. [Articles about birds from National geographic magazine]. Birds. LOOK FOR BURROWING BEES ON DRY SLOPES TN YOUR LAWN Faces of Halictuspruinosus stop entrances (left), and a female dashes home (center). Enemies include a wingless wasp (/'^^«rf07«<'///0("iryr/^;'£f(r, right), Metopia leucocephata (left), Loxoh'opa sp., below, and Megaselia divergens (right center). A Bee-catching wasp crawls down its hole. '.^V^'i ^"^^^'. I National Geographic Society TWO PARASITES. ONE INSIDE THE OTHER, LIVE WITHIN THE CABBAGE CATERPILLAR! Tiny wasps (Apanteles glomerafus, on yellow cocoons) lay-e


. [Articles about birds from National geographic magazine]. Birds. LOOK FOR BURROWING BEES ON DRY SLOPES TN YOUR LAWN Faces of Halictuspruinosus stop entrances (left), and a female dashes home (center). Enemies include a wingless wasp (/'^^«rf07«<'///0("iryr/^;'£f(r, right), Metopia leucocephata (left), Loxoh'opa sp., below, and Megaselia divergens (right center). A Bee-catching wasp crawls down its hole. '.^V^'i ^"^^^'. I National Geographic Society TWO PARASITES. ONE INSIDE THE OTHER, LIVE WITHIN THE CABBAGE CATERPILLAR! Tiny wasps (Apanteles glomerafus, on yellow cocoons) lay-eggs inside the host. Smaller ones {Asiomaspis nana extreme upper right, and Tctrastichiis rapo, lower) prey upon the first. Itoplcctns conauistor (lower male, left; female, right) and Pteromaluspnparum (left center) destroy the chrysalis. VII. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Washington, D. C. : National Geographic Society


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