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  2. Scoliidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scoliidae

    Female scoliids burrow into the ground in search of these larvae and then use their sting to paralyze them. They sometimes excavate a chamber and move the paralyzed beetle larva into it before depositing an egg. Scoliid wasps act as important biocontrol agents, as many of the beetles they parasitize are pests, including the Japanese beetle ...

  3. Soil food web - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soil_food_web

    An example of a topological food web (image courtesy of USDA) [1] The soil food web is the community of organisms living all or part of their lives in the soil. It describes a complex living system in the soil and how it interacts with the environment, plants, and animals. Food webs describe the transfer of energy between species in an ecosystem.

  4. Necrophage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Necrophage

    Ultimately, the stored food is utilized by developing larvae and the worker bee itself as a source of nutrition and energy. Due to the rapid decomposition of carrion, especially in warm temperatures, the bees must efficiently metabolize the carrion to avoid rotten carrion in their cerumen pots.

  5. Food web - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_web

    Food chain length is another way of describing food webs as a measure of the number of species encountered as energy or nutrients move from the plants to top predators. [ 41 ] : 269 There are different ways of calculating food chain length depending on what parameters of the food web dynamic are being considered: connectance, energy, or ...

  6. Trophic level - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trophic_level

    A food web starts at trophic level 1 with primary producers such as plants, can move to herbivores at level 2, carnivores at level 3 or higher, and typically finish with apex predators at level 4 or 5. The path along the chain can form either a one-way flow or a part of a wider food "web".

  7. Scientists Found a 520-Million-Year-Old Miracle: a Fossil ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/scientists-found-520...

    But not always. Sometimes we get lucky—like a team did recently, when they located a fossil of a 520-million-year-old worm larva that still had its brain and guts intact. “It’s always ...

  8. Mammoth wasp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mammoth_Wasp

    Once the beetle larva had been consumed the wasp larva builds a cocoon and pupates, emerging from the cocoon as an adult in the following spring. [4] The European rhinoceros beetle is the primary host for the mammoth wasp but it will also lay eggs on the larvae of other beetles in the Scarabaeoidea including Polyphylla fullo , Anoxia orientalis ...

  9. Heterotroph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heterotroph

    The term heterotroph arose in microbiology in 1946 as part of a classification of microorganisms based on their type of nutrition. [6] The term is now used in many fields, such as ecology, in describing the food chain. Heterotrophs occupy the second and third tropic levels of the food chain while autotrophs occupy the first trophic level. [7]