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A Flower Beetle, Euphoria sepulcralis (Fabricius) (Insecta: Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae)
Published 2007-11-01“…Published by the UF Department of Entomology and Nematology, September 2007. EENY-416/IN750: A Flower Beetle, Euphoria sepulcralis (Fabricius) (Insecta: Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) (ufl.edu) …”
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A Flower Beetle, Euphoria sepulcralis (Fabricius) (Insecta: Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae)
Published 2007-11-01“…Published by the UF Department of Entomology and Nematology, September 2007. EENY-416/IN750: A Flower Beetle, Euphoria sepulcralis (Fabricius) (Insecta: Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) (ufl.edu) …”
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Floral morphological and chemical analyses of Dienia flowers (Orchidaceae, Malaxidinae) relative to pollination processes
Published 2025-01-01“…Field observations have revealed that the flowers are visited by small flies, midges, other small dipterans, ants, and mites etc. …”
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Schoepfia Fruit Fly, Anastrepha interrupta Stone (Insecta: Diptera: Tephritidae)
Published 2012-03-01“… The schoepfia fruit fly is native to southern Florida. It is known only from coastal counties of south-central Florida to Key West, and only feeds on fruit of the flowering plant Schoepfia chrysophylloides. …”
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Schoepfia Fruit Fly, Anastrepha interrupta Stone (Insecta: Diptera: Tephritidae)
Published 2012-03-01“… The schoepfia fruit fly is native to southern Florida. It is known only from coastal counties of south-central Florida to Key West, and only feeds on fruit of the flowering plant Schoepfia chrysophylloides. …”
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Pollen metabarcoding reveals a broad diversity of plant sources available to farmland flower visitors near tropical montane forest
Published 2025-01-01“…We found that crops and native plants had distinct communities of flower visitors, suggesting the presence of fine-scale habitat differences. …”
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Spring phenological models combining the effects of temperature and photoperiod are successfully transferred to various spatial and temporal scales: a case study of Aesculus hippoc...
Published 2025-01-01“…For C. ohridella, the first flying out of adults after overwintering begins at the onset of horse chestnut leaf unfolding and mass flight occurs during the full flowering period.…”
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Environmental DNA profiling for detecting plant-insect interactions in endangered and native flora
Published 2025-01-01“…Environmental DNA (eDNA) is an established technique for studying plant-insect interactions, that has so far had very limited use in exploring flower-visiting insect communities. This study provides important evidence of the effectiveness of eDNA for studying flower-visiting insects, proving its ability to provide a comprehensive overview of pollinator communities beyond traditional observational methods. …”
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American Sand Wasp (suggested common name), Bembix americana Fabricius, 1793 (Insecta: Hymenoptera: Crabronidae: Bembicinae)
Published 2024-03-01“…Adults feed on flower nectar and can often be found visiting a variety of wildflowers. …”
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Bacterial communities of diverse Drosophila species: ecological context of a host-microbe model system.
Published 2011-09-01“…We find that Drosophilid flies have taxonomically restricted bacterial communities, with 85% of the natural bacterial microbiome composed of only four bacterial families. …”
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Strategic selection of polliniser trees can improve fruit quality of lychee, a crop that exhibits mixed-mating
Published 2025-03-01“…The European honeybee and a rhiniid fly, Stomorhina discolor, were the most abundant flower visitors. …”
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Drone imagery dataset for early-season weed classification in maize and tomato cropsDIGITAL.CSIC
Published 2025-02-01“…Specifically, the dataset contains 31,002 labeled images from the early-growth stage—maize with four unfolded leaves (BBCH14) and tomato with the first flower bud visible (BBCH501)—as well as 36,556 images from a more advanced-growth stage—maize with seven unfolded leaves (BBCH17) and tomato with the ninth flower bud visible (BBCH509). …”
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Combining Unity with machine vision to create low latency, flexible and simple virtual realities
Published 2025-01-01“…We show that closed‐loop feedback reduces behavioural artefacts exhibited by walking crabs in open‐loop scenarios, and that flying Eristalis tenax hoverflies navigate towards virtual flowers in closed loop. …”
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