Nymphs then find a suitable host, feed again and drop to the ground to molt into adults.
The nymphs then quest, moving to the tips of long grass and brush to wait for their next blood meal to wander by: a dog, a deer, or that accidental human host.
The nymph then finds another, usually larger host to attach to and suck blood.
Not exact matches
But
then I got to know her and realized that she's NOT a wood
nymph.
Rollover the tick to learn whether it is a female, male,
nymph or larva,
then click to learn more about its size and bite.
When the insects reach a critical mass, they start gathering together, first forming carpets of immature
nymphs and
then winged throngs that can span hundreds of square miles.
All periodical species follow the same basic life cycle, living underground as
nymphs for 13 or 17 years, and
then emerging simultaneously in great numbers in the summer.
For xenodiagnosis, 40 larval ticks were placed on each mouse 1 week prior to necropsy, allowed to feed to repletion, collected, and
then allowed to molt and harden into
nymphs.
Transtadial transmission of B. burgdorferi DNA from larvae that fed upon treated mice to
nymphs and
then to adults was also demonstrated [14].
So they were in a car crash,
then they became
nymphs?
It's life cycle involves an egg which develops into larval stage (6 weeks feeds on rodents and birds),
then nymph (8 weeks this is believed to be the cause of Lyme disease in people also feeds on other mammals),
then adult tick (current belief is that this is the cause of Lyme in the dog and feeds on other mammals).
The tick can be infected in either the larval or
nymph stage when it bites an infected rodent, and
then transmit Lyme to other victims it bites.
They hatch from eggs into a larva (the only stage where they have six legs), eat, molt into a
nymph, eat, and
then molt into the adult stage.
Female mites lays eggs deep in the skin, while the larvae hatched from eggs grows as a
nymph and
then molts into an adult.
Tick eggs are laid in densely wooded areas, hatch into larvae, and
then become
nymphs.
The white - footed mouse is the main source for the Lyme bacteria so when feeding on the mouse the larval tick picks up the bacteria from the blood meal
then carries this to the next stage of its life, falls off the mouse host and molts into a
nymph.
Spindle - shaped eggs hatch into small, six - legged larvae, which molt into eight - legged
nymphs, and
then into eight - legged adults.
Adults lay eggs in the hair follicle, larva and
nymphs develop in the oil glands and hair follicle and
then nymphs grow into adults where they live on the surface of the skin, oil glands and hair follicle and lay more eggs.
The eggs (called «nits») transition to 3 different stages of
nymphs, and
then become adults.
If John Currin's women talked back, fashioned their own narratives and
then sacrificed Currin in a puff of smoke to a nearby wood
nymph, they would be transformed into Rosa Loys.
She has described the genesis of the title of this work, saying, «When I had finished Evoë and was thinking about its title I toyed with the idea of calling it «Bacchanal without
Nymphs»... But
then I remembered, just in time, that I am after all supposed to be an abstract artist» (quoted in Kudielka, «Supposed to be Abstract», p. 26).