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| Immature Stages
  of Carabidae            Carabids are largely nocturnal and
  terrestrial, although a number of species are arboreal.  Most species are predaceous as adults and
  larvae on a variety of hosts, mostly insects, but some species also attack
  snails and earthworms.  Several
  species are associated with ants and termites, and a few species are
  questionably phytophagous and others at times utilize plant food in addition
  to the normal insect diet (Clausen 1940/1962).  Entomophagous species more frequently attack the larvae and
  naked pupae of Lepidoptera than the immature stages of other insects.  Several species are obligatory, primary,
  solitary ectoparasitoids, and a few species feed on seeds.  Species that have developed obligatory
  external parasitism show a degeneration in the larval instars following the
  first molt.             Most species are generally
  beneficial, and have been considered vital in natural control of other
  insects, such as certain pestiferous Diptera (Legner et al. 1980).  Nevertheless, they have not been used
  extensively in biological control. 
  European species of the genus Calosoma
  have been introduced into North America as predators of the gypsy moth and
  brown-tailed moth.             As implied by the common name,
  "ground beetles," adults are mainly ground dwellers, and they carry
  on their activities principally at night. 
  They may be found in various protected locations, such as under
  debris, loose bark of trees and stones, or they may inhabit distinct
  burrows.  Many others, such as the
  genera Lebia and Calosoma are to some extent
  arboreal, where they may be frequently found attacking foliage-feeding
  insects in trees.             Please CLICK on picture to view details:               In a few species the newly hatched
  larva does not feed for several days after hatching, because its nutrition is
  provided by yolk derived from the egg, which is contained in the digestive
  tract.  Preoral digestion occurs among
  some larvae, as is found also among adults, whereas others ingest tissues
  directly.  The injection of an
  intestinal secretion associated with preoral digestion has a paralyzing
  effect on the prey, which is important when the prey is large.  The amount of food consumed by a larva is
  often large compared with its size. 
  Burgess (1911, 1917) and Burgess and Collis (1915), studying C. sycophanta, found that each larva consumed an average of
  41 6th instar gypsy moth caterpillars during its feeding period, covering ca.
  14 days.  Pairs of adults were found
  to destroy 100-460 6th instar larvae between the time of emergence of the
  beetles in springtime and the completion of feeding in midsummer.             Regardless of where they feed,
  Carabidae pupae in cells in the soil, often at a great depth.  Therefore, C. sycophanta
  under normal field conditions forms its pupal chamber 10-12.5 cm. beneath the
  surface, but sometimes it penetrates deeper. 
  This ensures a considerable degree of temperature and humidity
  uniformity, which is essential for pupae not tolerant of a wide range of
  these conditions.  When a species is
  found to pupate above the ground, it is parasitic, such as Brachinus, which pupates in the
  pupal cell of its host.             The parasitic mode of development
  has been found in several carabid genera that are widely separated
  taxonomically.  This relationship with
  the host was first recorded by Wickham (1894) for Brachinus janthinipennis
  Dej. and later also found by Dimmock & Knab (1904).  The larvae occur in the pupal cells of Dineutes assimilis Aubé and show modifications in form, such as a
  reduction of the legs to a nonfunctional state, which is typical for the
  parasitic life style.  A detailed
  account of parasitic development was given by Silvestri (1904) for Lebia scapularis Fourc. 
  Adult beetles feed on all immature stages of the elm leaf-beetle, Galerucella luteola Mull, while larvae are
  restricted to attacking pupae.  The
  1st instar larva does not differ much from others of the family in being
  elongate, with 13 body segments, each of which bears sclerotized plates, and
  the legs are long and well-developed. 
  There are 4-jointed caudal cerci. 
  After finding the host pupae in the soil, the young larva feeds
  voraciously through a large puncture which it makes in the integument and in
  which the head is embedded.  After the
  first molt, a grublike form is assumed in which the segmental plates and the
  caudal cerci are lacking, and the legs are reduced to short conical processes
  (see Clausen, 1940 for diagrams). 
  This is followed by the prepupal and pupal stages, in both of which
  the meso and metathoracic segments are very much produced laterally.  Before the larvae finish feeding, they
  spin a lemon-yellow or brown cocoon, which is composed of a mass of
  interwoven strands cemented together. 
