such a woodpeckers and insects like clerid beetles that feed on adults and larvae under the bark. But these ... «TakePart, Nov 13»
How can I get rid of deathwatch beetle?
Surface-applied insecticide chemicals do not reach the larvae but can kill spiders and clerid beetles, the deathwatch beetles' natural predators. «Telegraph.co.uk, Jun 12»
Invertibrates - there is life in dead wood!
Saproxylic predators follow, such as root-eating beetles and clerid ant beetles, which feed on the adult and larval stages of bark beetles. «Pitchcare, Jun 12»