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| Immature Stages of Encyrtidae               Immature
  stages of Encyrtidae were discussed in detail by Clausen (1940), as follows:             The Encyrtidae reveal an
  exceptional diversity in form of the immature stages, and many of the
  modifications are strictly adaptive. 
  These are made necessary not only by the wide range of hosts attacked,
  but by the varied conditions under which development takes place.              The Egg. --Two general types of
  egg are produced by the Encyrtidae, there being the stalked and the
  encyrtiform, the latter representing an adaptive modification of the
  first.  In both forms, the ovarian egg
  is two‑bodied, and the contents of the anterior body, or bulb, are
  forced into the egg proper at the time of oviposition, leaving the stalk as a
  slender tube at the anterior end.  In
  the stalked form, this stalk is functionless after deposition but may, in
  some instances, serve to attach the egg to the integument or to other of the
  internal organs of the host. 
  Representative genera having this type of egg are Aphidencyrtus, Cerapterocerus,
  Eusemion, and Anarhopus.  In Tetracnemus
  pretiosus, according to
  Clancy, the stalk is reduced to a broad, blunt petiole one‑third to one‑fourth
  the length of the egg body.              Please CLICK on
  pictures to view details:                 Please CLICK on
  pictures to view details:                 The
  encyrtiform egg is distinguished from the stalked form by a heavy surface
  rib, termed the aeroscopic plate by Silvestri (1919), which extends the
  length of the stalk and of the greater portion of the egg itself.  Well‑known genera having encyrtiform
  eggs are Encyrtus, Microterys (Fig. 73A, B), Aphycus, Metaphycus, Blastothrix,
  and Ooencyrtus.  The plate of O. johnsoni
  is described by Maple as granulate in appearance and is composed of a mosaic
  of cells upon the outer surface of the stalk and egg body except for a
  thickened area near the base of what remains of the bulb of the ovarian
  egg.  In deposited eggs, the plate is
  much darker than the remainder of the chorion.             In two species of Isodromus parasitic in Chrysopa larvae, it has been
  found by Clancy that the egg of one, I.
  niger Ashm., is typically
  encyrtiform, whereas the other, I.
  iceryae How. (Fig. 74),
  lacks the aeroscopic plate and bears merely a melanized ring and a delicate
  membranous collar on the stalk.              First‑instar Larvae. --Among
  the monoembryonic species of the family, four forms of first‑instar
  larvae may be distinguished, based upon morphological modifications having a
  functional nature.  The
  hymenopteriform larva has a body of 12-13 visible segments, is widest in the
  thoracic or anterior abdominal region, and has no sculpturing or segmental
  processes.  These larvae lie free in
  the body cavity of the host and lack the open tracheal system.  A typical representative of this group is Comperiella bifasciata How.  (Compere and Smith, 1927).              The second is the encyrtiform, so
  called because it hatches from the encyrtiform egg previously described.  The number of body segments is reduced,
  there being only 10-11 visible, and the last segment, which bears the single
  pair of spiracles, apparently represents several that have fused.  The last four or five segments are usually
  closely enveloped by the eggshell, and this connection persists through the
  greater portion of the larval stage. 
  The larva of Isodromus
  iceryae, which hatches from
  the modified encyrtiform egg already described, is hymenopteriform, for it
  lacks the posterior spiracles and consequently does not derive its air supply
  through the stalk.  Both the egg and
  first‑instar larva of this species appear to represent transitional
  stages between the hymenopteriform and the encyrtiform type.  The genus Microterys contains many well‑known species having
  encyrtiform larvae; yet it has been shown by De Bach that in M. titiani it is hymenopteriform, with a full complement of
  spiracles.              The caudate larva (Fig. 77A) is
  frequently found among the species attacking Coccidae and Aphididae and is
  characterized by the development of the last abdominal segment into a tail‑like
  organ that may exceed the body proper in length and may bear setae on the
  distal portion.  It is associated
  with the stalked type of egg.  These
  larvae do not possess open spiracles. 
