home.social

#pyrausta — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #pyrausta, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Why a #mite of the #Parasitidae (#Mesostigmata), apparently genus #Parasitellus, seemingly attacks moth #Pyrausta #despicata (Crambidae). Parasitellus develops in #bumblebee #nests and uses them for dispersal (#phoresy) to other nests, thus they leave their hosts on blossoms and wait for new hosts to be carried to new nests. The moth was detected by the mite as a #nonsuitable #phoretic #host.

    © #StefanFWirth #Berlin 2025

    Visit my new YouTube Video:
    youtu.be/gRAT7CIKWTk?si=hb2LC1

    Photos
    ©S.F. Wirth

  2. Why a #mite of the #Parasitidae (#Mesostigmata), apparently genus #Parasitellus, seemingly attacks moth #Pyrausta #despicata (Crambidae). Parasitellus develops in #bumblebee #nests and uses them for dispersal (#phoresy) to other nests, thus they leave their hosts on blossoms and wait for new hosts to be carried to new nests. The moth was detected by the mite as a #nonsuitable #phoretic #host.

    © #StefanFWirth #Berlin 2025

    Visit my new YouTube Video:
    youtu.be/gRAT7CIKWTk?si=hb2LC1

    Photos
    ©S.F. Wirth

  3. Why a #mite of the #Parasitidae (#Mesostigmata), apparently genus #Parasitellus, seemingly attacks moth #Pyrausta #despicata (Crambidae). Parasitellus develops in #bumblebee #nests and uses them for dispersal (#phoresy) to other nests, thus they leave their hosts on blossoms and wait for new hosts to be carried to new nests. The moth was detected by the mite as a #nonsuitable #phoretic #host.

    © #StefanFWirth #Berlin 2025

    Visit my new YouTube Video:
    youtu.be/gRAT7CIKWTk?si=hb2LC1

    Photos
    ©S.F. Wirth

  4. Why a #mite of the #Parasitidae (#Mesostigmata), apparently genus #Parasitellus, seemingly attacks moth #Pyrausta #despicata (Crambidae). Parasitellus develops in #bumblebee #nests and uses them for dispersal (#phoresy) to other nests, thus they leave their hosts on blossoms and wait for new hosts to be carried to new nests. The moth was detected by the mite as a #nonsuitable #phoretic #host.

    © #StefanFWirth #Berlin 2025

    Visit my new YouTube Video:
    youtu.be/gRAT7CIKWTk?si=hb2LC1

    Photos
    ©S.F. Wirth

  5. Why a #mite of the #Parasitidae (#Mesostigmata), apparently genus #Parasitellus, seemingly attacks moth #Pyrausta #despicata (Crambidae). Parasitellus develops in #bumblebee #nests and uses them for dispersal (#phoresy) to other nests, thus they leave their hosts on blossoms and wait for new hosts to be carried to new nests. The moth was detected by the mite as a #nonsuitable #phoretic #host.

    © #StefanFWirth #Berlin 2025

    Visit my new YouTube Video:
    youtu.be/gRAT7CIKWTk?si=hb2LC1

    Photos
    ©S.F. Wirth

  6. My #YouTube #article points to my upcoming nature #video, showing interesting #biological #interactions on a common #dandelion inflorescence. A #mite (#Parasitellus sp.) appears to be attacking a #moth (#Pyrausta #despicata), but in reality, this is merely a #mistake by the mite, which is actually looking for a bee, presumably bumblebee, as a #phoretic #host for #dispersal.

    ©#StefanFWirth Berlin 2025

    Reference

    YouTube article S. F. Wirth (2025):
    youtube.com/post/UgkxP4oYFemnF

    #Photos
    ©S.F. Wirth

  7. My #YouTube #article points to my upcoming nature #video, showing interesting #biological #interactions on a common #dandelion inflorescence. A #mite (#Parasitellus sp.) appears to be attacking a #moth (#Pyrausta #despicata), but in reality, this is merely a #mistake by the mite, which is actually looking for a bee, presumably bumblebee, as a #phoretic #host for #dispersal.

    ©#StefanFWirth Berlin 2025

    Reference

    YouTube article S. F. Wirth (2025):
    youtube.com/post/UgkxP4oYFemnF

    #Photos
    ©S.F. Wirth