释义 |
Definition of woodwasp in English: woodwaspnounˈwʊdwɒspˈwo͝odwäsp another term for horntail Example sentencesExamples - Due to their fearsome appearance and large size, we often receive enquiries from people who have found woodwasps.
- This book is a compilation of articles about the basal group of the Hymenoptera, the Symphyta (sawflies and woodwasps).
- This Australian Unit located in England is undertaking an investigation of siricid woodwasps and their natural enemies in coniferous forests in Europe; the ultimate objective is the biological control of Sirex noctilio F. in Australia.
- Nearly all the Symphyta are phytophagous (plant eating) and the group includes the leaf-eating sawflies and the wood-boring woodwasps.
- Woodborers including the long-horned beetles, metallic woodborers, and woodwasps were sorted to species.
- When that wave of traps produced woodwasps, the dragnet was extended to a 50-mile and then a 70-mile radius.
- Nematodes have been successfully deployed against a wide range of insect pests, including white grubs, weevils, fruit flies and woodwasps.
- At low populations, sirex woodwasp selects suppressed, stressed, and injured trees for egg laying.
- The species belonging to the family Xiphidriidae are similar to woodwasps both in appearance and life history.
- The only other woodwasp in the United States was found in 2002 in Indiana but that was in a warehouse, not the wild, Hoebeke said.
- Therefore, in instances when woodwasp larvae are detected, inspection forms simply list ‘Siricidae; species of’ instead of the species name.
- It was the first such woodwasp, Sirex noctilio Fabricius, ever found in the wild in the United States.
- However, thinning and pruning should be avoided during woodwasp flight season since these activities wound trees and may attract pests or leave them susceptible to infestation.
- The Sirex woodwasp has also been reported in 6 locations in southern Ontario, Canada.
- At low populations, the woodwasps select ailing trees, and the rate of spread in the U.S. is uncertain in part because of competition from native bark beetles, according to a risk analysis for APHIS.
- You may find during the course of the year a huge variety of interesting fungi, woodwasps, tunnelling beetles, centipedes, and millipedes.
- On July 10, 2007, USDA confirmed the detection of a single female Sirex noctilio woodwasp in Macomb County, Michigan.
- The woodwasp is not typically a pest in its native habits in Europe, Asia and northern Africa.
- Sirex noctilio is an invasive, non-native pest that is a woodwasp native to Europe and Asia that has been introduced into New Zealand, Australia, South Africa, Brazil, Chile, Uruguay and Argentina.
- Finally in December 1954 Perry found permanent employment with the Commonwealth Health Department's Plant Quarantine Division where she was once again employed in the study of Sirex woodwasps.
Definition of woodwasp in US English: woodwaspnounˈwo͝odwäsp another term for horntail Example sentencesExamples - Due to their fearsome appearance and large size, we often receive enquiries from people who have found woodwasps.
- Nematodes have been successfully deployed against a wide range of insect pests, including white grubs, weevils, fruit flies and woodwasps.
- The only other woodwasp in the United States was found in 2002 in Indiana but that was in a warehouse, not the wild, Hoebeke said.
- Woodborers including the long-horned beetles, metallic woodborers, and woodwasps were sorted to species.
- This book is a compilation of articles about the basal group of the Hymenoptera, the Symphyta (sawflies and woodwasps).
- However, thinning and pruning should be avoided during woodwasp flight season since these activities wound trees and may attract pests or leave them susceptible to infestation.
- The woodwasp is not typically a pest in its native habits in Europe, Asia and northern Africa.
- It was the first such woodwasp, Sirex noctilio Fabricius, ever found in the wild in the United States.
- When that wave of traps produced woodwasps, the dragnet was extended to a 50-mile and then a 70-mile radius.
- At low populations, sirex woodwasp selects suppressed, stressed, and injured trees for egg laying.
- Sirex noctilio is an invasive, non-native pest that is a woodwasp native to Europe and Asia that has been introduced into New Zealand, Australia, South Africa, Brazil, Chile, Uruguay and Argentina.
- You may find during the course of the year a huge variety of interesting fungi, woodwasps, tunnelling beetles, centipedes, and millipedes.
- Therefore, in instances when woodwasp larvae are detected, inspection forms simply list ‘Siricidae; species of’ instead of the species name.
- Finally in December 1954 Perry found permanent employment with the Commonwealth Health Department's Plant Quarantine Division where she was once again employed in the study of Sirex woodwasps.
- At low populations, the woodwasps select ailing trees, and the rate of spread in the U.S. is uncertain in part because of competition from native bark beetles, according to a risk analysis for APHIS.
- The Sirex woodwasp has also been reported in 6 locations in southern Ontario, Canada.
- This Australian Unit located in England is undertaking an investigation of siricid woodwasps and their natural enemies in coniferous forests in Europe; the ultimate objective is the biological control of Sirex noctilio F. in Australia.
- Nearly all the Symphyta are phytophagous (plant eating) and the group includes the leaf-eating sawflies and the wood-boring woodwasps.
- The species belonging to the family Xiphidriidae are similar to woodwasps both in appearance and life history.
- On July 10, 2007, USDA confirmed the detection of a single female Sirex noctilio woodwasp in Macomb County, Michigan.
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