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| DIPTERA -- <Juveniles> [Latest Classification]             Please refer also to the following
  links for details on this group:                         DIPTERA = Link 1,  Photos-1,  Photos-2         Host
  Preferences    Reproduction    Life Cycle    Principal
  Families    References     Introduction   As with the Hymenoptera, by the 4th decade of the 20th Century
  there already existed an extensive literature concerning the exceptional diversity
  in habits and forms within the order Diptera (Clausen 1940).  Their economic importance judged from the
  attack on other insects, ranks Diptera next to Hymenoptera in the number of
  species and in the effectiveness of attack. 
  The Tachinidae are outstanding among the parasitic families followed
  by others that consistently have this habit being Cyrtidae, Pipunculidae,
  Nemestrinidae, Conopidae and Pyrgotidae. 
  The Bombyliidae are mostly parasitic but there are many predaceous
  species also.  Parasitic representatives
  occur in many families that are predominantly not entomophagous, such as the
  Agromyzidae, Phoridae, Cecidomyiidae, Calliphoridae and Anthomyiidae.  Predaceous families known for their attack
  on crop pests are Asilidae, Tabanidae, Syrphidae and Ochthiphilidae, but many
  others also have species with predaceous habits.    Host
  Preferences  Most parasitic Diptera are primary parasitoids of plant pests and
  are considered very beneficial. 
  However in the Tachinidae exceptions are those that attack adult
  Carabidae and Apidae and some spiders. 
  The Pipunculidae, Pyrgotidae and Nemestrinidae are almost entirely
  beneficial.  Parasitic Bombyliidae are
  most harmful because they attack larvae and pupae of beneficial Tachinidae
  and Hymenoptera, which counteracts their value as infrequent parasitoids of
  Coleoptera and Lepidoptera.  The
  Conopidae may be considered injurious because they attack Vespoidea, and the
  Cyrtidae similarly are harmful because of their spider parasitization.  Groups that are predaceous as larvae are
  usually beneficia, as is the case with adults having predaceous habits.  Many different kinds of insects are prey
  of asilids and other large flies, which ranges from scarab beetles to small
  flies, and thus it is difficult to evaluate their effect.  Generally, the food sources of adult
  predaceous Diptera are determined by size and ease of capture and by their
  relative abundance in the predators' environment.   Host preferences of parasitic species vary, with larvae of
  Lepidoptera being preferred followed by larvae and adults of Coleoptera.  These two orders are attacked primarily by
  Tachinidae.  Other hosts that are
  infrequently attacked include dipterous larvae, hymenopterous larvae and
  adults, hemipterous, homopterous and orthopterous adults and occasionally
  nymphs, nymphs and adults of Dermaptera, nymphs of Trichoptera and the
  Isopoda and Arachnida (Clausen 1940/1962).   Predators are commonly found in the Syrphidae attacking
  Aphididae, Coccidae and other Homoptera; Asilidae, the larvae of which prey
  on various insects in soil; and Bombyliidae, Calliphoridae, Sarcophagidae and
  Anthomyiidae, many of which are predators of acridid egg masses.  Occasionally species of Drosophilidae,
  Phoridae and Sarcophagidae develop in the egg sacs of spiders.  Predaceous aquatic types feed on a variety
  of insects and other minute animals in their surroundings.  The habits of these were already known in
  great detail by the 1930's as shown by the memoirs of Johannsen (1934-1937),
  published under the title "Aquatic Diptera."  Clausen (1940) provided a general
  statement on the habits of entomophagous dipterous larvae, grouping them into
  either predominantly parasitic or predatory and predatory only.  He noted that there may be a difference of
  opinion as to which habit predominates in a particular family.  In the Bombyllidae, e.g., the number of
  species parasitic larvae of Hymenoptera and others probably exceeds that
  which is predaceous in egg masses, although the population of the latter may
  be larger.   Food requirements of adult Diptera is extremely variable.  Parasitic species feed generally at
  blossoms and on various plant exudations, as well as on honeydew secreted by
  other insects, and a few species are known to imbibe the blood of their hosts
  upon which they lay their eggs. 
