I have now started "disassembly" of a plant I harvested recently, so I can make seeds available soon to those who arent lucky enough to have them in their area. Altho I chose the particular plant for its mostly free of bugs appearance I must discover it does still carry impressive numbers of bugs with it. Most present is a bug from Cionus family, propably Cionus tuberculosus - but they are all very similar and it doesnt matter much from a botanical standpoint. The thing is: I consider myself lucky I started the extraction of seeds today and not later, the larva thrieve on the plant and then will rest in the flowers, I assume natures plan is the bug, once developed, can feed on the seeds, or precisely: the energy the mother plant left in there to help the seedlings on their way. So it appears waiting unecessarely long before taking the seeds out of the plant can reduce the amount of seeds you harvest, if the plant is inhabitated with bugs. They hide very well, you cant see them until you crack the seedpods. They dont even have any sign of the bug making its way in.