Squash bug ENT532

Squash bugs (Coreidae family) were found on squash plants at Penn State's Rock Spring Field, with eggs found on the undersides of leaves. The most damaging stage occurs were adults and nymphs, when they extract plant juice, underscoring the importance of swift intervention.

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

Files were transformed for preservability and added to work by a ScholarSphere administrator.

Files

Metadata

Work Title Squash bug 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/nhe4-d039
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 squash bug nymph.heic
  • Added Eggs of squash bug.heic
  • Updated License Show Changes
    License
    • https://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/
  • Published
  • Updated Subject, Publisher, Description Show Changes
    Subject
    • Insect Diversity and Evolution (ENT532)
    Publisher
    • Anju Poudel
    Description
    • Squash bugs (Coreidae family) were found on squash plants at Penn State's Rock Spring Field, with eggs found on the undersides of leaves. The most damaging stage occurs were adults and nymphs, when they extract plant juice, underscoring the importance of swift intervention.
    • This image was deposited for ENT 532: Insect Biodiversity and Evolution in Fall 2023.
  • Updated Description Show Changes
    Description
    • Squash bugs (Coreidae family) were found on squash plants at Penn State's Rock Spring Field, with eggs found on the undersides of leaves. The most damaging stage occurs were adults and nymphs, when they extract plant juice, underscoring the importance of swift intervention.
    • This image was deposited for ENT 532: Insect Biodiversity and Evolution in Fall 2023.
    • Files were converted for preservability and added to work by a ScholarSphere administrator.
  • Added Eggs_of_squash_bug.jpg
  • Added squash_bug_nymph.jpg
  • Updated Description Show Changes
    Description
    • Squash bugs (Coreidae family) were found on squash plants at Penn State's Rock Spring Field, with eggs found on the undersides of leaves. The most damaging stage occurs were adults and nymphs, when they extract plant juice, underscoring the importance of swift intervention.
    • This image was deposited for ENT 532: Insect Biodiversity and Evolution in Fall 2023.
    • Files were converted for preservability and added to work by a ScholarSphere administrator.
    • Files were transformed for preservability and added to work by a ScholarSphere administrator.
  • Updated