Rice bug

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The term rice bug may apply to a number of species in at least three bug genera that attack rice: especially at the later panicle stages. They include:

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Neaera, Neæra, or Neaira are different transliterations of an Ancient Greek name Νέαιρα. They may refer to:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cobra</span> Index of animals with the same common name

Cobra is the common name of various venomous snakes, most of which belong to the genus Naja.

Stink bug may refer to:

Angra may refer to:

Different snakes are called water snakes. "Water snake" is also sometimes used as a descriptive term for any snakes that spend a significant time in or near fresh water, such as any species belonging to the family Acrochordidae. They should not be confused with sea snakes, which live primarily or entirely in marine environments.

The term chinch bug can refer to a few different North American insects:

Horehound or hoarhound may refer to:

Olbia is a city in Sardinia, Italy.

Japonica may refer to:

Diadema is the term for diadem in most Romance languages, and in English may refer to:

Memnonia or Memnonium may refer to:

Palustris is a Latin word meaning "swampy" or "marshy", and may refer to:

Bed bugs are blood feeding insects that may infest human dwellings

T. orientalis may refer to:

Athysanus may refer to:

L. occidentalis may refer to:

L. grandis may refer to:

<i>Oebalus pugnax</i> Species of true bug

Oebalus pugnax, the rice stink bug, is a flying insect in the shield bug family Pentatomidae native to North America that has become a major agricultural pest in the Southern United States. It has been a known pest since at least the time of Johan Christian Fabricius, who described the species in 1775.

Wēkiu bug is the name given to two species of closely related flightless seed bugs in the genus Nysius that inhabit high elevations on the island of Hawaiʻi.