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Termite mating

เผยแพร่:   โดย: MGR Online

This undated photo provided by Thomas Chouvenc of the University of Floridas Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (IFAS), shows a light-colored female Formosan termite, left, exhibiting mating behavior with the darker male Asian termite in Florida. The two highly destructive species may be breeding where their habitats overlap in South Florida, according to a University of Florida study published Wednesday, March 25, 2015, in the journal PLOS ONE. (AP Photo/Thomas Chouvenc, University of Florida/IFAS)
Mating behavior between a light-colored female Formosan termite and a darker male Asian termite was showed.
This undated photo provided by Thomas Chouvenc of the University of Floridas Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (IFAS), shows young hybrid termite offspring eight months after the light-colored female Formosan termite, bottom right, mated with the darker male Asian termite, bottom left, in Florida. The Asian and Formosan termites, two of the most destructive termite species in the world, invaded Florida, probably through cargo shipments, several decades ago. Now they may be breeding where their habitats overlap in South Florida, according to a University of Florida study published Wednesday, March 25, 2015, in the journal PLOS ONE. (AP Photo/Thomas Chouvenc, University of Florida/IFAS)
This undated photo provided by Thomas Chouvenc of the University of Floridas Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (IFAS), shows hybrid termite eggs 45 days after the light-colored female Formosan termite mated with the darker male Asian termite in Florida. The two highly destructive species may be breeding where their habitats overlap in South Florida, according to a University of Florida study published Wednesday, March 25, 2015, in the journal PLOS ONE. (AP Photo/Thomas Chouvenc, University of Florida/IFAS)
This undated photo provided by Thomas Chouvenc of the University of Floridas Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (IFAS), shows damage to wood caused by Asian and Formosan termites in Florida. The two species may be breeding where their habitats overlap in South Florida, according to a University of Florida study published Wednesday, March 25, 2015, in the journal PLOS ONE. They are two of the most destructive termite species in the world, responsible for much of the estimated $40 million in economic losses attributed to termites annually. (AP Photo/Thomas Chouvenc, University of Florida/IFAS)
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