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Steve Passlow / 1,555 items

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Alternative Name
Scale insect

Identification
Males have the front pair of wings well-developed for flying, with the hind pair of wings reduced, so that they look superficially like true flies in the order Diptera. The mouthparts are not functional, so the usual characteristic of the order Hemiptera ("sucking mouthparts") is not visible. Males have long waxy filaments protruding from the tip of their abdomen, and when they fly they resemble dandelion seed heads. The wings and body are often coloured with vivid violet or red.

Adult females are large, up to 40mm long, often covered in waxy powder, and are usually found immobile and attached to vertical surfaces such as trees and fence posts.

Size range
up to 40mm in females, body length in males ~4-8mm

Distribution
Most of Australia, including Tasmania.

Habitat
Mostly in sandy heathland, mallee and dry sclerophyll woodland

Seasonality
Adults are active from January to June.

Feeding and Diet
Immature stages live underground on roots of plant hosts where they suck sap. Food plants are poorly known, as adult females often move away from nymphal feeding locations.

Feeding Habits
root-feeder, sap-feeder

Life cycle
Females moult into the adult stage and crawl up above ground and onto vertical structures such as trees and fence posts. Males mate with the females at this stage, then the females crawl to a protected place such as under bark, or in a crevice, where they become immobile and appear essentially dead. At this stage the four posterior segments of the abdomen are retracted into the abdomen to form a large cavity ("marsupium"), with a posterior slit-like opening. The first instar nymphs ("crawlers") develop inside this marsupium in the dead leathery body of the mother, then emerge, dropping onto vegetation and soil. Mortality of these crawlers is very high. 1,000 to 2,000 are produced per female.

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Snapper Point, Munmorah Conservation Area, NSW, Australia

Tags:   seascape ocean landscape Pacific Ocean munmorah Australia Coast coastal coastline Snapper Point Frazer motion movement water rock shelf Waterfall beach nature sunset

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An alternate for #VoTogs52 2015: Week 18 — Still Life

votogs.com

Tags:   spheres shiny mirror votogs Escher escheresque patterns balls steel chrome reflections stilllife abstract B&W blackandwhite monochrome macro metal

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For #VoTogs52 2015: Week 18 — Still Life

votogs.com

Tags:   steel balls balls chrome reflections B&W Black and White still life abstract monochrome macro metal spheres shiny mirror votogs Escher escheresque patterns chequered checks


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