SmugMug > keywords > aphid > Alfalfa aphid giving birth to living young.  You can see the red eye, antennae, and legs folded against the body.  Aphids, and some other insects, can produce offspring from unfertilized eggs, a process called parthenogenesis.  The eggs develop and hatch within the mother.  At birth, eggs are already developing in the offspring for the next generation.  This type of quick reproduction allows the aphid population to explode in number and rapidly exploit available resources.
SmugMug > keywords > aphid > Close up of pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum (Homoptera: Aphididae) feeding on a leaf of a fava bean plant
SmugMug > keywords > aphid > Alate greenbug, Shizaphis graminum (Homoptera: Aphididae) just exiting the old exoskeleton.  The wings are highly folded at this point and are opaque white.  Within minutes the wings were expanded, transluscent, and folded A-shape over the back of the aphid
SmugMug > keywords > aphid > Parasitized aphid on an eggplant leaf with what appears to be dark spots of excrement deposited by the larval wasp inside the aphid
SmugMug > keywords > aphid > Aphidius ervi - biocontrol wasp attacking Acyrthosiphon pisum pea aphids.  Laboratory colony at the University of Arizona.

filename: aphidius12
SmugMug > keywords > aphid > Ants (Pheidole megacephala) tending aphids for honeydew.  The tight association of ants and aphids give the ants a significant carbohydrate boost and the aphids protection from predators.

St. Lucia, KZN, South Africa
SmugMug > keywords > aphid > OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
SmugMug > keywords > aphid > A predatory syrphid fly larva sneaks up behind an oleander aphid (Aphis nerii) for a quick snack.  Syrphids are excellent control agents for pest aphids.  Arizona.

filename: syrphidlarva1
SmugMug > keywords > aphid > A ladybug larva feeding on a wasp infested aphid.  This aphid didn't feel a thing.  It was already dead from the wasp larva within.
Alfalfa aphid giving birth to living young. You can see the red eye, antennae, and legs folded against the body. Aphids, and some other insects, can produce offspring from unfertilized eggs, a process called parthenogenesis. The eggs develop and hatch within the mother. At birth, eggs are already developing in the offspring for the next generation. This type of quick reproduction allows the aphid population to explode in number and rapidly exploit available resources.
 > Alfalfa aphid giving birth to living young.  You can see the red eye, antennae, and legs folded against the body.  Aphids, and some other insects, can produce offspring from unfertilized eggs, a process called parthenogenesis.  The eggs develop and hatch within the mother.  At birth, eggs are already developing in the offspring for the next generation.  This type of quick reproduction allows the aphid population to explode in number and rapidly exploit available resources.
Alfalfa aphid giving birth to living young. You can see the red eye, antennae, and legs folded against the body. Aphids, and some other insects, can produce offspring from unfertilized eggs, a process called parthenogenesis. The eggs develop and hatch within the mother. At birth, eggs are already developing in the offspring for the next generation. This type of quick reproduction allows the aphid population to explode in number and rapidly exploit available resources.
Photo by: fisherwr2 • see photo in gallery

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