  While spinning, the remains of the host pupa may be drawn into the
  cocoon and enclosed within it.  There
  are two generations annually, and overwintering is in the adult stage in
  sheltered areas.             Salt (1928) observed the behavior
  of Pelecium sulcatum Guer., one of an
  aberrant genus of Carabidae.  Several
  larvae were found on various hosts, including beetle pupae and
  millepedes.  Development was quick and
  apparently was completed on an individual host, so that in its essential
  aspects the mode of life was identical to Lebia,
  though no distinctive 2nd instar larva as found and no cocoon was made.             Arsinoë grandis
  Per. seems to represent a transitional phase between predation and parasitism
  (Blair 1927).  Larvae attack those of
  the lichen-feeding tenebrionid, Catamerus
  revoili Fairm., in
  Nyasaland.  Several larvae of the
  latter were found to bear those of Arsinoë
  attached by the mandibles to the abdominal dorsum.  Feeding occurred in this position until the host died, after
  which the larva released its hold and searched for another host.  Younger larvae may feed for as long as 2
  weeks before causing the host's death, while later instars do so in 1-2
  days.  They pupate in the soil, and
  the duration of larval life was thought to be rather long, for some
  individuals that were collected did not enter the soil for pupation until
  several months later.  This indicates
  that a number of host individuals are required during the feeding period.             Generally it may be concluded that
  carabid eggs are laid in the immediate vicinity of the hosts on which the
  larvae fed, though not closely associated therewith.  The behavior of parasitic species in this
  regard does not differ much from that of predaceous species.  Most species lay their eggs singly in
  small holes in soil with the ovipositor. 
  Pterostichus multipunctatus Dej. is known to
  place a cluster of eggs in the soil chamber and then to guard it during
  incubation and for a while after hatching (Clausen 1940/1962).             Several species of Galerita, Chlaenius and Brachinus
  lay the eggs singly in mud cells which are constructed on plant leaves,
  stems, stones, etc. (Riley 1884, King 1919). 
  The form and composition of the cells, as well as their location, are
  distinctive for the genus.  Cells of Brachinus are crescentric or
  triangular and are located in groups of 3-10 on the undersides of twigs,
  plants stems and stones, while those of Galerita
  are triangular or purse-shaped, with a finely granular surface, and are
  formed on the undersides of smooth leaves. 
  They are oblong and smoothly convex in C. impunctifrons
  Say, and are similarly placed on the undersides of smooth leaves.  Those of C. aestivus
  Say are found on dead twigs, plants stems, the bark of trees, etc.  While forming the cell, the mud pellet is
  first collected about the tip of the abdomen of the female beetle, and the
  walls are built upon on the stone or other surface in the form of a mold
  about the caudal segments.  The cover
  is formed from the mud carried on the dorsum of such segments (Clausen
  1940/1962).             Craspedonotus tibialis
  Schaum., inhabiting sand duns in Japan, shows an elaborate provision for
  laying eggs (Clausen et al. 1927). 
  The female beetle digs a burrow 25-45 cm. deep, inclined at an angle
  of 45°, in embankments, and the eggs are laid singly in small chambers
  branching off from the main burrow. 
  The entire egg-laying period is thought to be passed in the burrow, except
  for regular trips in search of food.             Life cycles in Carabidae are very
  variable, ranging from several months in Lebia
  grandis to several
  years.  Most species probably have an
  annual cycle, with winger being passed as adults, although in many species
  adult beetles may live for several years. 
  Calosoma sycophanta adults usually pass
  two winters, and sometimes 3-4, though none are known to lay eggs for more
  than two seasons (Burgess 1911, 1917). 
  Males and females both live the same length of time.  The adult stage is reached late in the
  season, and oviposition does not start until the following spring, with some
  individuals not ovipositing until the second season.  Studies on a large number of C. sycophanta showed that an average of 128.5 eggs were laid
  per female, with a maximum of 653. 
  However, the average for Carabidae is thought to be much lower than
  this (Clausen 1940/1962).       References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references may
  be found at: MELVYL Library ]   |