  Adults of groups with predaceous larvae may themselves be predaceous,
  as is found in Asilidae, Rhagionidae, Therevidae and Dolichopodidae.  However, those of other groups where the
  larvae are not highly entomophagous, may feed almost entirely on insect
  food.  Among the latter are the
  Empididae, Mydaidae, Ceratopogonidae and Scatophagidae.   Reproduction  The first attempt to systematize the subject of dipterous
  reproduction was by Townsend (1908), who proposed five groups for Tachinidae,
  based on placement of the eggs or larvae with respect to the host.  Pantel (1910) followed with studies on the
  parasitic species of the order, but with special emphasis on Tachinidae.  He increased these groups to 10, using as
  a basis the reproductive system of the female, the type of egg laid, the
  stage of incubation at the time of oviposition, and the placement of the egg
  or larva.  These groupings still
  largely hold and are summarized as follows:   1.  Egg macrotype, broadly
  oval, flattened ventrally, the chorion thick and rigid dorsally and thin
  ventrally, size proportioned to that of female; deposited on the host body;
  posterior uterus of gravid female short and broad, occasionally long and
  narrow (Thrixion).  Example = Meigenia floralis Meig.   2.  Egg microtype, chorion
  as previous (#1), size largely independent of that of female; laid on food of
  the host and ingested by latter; posterior uterus moderately to very long,
  adapted for partial incubation of a large number of eggs.  Example = Gonia atra Meig.   3.  Egg large, elongate,
  not flattened or pedicellate, the chorion thin and flexible; posterior uterus
  an incubating organ containing a moderate number of eggs; females lacking
  chitinized piercing organ; larviporous. 
  Example = Miltogramma spp., Sarcophaga spp.   4.  Egg with very thin,
  uniform chorion; ovarioles 50-150, posterior uterus long and coiled, with
  eggs lying transversely in several series; 1st instar larva with cuticular
  armature for protection, indicating a free-living period; larva laid by
  female near host, usually on its food plant. 
  Example = Echinomyia fera L.   5.  Egg and larva as in
  previous (#4), but the ovaries less numerous, the posterior uterus very long,
  slender and coiled (Glaucophana, Bigonicheta) or moderately long and
  distended, the eggs lying transversely in regular series (Bigonicheta) or longitudinally and
  irregularly; larva laid in host vicinity. 
  Example = Bigonicheta setipennis Fall.   6.  Egg and larva as in
  #4, with the chorion slightly thicker dorsally; larva without a specialized
  cuticular armature; ovarioles 15-55, posterior uterus of medium length, in
  1-2 corkscrew coils, and somewhat distended, with eggs lying transversely or
  longitudinally; fully incubated egg laid on host body.  Example = Cryptophlebia ruricola Meig.   7.  Female with piercing
  organ, distinct from ovipositor, for perforating skin of host; egg not
  narrowed at posterior pole; posterior uterus slender, elongate,
  intestiniform, serving as an incubating organ, the eggs lying transversely in
  a single series.  Example = Compsilura
  concinnata Meig.   8.  As previous (#7)
  except that ovipositor itself serves as the piercing organ.  Example = Cercomyia curvicauda
  Fall.   9.  Female with piercing organ
  variably formed and functional; egg much narrowed at posterior pole;
  posterior uterus short and does not serve for incubation.  Example = Hyalomyia, Oxyptera, Conops.   10.  Egg with a pedicel at
  posterior pole, serving for adhering to host; ovarioles of moderate number
  and posterior uterus intermediate between the simple and incubating
  forms.  Example = Carcelia cheloniae
  Rond.   Townsend (1934) further extended this classification through the
  Muscoidea, enumerating 39 habit groups, the majority of which comprise some
  entomophagous species.  He includes
  additionally characters of the 1st instar larva.  However, this arrangement is of greater value to a taxonomist
  and to the specialist of insect parasitology than to researchers working on
  biologies of specific parasitoids or predators.  Pantel's earlier arrangement is simpler and quite
  satisfactory.  Clausen (1940) conceded
  that this classification would need revision and extension it if were to
  include all parasitic groups of Diptera, and further still if it were to
  include predaceous forms.  Considering
  only parasitic species, the Conopidae, Pipunculidae, Pyrgotidae and
  Agromyzidae (Chryptochaetum) seem
  to fall into groups 7-9, for the species consistently insert their eggs into
  the host body.  However, most
  Conopidae have stalked eggs.  Most
  parasitic Phoridae have the same oviposition habit, but some deposit eggs
  externally; yet females are still able to puncture the host with the
  ovipositor.  The parasitic
  Cecidomyiidae that have stalked eggs do not fall into any of the 10 groups,
  nor do the Cyrtidae, Nemestrinidae and Bombyliidae.     The parasitic species show a wide range in reproductive capacity,
  this being related to hazards encountered by the eggs and young larvae before
  the latter gain access to the host body cavity.  Species depositing their eggs or larvae in or directly on the
  host body usually are limited to a few hundred, and several species are known
  to produce less than 100.  Those which
  lay them in the general area of the host produce 1-2,000, the latter
  including most Bombyliidae and many Tachinidae.  When oviposition is entirely apart from the host or where the
  eggs must be consumed by the host, the hazards are increased and thus a
  higher reproductive capacity is required. 
