In the course of evolution, animals and particularly insects, have developed efficient and complex mechanisms for survival. Biomimetics aims to find applications for these features of organisms (or organs) in industry, agriculture, and medicine. One of these features is the thin, flexible, and mobile insect ovipositor, which is also capable of carrying substances and drilling various substrates, usually of plant origin. Despite the well-studied structure of the ovipositor, the principles of its operation and real possibilities remain poorly understood. In our study, we first discovered an unusual behavioral pattern of oviposition of the female parasitoid Eupelmus messene Walker (Hymenoptera: Eupelmidae): she drilled with her ovipositor thro...
Egg parasitoids play an important role in biological control of pest species attacking and killing t...
Resource partitioning is facilitated by adaptations along niche dimensions that range from morpholog...
International audienceThe recognition by female phytophagous insects of a plant as a ‘good’ or ‘bad’...
Drilling into solid substrates with slender beam-like structures is a mechanical challenge, but is r...
Drilling into solid substrates with slender beam-like structures is a mechanical challenge, but is r...
Female insects of diverse orders bore into substrates to deposit their eggs. Such insects must overc...
There are many biomechanical challenges that a female insect must meet to successfully oviposit and ...
Hymenopterous insects are able to drill several inches into fresh wood with an egg-laying organ (ovi...
Hemipterans, mosquitoes, and parasitic wasps probe in a variety of substrates to find hosts for thei...
Hymenopterous insects are able to drill several inches into fresh wood with an egg-laying organ (ovi...
Females of most psychomyiid species bear an elongated ovipositor enabling them to oviposit their egg...
Parasitic wasps use specialized needle-like structures—ovipositors—to drill in substrates to reach h...
Morphology, ultrastructure and possible mechanics of the ovipositor of Venturia canescens (Gravenhor...
Insects such as mosquitoes, true bugs, and parasitic wasps, probe for resources hidden in various su...
Many parasitic wasps use slender and steerable ovipositors to lay eggs in hosts hidden in substrates...
Egg parasitoids play an important role in biological control of pest species attacking and killing t...
Resource partitioning is facilitated by adaptations along niche dimensions that range from morpholog...
International audienceThe recognition by female phytophagous insects of a plant as a ‘good’ or ‘bad’...
Drilling into solid substrates with slender beam-like structures is a mechanical challenge, but is r...
Drilling into solid substrates with slender beam-like structures is a mechanical challenge, but is r...
Female insects of diverse orders bore into substrates to deposit their eggs. Such insects must overc...
There are many biomechanical challenges that a female insect must meet to successfully oviposit and ...
Hymenopterous insects are able to drill several inches into fresh wood with an egg-laying organ (ovi...
Hemipterans, mosquitoes, and parasitic wasps probe in a variety of substrates to find hosts for thei...
Hymenopterous insects are able to drill several inches into fresh wood with an egg-laying organ (ovi...
Females of most psychomyiid species bear an elongated ovipositor enabling them to oviposit their egg...
Parasitic wasps use specialized needle-like structures—ovipositors—to drill in substrates to reach h...
Morphology, ultrastructure and possible mechanics of the ovipositor of Venturia canescens (Gravenhor...
Insects such as mosquitoes, true bugs, and parasitic wasps, probe for resources hidden in various su...
Many parasitic wasps use slender and steerable ovipositors to lay eggs in hosts hidden in substrates...
Egg parasitoids play an important role in biological control of pest species attacking and killing t...
Resource partitioning is facilitated by adaptations along niche dimensions that range from morpholog...
International audienceThe recognition by female phytophagous insects of a plant as a ‘good’ or ‘bad’...