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  2. Watch where you step! These bees may be digging holes in your ...

    www.aol.com/watch-where-step-bees-may-110000916.html

    Insecticide dust: If you must kill ground bees, use an insecticide dust applied sparingly on the tops of their open burrow holes. Follow all directions and avoid spreading the poison in a wider ...

  3. Pantry Moths Are the Bed Bugs of Your Kitchen—Here's ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/pantry-moths-bed-bugs-kitchen...

    These winged bugs love to lay their eggs in pantry items such as flour, grains, cereals, dried fruits, and pasta to give the newly hatched larvae a ready-to-eat food source, Daniel Kiefer, Ph.D ...

  4. Cydnidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cydnidae

    Cydnidae are a family of pentatomoid bugs, known by common names including burrowing bugs or burrower bugs. [2] As the common name would suggest, many members of the group live a subterranean lifestyle, burrowing into soil using their head and forelegs, only emerging to mate and then laying their eggs in soil.

  5. Deathwatch beetle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deathwatch_beetle

    To attract mates, the adult insects create a tapping or ticking sound that can sometimes be heard in the rafters of old buildings on summer nights. For this reason, the deathwatch beetle is associated with quiet, sleepless nights and is named for the vigil (watch) being kept beside the dying or dead. By extension, there exists a superstition ...

  6. Defense in insects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defense_in_insects

    Behavioral responses to escape predation include burrowing into substrate and being active only through part of the day. [1] Furthermore, insects may feign death, a response termed thanatosis. Beetles, particularly weevils, do this frequently. [2] Bright colors may also be flashed underneath cryptic ones.

  7. Japanese beetle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_beetle

    The Japanese beetle (Popillia japonica) is a species of scarab beetle. Due to the presence of natural predators, the Japanese beetle is not considered a pest in its native Japan, but in North America and some regions of Europe, it is a noted pest to roughly 300 species of plants.

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