  In this way the Tachinidae and Cyrtidae deposit 2-6,000 eggs.  An extreme is shown by Echinomyodes which produces ca. 13,000
  maggots (Clausen 1940/1962).   Life Cycle  Life cycles among entomophagous Diptera range from ca. 10 days in
  Metagonistylum and an almost
  equally short time for various other Phoridae, Tachinidae, Syrphidae and
  Sarcophagidae, to the annual cycle found in a great many of both the
  parasitic and predaceous species and to a possibly obligatory 2-yr. cycle in
  some Nemestrinidae.  The egg stage is
  almost always short, often owing to partial or complete uterine incubation,
  and in many species hatching occurs in the uterus or immediately on
  deposition of the egg.  The shortest
  larval period occurs among the parasitic species, some of which complete
  feeding in 2-4 days, this brief period also being found in a few
  predators.  However, there is no
  uniformity in this respect for many species remain inactive within the host
  for long periods of time.  The pupal
  stage similarly shows much variation, ranging from one week to almost a
  year.  The normal cycle of many
  species may not be completed, being interrupted by adverse conditions.  This results in some or all individuals
  entering diapause, that may extend to over several years.  The adult life is correlated with the kind
  of reproduction, but in most species it extends to 1-2 months (Clausen
  1940/1962).   For a detailed discussion of immature stages of Diptera, please
  refer to Clausen (1940/1962).     
   References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references
  may be found at:  MELVYL
  Library]   Blagoderov, V. A., E. D. Lukashevich & M. B.
  Mostovski. 2002. "Order Diptera Linné, 1758. The true flies". In A.
  P. Rasnitsyn & D. L. J. Quicke. History of Insects. Kluwer
  Academic Publishers.    Blagoderov,
  V.A., Lukashevich, E.D. & Mostovski, M.B. 2002. Order Diptera. In: Rasnitsyn,
  A.P. and    Quicke, D.L.J.
  The History of Insects, Kluwer Publ., Dordrecht, Boston, London,
  pp. 227–240.   Brown, B.V.,
  Borkent, A., Cumming, J.M., Wood, D.M., Woodley, N.E., and Zumbado, M.
  (Editors) 2009 Manual of Central American Diptera. Volume 1 NRC
  Research Press, Ottawa ISBN 978-0-660-19833-0    Christian Thompson, F. C.. "Sources for the
  Biosystematic Database of World Diptera (Flies)" (PDF). United States
  Department of Agriculture, Systematic Entomology Laboratory.    Colless, D.H.
  & McAlpine, D.K.1991 Diptera (flies) , pp. 717–786. In: The
  Division of Entomology.  Commonwealth
  Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Canberra (spons.), The
  insects of Australia.Melbourne Univ. Press, Melbourne.    Griffiths,
  G.C.D. The phylogenetic classification of Diptera Cyclorrhapha,
  withspecial reference to the structure of the male postabdomen. Ser. Ent. 8, 340 pp. [Dr. W. Junk,
  N. V., The Hague] (1972).    Hennig, W.
  1954a. Diptera (Zweifluger). Handb. Zool. Berl. 4 (2 ) (31):1-337. General introduction with key to
  World Families. In German.   Hennig, W.
  1954b.  Flugelgeader und System der Dipteren
  unter Berucksichtigung der aus dem Mesozoikum beschriebenen Fossilien. Beitr.
  Ent. 4: 245-388 (1954).   Hennig, W.
  1948.  Die Larvenformen der
  Dipteren. 3. Teil. Akad.-Verlag, Berlin. 185 pp., 3
  pls.   Hoell, H.V., Doyen, J.T. & Purcell, A.H. 1998. Introduction
  to Insect Biology and Diversity, 2nd ed.. Oxford University Press.
  pp. 493–499.    Oldroyd, H. The
  Natural History of Flies. New York: W. W. Norton.1965.    Rohdendorf, B.
  B. 1964. Trans. Inst. Paleont., Acad. Sci. USSR,
  Moscow, v. 100 "Taxon: Superorder
  Antliophora". The Taxonomicon.    Séguy, E.
  1924-1953.  Diptera: recueil
  d'etudes biologiques et systematiques sur les Dipteres du Globe
  (Collection of biological and systematic studies on Diptera of the World). 11
  vols. Text figs. Part of Encyclopedie Entomologique, Serie B II:
  Diptera.    Seguy, E.
  1950. La Biologie des Dipteres. pp. 609. 7 col + 3 b/w plates,
  225 text figs.    Wiegmann, B. M. & D. K. Yeates .1996. "Tree of
  Life: Diptera".      |