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A dragonfly icon in minimalist style with editable stroke. Insect symbol, flying bug, nature element, wetland creature Royalty Free Stock Photo
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Insect Silhouette, Vector Insect, Bug Silhouette, Nature Silhouette, Insect Vector Art, Black Insect Illustration Royalty Free Stock Photo
Close-up orange insect with transparent wings sits on green leaf. Insect backlit by sunlight. Macro shot details bug, nature Royalty Free Stock Photo
🐞Bug nature green Royalty Free Stock Photo
Ladybug in natrue, small red bug in nature Royalty Free Stock Photo
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Bug and Nature
Watercolor dragonflies. Colorful insects with wings, summer spring fly bug, nature decoration set vector illustration Royalty Free Stock Photo
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Green leaves texture with little lady bug nature background Royalty Free Stock Photo
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The majority of coccinellid species are generally considered useful insects, because many species prey on herbivorous homopterans such as aphids or scale insects, which are agricultural pests. Many coccinellids lay their eggs directly in aphid and scale insect colonies in order to ensure their larvae have an immediate food source.[6] However, some species do have unwelcome effects; among these, the most prominent are of the subfamily Epilachninae which includes the Mexican bean beetle, which are herbivorous themselves. Usually, epilachnines are only minor agricultural pests, eating the leaves of grain, potatoes, beans, and various other crops, but their numbers can increase explosively in years when their natural enemies, such as parasitoid wasps that attack their eggs, are few. In such situations, they can do major crop damage. They occur in practically all the major crop-producing regions of temperate and tropical countries.


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