dermestid การใช้
- Dermestid beetles are destructive to a number of common items.
- The dermestid beetles, common in advanced decay, leave the carcass.
- The guano is infested with carnivorous dermestid beetles capable of stripping a bat corpse in minutes.
- The species is known to be a pest to institutional as well as private dermestid beetle colonies.
- :: : I agree with Stone that the " bugs " are probably the larvae of a Dermestid.
- Some dermestid species, commonly called " bow bugs ", infest violin cases, feeding on the bow hair.
- Dermestid larvae boast a complete or holometabolous development, which includes an thoracic legs that easily distinguish them from Diptera maggots.
- Adult Dermestidae ( skin beetles ) arrive at the carcass; adult dermestid beetles may be common, whereas larval stages are not
- Some researchers have asserted that devastating " L . zacheri " infestations can occur in any climate when their target is a dermestid beetle colony.
- The soft tissue is gone, " Sarna said . " Now it's the turn of the dermestid ( skin and tendon-eating ) beetles.
- ""'Lardoglyphus zacheri " "'is a species of mite first discovered by Dr . Zacher in a dermestid beetle culture.
- The pollination of Visser's " Hydnora " involves a trap and release mechanism where dermestid beetles are detained for several days then released dusted with pollen.
- Dermestid larvae are typically found on dry organic items that are hard for other organisms to digest, such as dried foodstuffs, skins, hides, wood and other natural fibers.
- Scientists believe that cured fish infestations of " L . zacheri " are initiated by dermestid ( carrion ) beetles that carry hypopi to the fish source in the first place.
- All are eventually dissected, then stripped of their flesh by an industrial steam cleaner or by the carnivorous dermestid beetle larvae that live in a temperature-and humidity-controlled cargo container next to the freezer.
- At the Exploratorium, the hands-on science museum here, there is an exhibit called " Energy From Death " that staff members refer to as " the rotting carcass . " In a small terrarium hundreds of dermestid beetles eat the flesh and bones of a dead baby mouse over several days.