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| Immature Stages
  of Lampyridae  Detailed information on immature stages of Lampyridae is being
  acquired.  However, Clausen (1940)
  noted that members of this family are the fireflies or glowworms, which are
  found worldwide, being conspicuous because of the luminescence produced by
  certain organs.  All stages show
  luminescence; even the eggs have a faint glow due to the material with which
  they are coated at the time of oviposition. 
  Several species are diurnal and have the luminescence organs only
  slightly developed or entirely lacking. 
  Females of most species are wingless and somewhat larviform and of
  much greater size than males.  A few
  species are considered phytophagous as adults (Williams 1917), although the
  majority, both adults and larvae, seem to limit feeding to snails, with some
  evidence that cutworms and earthworms also form part of the diet.  The amount of food consumed by the larvae
  is much greater than that consumed by adults, with many of the latter not
  feeding at all.  Larvae are thought to
  inject a powerful toxic agent into the body of the snail host, for death
  occurs quickly after attack, even though the mechanical injury is usually
  very light (Clausen 1940/62).   In Asia, several species are aquatic, the larvae of some living
  in clear flowing streams, while others inhabit standing water such as in rice
  fields.  Their food consists almost
  entirely of aquatic snails.  The
  larvae of most terrestrial species seem to live ca. two years, while aquatic
  forms have an annual cycle. 
  Hibernation is as larvae in a soil chamber on or underneath the
  surface.  They usually pupate in a
  soil cell, beneath trash or on the surface in moist situations.  Early accounts of the biology of several
  common North American species were given by Hess (1920).       References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>,
  [Additional references may be
  found at: MELVYL Library ]   |