Diapause is a period of time when an insect does not grow. It is especially effective and efficient when food and water are scarce.
Diapause in a insect helps the insect tell the difference between day and night time hours. This is important to insects to avoid predators.
give me the answer please
A.D Lees has written: 'The physiology of diapause in arthropods' -- subject(s): Arthropoda, Insects, Physiology
The cast of Diapause - 2013 includes: John Fairbairn as Braden Sally Weller as Michelle
The tick will eat the insects which will make it sick.
Which among these are called Acids
Diapause, has great advantages to the species in that if one young dies, another embryo can quickly take its place.
Safety issue.
Safety issue.
Yes. Like kangaroos, rock-wallabies do have embryonic diapause. They may indeed keep the development of the embryo in suspension until the optimum time for birth.
Embryonic diapause is, in layman's terms, the ability of a female kangaroo to suspend the development of the embryo during gestation so that it is not born when conditions might compromise its survival, e.g. during drought. Almost all marsupial macropods have the unique feature of embryonic diapause, especially the larger and mid-sized species, such as the red kangaroos, and also many species of wallabies. Even Gilbert's potoroo, a smaller macropod, exhibits embryonic diapause. The smallest member of the kangaroo family, the musky-rat kangaroo, does not appear to have embryonic diapause; nor do some of the tree kangaroos.
Diapause - 2013 was released on: USA: 12 October 2013 (Other Venice Film Festival) UK: 26 October 2013 (London City Film Festival)
the significant of number 7 among the maranaos -knowing that there are 7 layers in eharth