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  2. Aphid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aphid

    Some farming ant species gather and store the aphid eggs in their nests over the winter. In the spring, the ants carry the newly hatched aphids back to the plants. Some species of dairying ants (such as the European yellow meadow ant, Lasius flavus) [70] manage large herds of aphids that feed on roots of plants in the ant colony. Queens leaving ...

  3. Aphids and other bad bugs can survive cold in veggie garden ...

    www.aol.com/aphids-other-bad-bugs-survive...

    In parts of yard, overwintering bees and other beneficial insects live in dormant plant material. But aphids, beetles lurk in veggie plot.

  4. Black bean aphid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_bean_aphid

    The primary host plants are woody shrubs, and eggs are laid on these by winged females in the autumn. The adults then die and the eggs overwinter. The aphids that hatch from these eggs in the spring are wingless females known as stem mothers. These are able to reproduce asexually, giving birth to live offspring, nymphs, through parthenogenesis. [7]

  5. Brachycaudus helichrysi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brachycaudus_helichrysi

    Brachycaudus helichrysi overwinters as fertilised eggs which hatch during the winter or early spring, before the plum and damson trees on which they are laid come into leaf. The fundatrices (viviparous parthenogenetic females produced on the primary host) feed at first at the base of buds but as the buds begin to expand, they move on to softer ...

  6. Read This If Aphids Are Eating Your Plants - AOL

    www.aol.com/read-aphids-eating-plants-130000346.html

    An aphid infestation can ruin a garden. Learn what causes aphids and how to identify, kill, and control them naturally for healthy plants with no aphid holes. Read This If Aphids Are Eating Your ...

  7. Macrosiphum rosae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macrosiphum_rosae

    Macrosiphum rosae, the rose aphid, is a species of sap-sucking aphids in the subfamily Aphidinae. [1] [2] They have a world-wide distribution and infest rosebushes as the main host in spring and early summer, congregating on the tips of shoots and around new buds. Later in the summer, winged forms move to other rose bushes, or to a limited ...

  8. Eriosomatinae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eriosomatinae

    Woolly aphids on crab apple bark. Pemphigus gall on cottonwood tree Grylloprociphilus imbricator on Fagus Galls made by Melaphis rhois. Woolly aphids (subfamily: Eriosomatinae) are sap-sucking insects that produce a filamentous waxy white covering which resembles cotton or wool. The adults are winged and move to new locations where they lay egg ...

  9. Aphidius - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aphidius

    Aphidius wasps are endoparasitoids of aphids. The female wasp lays eggs in an aphid. When the eggs hatch, the wasp larvae feed on the inside of the aphid. As the larvae mature, the hosts die and become slightly enlarged or mummified, often becoming tan or yellow. Complete metamorphosis occurs within the host.