The Insects of Australia: A Textbook for Students and Research Workers, Volume 1 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 73
Page 70
... eggs are laid in the soil in the early summer and undergo partial development to a stage in which they vir- tually cease to lose water . They then enter diapause and remain in it even if unseasonable rains fall during the summer ...
... eggs are laid in the soil in the early summer and undergo partial development to a stage in which they vir- tually cease to lose water . They then enter diapause and remain in it even if unseasonable rains fall during the summer ...
Page 282
... eggs are deposited in water . Most females oviposit by descending to the water , dipping the abdomen into the water and releasing a few eggs at a time ; such behaviour is displayed by many Australian Leptophlebiidae . Some species ...
... eggs are deposited in water . Most females oviposit by descending to the water , dipping the abdomen into the water and releasing a few eggs at a time ; such behaviour is displayed by many Australian Leptophlebiidae . Some species ...
Page 324
... Eggs pass directly from the oviduct into the uterus where they lie in a jumbled mass ( Rugg and Rose 1984a ) . 4. VIVIPARITY ( known only in the blaberid Diploptera punctata but probably other species of the genus are viviparous also ) ...
... Eggs pass directly from the oviduct into the uterus where they lie in a jumbled mass ( Rugg and Rose 1984a ) . 4. VIVIPARITY ( known only in the blaberid Diploptera punctata but probably other species of the genus are viviparous also ) ...
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Skeletal anatomy and key to orders by J F LAWRENCE E S NIELSEN and I M MACKERRAS | 3 |
General anatomy and function by R F CHAPMAN | 33 |
Copyright | |
30 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
3-segmented abdominal segments absent adult anal antennae apex apical appendages apterous aquatic Archaeognatha areas articulation Australia Australian species basal base biological body cells cerci claws Coleoptera Collembola colour costal coxae Cretaceous cross-veins cuticle developed Diplura Diptera distal dorsal ecdysis eggs elongate endemic Entomology Ephemeroptera fauna feed female fore legs fore wing fossil fused genera genitalia genus gills glands groundplan head Hemiptera Heteroptera hind wing host Hymenoptera insects instar known Kukalová-Peck labial palp labium larvae lateral Lepidoptera lobe male Malpighian tubules mandibles margin membrane mesothorax metathorax moult mouth-parts muscles Neoptera nymphs occur ocelli Odonata organs ovipositor pair Permian pest plants posterior predators present primitive pronotum prothorax recognised reduced region sclerites sclerotised setae sometimes spines spiracles Sternorrhyncha structure stylets subfamilies Superfamily surface synapomorphies taxa termites thoracic Thysanura tibia tion tropical usually veins venation ventral