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  2. Earwig - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earwig

    Earwigs are mostly nocturnal and often hide in small, moist crevices during the day, and are active at night, feeding on a wide variety of insects and plants. Damage to foliage, flowers, and various crops is commonly blamed on earwigs, especially the common earwig Forficula auricularia. Earwigs have five molts in the year before they become ...

  3. Got an earwig problem? Here's what to know about the ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/got-earwig-problem-heres-know...

    Use diatomaceous earth or copper tape to protect your plants. Create your own earwig traps using old tuna cans and fish or vegetable oil. Kill the trapped insects by dumping them in a bucket of ...

  4. Forficula auricularia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forficula_auricularia

    The female earwig lays a clutch of about 50 eggs in an underground nest in the autumn. She enters a dormant state and stays in the nest with the eggs. Common earwigs exhibit varying levels of maternal care. Female earwigs typically show maternal care through behaviors such as guarding and tending to their eggs and nymphs.

  5. Tegmen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tegmen

    Earwig wing anatomy. One tegmen opened, the other removed to show wing folding mechanism. The term tegmen refers to a miscellaneous and arbitrary group of organs in various orders of insects; they certainly are homologous in the sense that they all are derived from insect forewings, but in other senses they are analogous; for example, the evolutionary development of the short elytra of the ...

  6. Labidura riparia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labidura_riparia

    Labidura riparia is a species of earwig in the family Labiduridae characterized by their modified cerci as forceps, and light tan color. [2] [3] They are commonly known as the shore earwig, tawny earwig, riparian earwig, or the striped earwig due to two dark longitudinal stripes down the length of the pronotum.

  7. Insect mouthparts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insect_mouthparts

    Typically the mandibles are the largest and most robust mouthparts of a chewing insect, and it uses them to masticate (cut, tear, crush, chew) food items. Two sets of muscles move the mandibles in the coronal plane of the mouth: abductor muscles move insects' mandibles apart ( laterally ); adductor muscles bring them together ( medially ).

  8. Chelisochidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chelisochidae

    Chelisochidae is a family of earwigs [3] [4] whose members are commonly known as black earwigs. [5] The family contains a total of approximately 96 species, spread ...

  9. Marava arachidis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marava_arachidis

    Marava arachidis is a species of earwig in the family Spongiphoridae.It is found in Africa, Australia, the Caribbean, Europe, Northern Asia (excluding China), North America, South America, and Southern Asia.