Telenomus Fimbriatus
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Telenomus Fimbriatus
''Telenomus'' is a genus of parasitoid wasps from the subfamily Telenominae. The genus was first described by Alexander Henry Haliday in 1833. Species in this genus parasitise the eggs or immature stages of other insects. Known hosts include : ''Agrius convolvuli'', ''Amsacta moorei'', ''Bagrada hilaris'', ''Chilo auricilius'', ''Cricula trifenestrata'', ''Eudocima fullonia'', ''Helicoverpa armigera'', ''Helicoverpa punctigera'', ''Helopeltis antonii'', ''Helopeltis theivora'', ''Leptocybe invasa'', ''Orgyia postica'', ''Piezodorus hybneri'', and ''Sahlbergella singularis''. Species This list is incomplete: See List of Telenomus species, List of ''Telenomus'' species. * ''Telenomus alsophilae'' Viereck, 1924 * ''Telenomus arzamae'' Riley, 1893 * ''Telenomus bakeri'' Kieffer, 1906 * ''Telenomus bifidus'' Riley, 1887 * ''Telenomus brachialis'' Haliday, 1833 * ''Telenomus californicus'' Ashmead, 1893 * ''Telenomus catalpae'' Muesebeck, 1935 * ''Telenomus chrysopae ...
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Heteroptera
The Heteroptera are a group of about 40,000 species of insects in the order Hemiptera. They are sometimes called "true bugs", though that name more commonly refers to the Hemiptera as a whole. "Typical bugs" might be used as a more unequivocal alternative, since the heteropterans are most consistently and universally termed "bugs" among the Hemiptera. "Heteroptera" is Greek for "different wings": most species have forewings with both membranous and hardened portions (called hemelytra); members of the primitive sub-group Enicocephalomorpha have completely membranous wings. The name "Heteroptera" is used in two very different ways in modern classifications. In Linnean nomenclature, it commonly appears as a suborder within the order Hemiptera, where it can be paraphyletic or monophyletic depending on its delimitation. In phylogenetic nomenclature, it is used as an unranked clade within the Prosorrhyncha clade, which in turn is in the Hemiptera clade. This results from the realiza ...
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