Lacewing ENT532

In Rock Spring field, Penn State University, a tomato plant infested with aphids faced a natural remedy as Lacewing larvae, known predators of insects, attacked the aphid population. This demonstrates the beneficial role of Lacewings in controlling pest infestations in agricultural settings.

This image was deposited for ENT 532: Insect Biodiversity and Evolution in Fall 2023.

Files

Metadata

Work Title Lacewing ENT532
Access
Open Access
Creators
  1. Anju Poudel
License No Copyright - U.S.
Work Type Image
Publication Date November 21, 2023
Language
  1. English
DOI doi:10.26207/aeen-va70
Geographic Area
  1. Pennsylvania
Deposited November 21, 2023

Versions

Analytics

Collections

This resource is currently not in any collection.

Work History

Version 1
published

  • Created
  • Updated
  • Added Creator Anju Poudel
  • Added Lacewing larvae.jpeg
  • Updated License Show Changes
    License
    • https://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/
  • Published
  • Updated

Version 2
published

  • Created
  • Updated Description Show Changes
    Description
    • In Rock Spring field, Penn State University, a tomato plant heavily infested with aphids faced a natural remedy as Lacewing larvae, known predators of insects, attacked the aphid population. This demonstrates the beneficial role of Lacewings in controlling pest infestations in agricultural settings.
    • In Rock Spring field, Penn State University, a tomato plant infested with aphids faced a natural remedy as Lacewing larvae, known predators of insects, attacked the aphid population. This demonstrates the beneficial role of Lacewings in controlling pest infestations in agricultural settings.
  • Published
  • Updated Subject, Publisher, Description Show Changes
    Subject
    • Insect Diversity and Evolution (ENT532)
    Publisher
    • Anju Poudel
    Description
    • In Rock Spring field, Penn State University, a tomato plant infested with aphids faced a natural remedy as Lacewing larvae, known predators of insects, attacked the aphid population. This demonstrates the beneficial role of Lacewings in controlling pest infestations in agricultural settings.
    • In Rock Spring field, Penn State University, a tomato plant infested with aphids faced a natural remedy as Lacewing larvae, known predators of insects, attacked the aphid population. This demonstrates the beneficial role of Lacewings in controlling pest infestations in agricultural settings.
    • This image was deposited for ENT 532: Insect Biodiversity and Evolution in Fall 2023.
  • Updated