A larva named Yellow is a gas-passing machine and emits noxious clouds of the stuff regularly. But Red and Chuck get into expelling clouds of foulness quite often, too. Those puffs and explosions are smelled and gagged over and used to ward off attacks, set fires and give extra propulsion when needed. In fact, that kind of gasiness becomes the punchline for at least half of the jokes in the movie. Nose-picking happens once or twice, too. Regurgitation becomes the focus in one story.
Her parents were guardians of the island and it's inhabitants, should the volcano ever erupt, they would leave Mango in the care of the Muscular Mudskipper to perform a ritual that keeps the eruption at bay. One day, when the volcano erupted once more, Mango decided to take care of this her self only to accidentally destroy their parents drum. When Mango was in danger her parents stepped in to save her by sacrificing themselves to the volcano. This hurt Mango, that she buried her parents drum near her parents totem, and would only come to unbury if the volcano erupt again.
At first glance she may be a tribal, feral, and territorial kind of bug; But she is really an energetic, kind, curious, and protective (if a little cautious of strangers). She loved Red after he saved her from drowning and he reciprocated her feelings. This went to the point she was willing to leave the island and her friends to find him and Yellow.
-She really friendly to red and yellow that when their first meet, she just watch from behind. But during larva ranger when Ivory fly to the island, she doesn't act as she did before and go scare him.
The Island is a unnamed location that belongs in the Larva Island series. The only characters who lives on the island are Mango, Booby, the Crabsformer and his crabs and the mudskippers who resided there and formerly others like Chuck, Yellow, Red and Clara who used to live there after a while ago. Years ago, Chuck was stranded on a island in about five and a half years later after a shipwreck, and also the two bugs such a Yellow and Red who used to live there, after Yellow folds up a paper plane while they're sleeping as they flew away out of New York (unknowingly they didn't get to say goodbye to they're friends). As for the episode Volcano, the volcano where Chuck was laying down on the hot-tub, but suddenly, the volcano starting to erupt as the entire island starts to be destroyed, and after the penta of heroes (Yellow, Red, Chuck, Clara and the Crabsformer) were stranded on a raft, but later they were separated after Yellow pulls off the rope, making them go back to their home in peace, and after they got back home, the Crabsformer later arrived back to the island while everyone lives there fixing the island and Mango was seen playing the bongo to stop the volcano from erupting and the path of the volcano was pushed down to the sand as they all cheer happily after the chaos.
The larva of Hydropsyche perseus Malicky 2001, endemic species of Kerkyra Island (Corfu), Greece, is described for the first time. The diagnostic features of the species are described and illustrated, and some information regarding its ecology is included. In addition, a tabular key for larvae of the known Hydropsyche species of the Greek Islands is provided.
Specificity tests of the molecular protocol developed in the present study to detect larvae of Grapsus grapsus, all of which including both the positive control and specific primer sets. According to the size of the marker, each lane represents the application of the molecular protocol for each species: (1) Grapsus grapsus (Grapsidae); (2) Goniopsis cruentata (Grapsidae); (3) Ocypode quadrata (Ocypodidae); (4) Cardisoma guanhumi (Gecarcinidae); (5) Ucides cordatus (Ocypodidae); (6) Negative control.
The visual system of 3rd instar whirligig beetle larva. A: A 3rd instar larva. B: Group of six stemmata located laterally on the head. C: Top-down view of the brain after removing the head capsule. Larval stemmata are connected to the brain by a fused stemmatal nerve (bundles of retinular axons, arrows). D: A horizontal silver-stained section showing the stemmatal nerve (black arrow), three major larval laminas (LrLA, white arrowheads) and precocious larval lobula plate (LrLOP). The lobula plate is supplied by uncrossed axons from the lamina (asterisk). E-G: Three consecutive horizontal brain sections of another preparation showing the three larval laminas (LrLA, white arrowheads) and the larval lobula plate (LrLOP), which receives uncrossed inputs from the laminas (asterisks). Inset F: Reconstruction from serial Bodian-stained sections of the larval laminas and lobula plate showing dendrites and centrally projecting axons. Scale bars = 5 mm in A; 500 μm in C; 50 μm in D-G.
The precocious lobula plate is supplied by the dorsal three stemmata, but not the ventral three stemmata, of the larval whirligig beetle. A-I: Nine consecutive reduced silver-stained horizontal sections of the 3rd instar larval visual system from dorsal to ventral, and their corresponding schematic drawings, show the three larval laminas (LrLA) and the precocious lobula plate (LrLOP, pink) supplied from the dorsal three stemmata (St6, orange; St1, yellow; St5, green), but not the ventral three stemmata (St2, teal; St4, blue; St3, purple). All panels are of the same magnification (bar in A = 50 μm).
The most sophisticated stemmatal larval eyes have been reported in the larvae of adephagan Coleoptera, including the predatory sunburst diving beetle T. marmoratus and tiger beetles, such as Cicindela chinensis. In the predaceous larval T. marmoratus, two large tubular stemmata and four smaller spherical stemmata on each side of the head are equipped with distinctive arrangements of 28 asymmetric retinas[20]. Stemmatal photoreceptors from these retinas supply a larval optic lobe consisting of two exceptionally large neuropils and four smaller ones, each receiving receptor inputs from one of the stemmata[20,21]. The two largest of these larval laminas have columnar arrangements of receptor endings that intersect layers[21]. The layers likely comprise processes of stratified interneurons that are likely to integrate information from the several retinas thereby mediating target detection by a larva that employs characteristic vertical scanning movements to locate and seize its prey[22]. At metamorphosis, larval laminas degenerate and are substituted by the nested optic lobes of the adult beetle[21].
Schematics comparing the larval and adult optic lobes of the tiger beetle Cicindela (after [[1,][5]]) and the whirligig beetle D. sublineatus. Upper and lower left: Both larvae are ambush predators and are equipped with precociously developed larval lobula plates (LrLOP, pink) that contain wide-field neurons supplied by uncrossed axons from prominent stemmatal laminas (St LA). These receive their inputs from the dorsal-most stemmata in tiger beetle larva (St 1 and 2) and whirligig larva (St 1, 5 and 6). Upper and lower right: During pupal metamorphosis, larval stemmata and their underlying optic neuropils degenerate. On eclosion, the adult tiger beetle possesses only a lamina (LA), medulla (ME), and lobula (LO), but lacks the lobula plate. In the adult whirligig beetle, the lower lobula plate (lLOP, pink) serving the lower aquatic eye develops normally, but the upper lobula plate is absent.
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