Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
These parasitic beetles mimic the smell of flowers so they can trick bees and raid their nests, new research suggests
A beetle species’ larvae seem to bamboozle bees by smelling like flowers. This newly discovered deceptive strategy might be ...
These parasitic beetle larvae lure in bees with complex floral aromas before hitching a ride back to their nests and eating ...
The larvae of a type of bark beetle can perform acrobatic flips, somersaulting their bodies through the air. They join maggots and other larvae in... This beetle larvae's flips are ready for the ...
The predator-prey relationship between frogs and beetles seems like it would be pretty obvious doesn’t it? Frog spots beetle, frog stealthily approaches beetle, frog eats beetle. Done, done and done.
Signs of the invasive coconut rhinoceros beetle have for the first time been reported on the island of Lanai. The state Department of Agriculture and Biosecurity, or DAB, said Pulama Lanai found the ...
This image shows the coconut rhinoceros beetle larvae detected in plants shipped from Oahu to Lanai. Photo courtesy Department of Agriculture and Biosecurity Since May, officials report there have ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Opatroides punctulatus Brullé, a Mediterranean darkling beetle, has been documented in Idaho for the first time by University of ...
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