The Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Insects and SpidersAn extensive use of color photographs makes this a fine guide for identifying insects. Spiders, bugs, moths, butterflies, beetles, bees, flies, dragonflies, grasshoppers, and many other insects are detailed in more than 700 full-color photographs visually arranged by shape and color. Descriptive text includes measurements, diagnostic details, and information on habitat, range, feeding habits, sounds or songs, flight period, web construction, life cycle, behaviors, folklore, and environmental impact. An illustrated key to the insect orders and detailed drawings of the parts of insects, spiders, and butterflies supplement this extensive coverage. |
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Page 440
... overwinter in the North , where all unmatured nymphs and adults die of the frost . In the South nymphs and adults may overwinter and produce 3 generations a year . This cricket enters houses in autumn , attracted by the warmth . In ...
... overwinter in the North , where all unmatured nymphs and adults die of the frost . In the South nymphs and adults may overwinter and produce 3 generations a year . This cricket enters houses in autumn , attracted by the warmth . In ...
Page 615
... overwinter , and hatch in April . Larvae feed inside buds and then on leaves . They pupate in cocoons attached to the host plant or in the curl of fallen leaves . Adults emerge in summer and overwinter in the crowns of plants among ...
... overwinter , and hatch in April . Larvae feed inside buds and then on leaves . They pupate in cocoons attached to the host plant or in the curl of fallen leaves . Adults emerge in summer and overwinter in the crowns of plants among ...
Page 884
... overwinter or hatch and spiderlings overwinter . Adults die . When snow is deep , more young survive to disperse in early summer . 1 generation a year . Both sexes may have an irregular silvery area above near the front half of the ...
... overwinter or hatch and spiderlings overwinter . Adults die . When snow is deep , more young survive to disperse in early summer . 1 generation a year . Both sexes may have an irregular silvery area above near the front half of the ...
Contents
Introduction Audubon Society | 7 |
How to Use This Guidergest private | 31 |
Glossary | 939 |
Copyright | |
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Other editions - View all
National Audubon Society Field Guide to Insects and Spiders: North America National Audubon Society No preview available - 1980 |
National Audubon Society Field Guide to Insects and Spiders: North America National Audubon Society No preview available - 1980 |
Common terms and phrases
abdomen abdominal segment Adult drinks nectar Adult eats Adults emerge antennae aphids areas bands bark bees Beetle body British Columbia brownish burrow butterflies Caterpillar Caterpillar eats Caterpillar feeds cells cephalothorax chelicerae cocoons color compound eyes Cycle damselflies dark brown Deciduous Description Eggs are laid elongate elytra Family female female's femora flies Flight Florida flowers foliage Food fore wings forests genus Grasshopper gray grayish green Habitat hair hatch head hind wings juices Larva feeds leaf legs Male Male's Mantidfly mate Meadows Mexico moths mouthparts Naiad nest North America Nymphs orange oval overwinter ovipositor pair pale parasites pedipalps plants pollen predators prey pronotum prothorax pupae pupate Range reddish brown resemble side slender small insects soil South southern Canada species spiders spines spring stripes Texas thorax Throughout North America tibiae trees twigs usually veins wasps wingless Wings clear Wingspan wood yellow yellowish