|
Canada-0-LaboratoriesTesting företaget Kataloger
|
Företag Nyheter:
- Orius - Wikipedia
These predators are common in gardens and landscapes They have a fairly painful bite, but are not venomous Some species are raised commercially and sold to growers as a form of biological control
- Orius tristicolor and O. insidiosus - Cornell University
Orius is common on many agricultural crops including cotton, peanuts, alfalfa, corn, pea, and strawberry, on pasture land, in orchards, and is successfully used as a biological control agent in greenhouses
- Minute Pirate Bug: A Beneficial Generalist Insect Predator
Orius is typically the first and most common predaceous insect to appear during spring They play a key role in the management of various agricultural pests in greenhouse and field environments
- The Minute Pirate Bug (Orius) - ext. vt. edu
Minute pirate bugs (also known as flower bugs) are small, fast-moving predacious insects in the order Hemiptera and family Anthocoridae Several species of minute pirate bugs in the genus Orius occur in the U S ; the dominant species in Virginia is the insidious flower bug, Orius insidiosus (Say)
- EENY-665 IN1148: Insidious Flower Bug, Minute Pirate Bug Orius . . .
Species of the genus Orius are commonly referred to as minute pirate bugs, while the common name for Orius insidiosus is the insidious flower bug (Funderburk 2009)
- Genus Orius - BugGuide. Net
An online resource devoted to North American insects, spiders and their kin, offering identification, images, and information
- ORIUS - University of Vermont
ORIUS Adult minute pirate bugs are fast moving predators of small, soft bodied insects They consume eggs and immature stages of several pests They also feed on pollen in the absence of prey In greenhouses they are commonly used against thrips, aphids, mites and whiteflies They occur naturally in New England
- Minute Pirate Bug and Insidious Flower Bug - Cornell CALS
The minute pirate bug, Orius tristicolor, and the insidious flower bug, Orius insidiosus, are true bugs in the family Anthocoridae Both species are common predators of a wide variety of small, economically important, soft-bodied arthropods (Funderburk et al 2000)
- Orius (Orius spp - Applied Bio-nomics
Orius are generalist predators that consume a variety of pests including mites, aphids, and small caterpillars They are most effective for pests with life stages that inhabit flowers (such as flower thrips)
- Insidious Flower Bug - Entomology
Smaller than adults, with tear-drop-shaped orange bodies that lack wings and red eyes The insidious flower bug is a common natural control of thrips and other arthropod pests on a number of important crops including most deciduous fruits, corn, cotton, soybeans, alfalfa and grapes
|
|