  Many genera have larvae of this type, the best known being Aphidencyrtus, Cerapterocerus, Cheiloneurus, Eusemion, and others.             The vesiculate form is similar to
  the hymenopteriform, except that the proctodaeum is evaginated to form a
  caudal vesicle.  This modification is
  rare among the Encyrtidae and is at present known only in the genera Anarhopus and Clausenia (Fig. 76C), both of
  which parasitize mealybugs.  Tetracnemus pretiosus (Fig. 76A, B) may be
  of the same type, though it is uncertain whether or not the small expanded
  organ on the caudal segment corresponds to the vesicle in the above‑named
  species.  Both A. sydneyensis
  and T.  pretiosus
  are distinguished from other known Encyrtidae by the presence of a ring of
  fleshy processes or protuberances on the first 12 body segments; and the
  former has also a single, curved medium process dorsally on the last segment,
  immediately above the vesicle.              Intermediate‑instar and
  Mature Larvae. --The greatest diversification in form occurs in the first
  instar, and the succeeding forms tend to become more uniform as the final
  instar is reached.  The
  hymenopteriform larva, which lies free in the body cavity of the host,
  progresses through the series of molts without appreciable change in its
  essential characters.  In the caudate
  forms, the tail becomes considerably reduced in size in the second instar and
  practically disappears in the third. 
  The vesiculate forms, on the other hand, show an enlargement of the
  vesicle in the second and third instars. 
  In Anarhopus and Tetracnemus, the ring of fleshy
  protuberances on each body segment of the first‑instar larva is lacking
  after the first molt.             The number and position of the
  spiracles of the larvae are an exceedingly variable character in
  Encyrtidae.  In the hymenopteriform
  larva, the spiracles are lacking in the first and second instars, but they
  appear on the second to the tenth body segments in the third or a later
  instar.  Among the species having
  caudate larvae,  Cerapterocerus mirabilis
  Westw. is stated to lack spiracles until the fourth instar, at which time the
  nine pairs appear in the position already mentioned.  In Carabunia
  myersi (Fig. 73), they are
  first found on what is stated to be the third and final instar, and only
  three in number, the anterior pair being on one of the thoracic segments and the
  remaining two pairs on the abdominal segments immediately preceding the
  caudal appendage             Information regarding the spiracle
  arrangement of vesiculate larvae is available only for Anarhopus sydneyensis.  In this species, they are lacking on the
  first instar and occur on the second to tenth body segments of the second and
  last instar.  Tetracncmus pretiosus
  has no open spiracles until the final instar, when the full complement
  appears.              The first‑instar encyrtiform
  larvae possess a single pair of spiracles on the last apparent abdominal
  segment.  This arrangement persists in
  the following two instars, and the nine pairs of spiracles then appear on the
  fourth instar.  In Microterys speciosus (Ishii, 1923), they are stated to appear on the
  third instar.  Clancy mentioned that
  the second instar of Isodromus
  is readily distinguished from the first by the presence of the spiracular
  spurs in the second to ninth body segments, and this character may be common
  to many second‑instar larvae of the encyrtiform type.  A marked departure from the normal for the
  family occurs in Metaphycus lounsburyi (Smith and Compere,
  1920), in which the single caudal pair of spiracles of the first instar is
  followed by three additional pairs, situated on the second to fourth body
  segments, on the second instar, and by the usual nine on the third
  instar.               A further modification in
  spiracular arrangement is found in certain species of Encyrtus having encyrtiform larvae, which acquire in their
  later stages an intimate connection with the host respiratory system.  In E.
  infelix (Thorpe, 1936), the
  fourth instar has 3 pairs of spiracles, one of which is on the prothorax and
  the remaining two at the posterior end of the abdomen.  The caudal spiracles are borne at the end
  of a pair of slender tube‑like processes, merely enclosing the tracheal
  tubes, half to‑two‑thirds the length of the body proper.  The fifth‑instar larva bears only
  two pairs of spiracles, one at each end of the body.   This spiracular modification occurs also
  in E. infidus, though one instar apparently was overlooked, and
  the described third (Fig. 70B) is identical with the fourth of E. infelix.  Ishii
  (1932a) described the supposed first‑instar larva of E. barbatus Timb. which has the three pairs of spiracles
  arranged in identically the same manner as is given above for the fourth
  instar.  The large size of this larva
  indicates that it may be a later instar than that stated (Clausen 1940).             In considering the various
  adaptations, it is seen that the characters mentioned are common to a number
  of genera and that, in some instances, all species of a given genus do not
  reveal the same modifications.    References:  
  Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>,
  [Additional
  references may be found at: MELVYL Library ]   |