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| HYMENOPTERA, Calliceratidae (Ceraphronoidea) --  <Images>
  & <Juveniles>            
  This is a small family with hosts in the Diptera, Hymenoptera,
  Lepidoptera, Coleoptera and Homoptera. 
  They are more generally found as secondary external parasitoids of
  Aphididae and dactylopine Coccidae, through Braconidae and chalcidoid
  primaries.  Calliceras abnormis
  Perk. attacks mature dryinid larvae in their cocoons in Hawaii, and Lygocerus semiramosus Kieff, is a secondary parasitoid of Chermidae through
  Encyrtidae in India (Clausen 1940/1962).   Biology & Behavior            Lygocerus cameroni
  Kieff. is a secondary parasitoid of aphids through aphidius spp. (Haviland 1920). 
  It attacks mature larvae and sometimes early pupae of Aphidius and also may develop on
  corresponding stages of its own species. 
  It is solitary and external. 
  Oviposition occurs only after the body contents of the aphid have been
  completely consumed by aphidius and
  only the shell remains, which is lined with silk by the mature larva of the
  primary parasitoid.  Females may
  either stand on the aphid body during oviposition or insert their ovipositor
  by a backward thrust.  The egg is laid
  on the dorsum of the body of the aphidius
  larva or pupa.  The meconium is cast
  by the prepupa, appearing as a single black spherical mass lying in the
  mid-ventral curve of the pupa.  The
  cycle from egg to adult is complete in 21-24 days, of which the egg, larval
  and pupal stages take 1, 6-7 and 14-16 days, respectively.  The number of eggs per female was
  estimated at not more than 25, and the sex ratio was ca. 1.5:1 in favor of
  females.             Spencer (1926) studying L.
  niger How. found that the host
  preferences and habits are similar to those given for L. cameroni.  Development takes place occasionally on
  its own larvae also.  The egg is
  placed somewhat ventrally, rather than dorsally, on the Aphidius larva of pupa. 
  The body of the pupa is curved ventrally into a semicircle, and the
  single meconial pellet lies at the middle of the curve and is encircled by
  the antennae for 3/4ths of its circumference.  The cycle from egg to adult takes an average of 14 days.  There is no thelytoky known.             The genus Lygocerus is
  also hyperparasitic on mealybugs.  Lygocerus sp. is a secondary
  parasitoid of Pseudococcus sp.
  through the encyrtid, Clausenia purpurea Ishii, in Japan.  Attack is limited to pupae, and it was not
  possible to secure oviposition on mature larvae.  Due to the host cell's ellipsoidal form, the pupa is fully
  extended rather than curved as described for L. cameroni, and the
  single meconial pellet lies at the tip of the abdomen.  Withycombe (1924a) found a female of Lygocerus sp. to bite a hole in the
  cocoon of Conwentzia psociformis Curt. before depositing her
  egg (Clausen 1940/1962).             A conical process on the last abdominal segment of the larva of L. cameroni,
  which occurs in other species of the genus, is believed to serve for
  locomotion (Haviland 1920).  There
  really does not seem to be a need for locomotion in confined quarters that
  the larva occupies, but the exceptional mobility of the posterior portion of
  the body, observed in Lygocerus
  sp., supports this assumption.  The
  movements of the tapering abdominal end of the body suggest those of the head
  and thorax of syrphid larvae when searching for food (Clausen
  1940/1962).               Two species of Conostigmus
  reared by Kamel (1939) were C. zaglouli Kamal and C. timberlakei
  Kamal, taken from puparia of Syrphidae in California.  These are gregarious external parasitoids
  on the pupa within the puparium.  Eggs
  are laid on the integument of the newly formed pupa and hatch in 2 days.  The larval period is long, covering ca. 24
  days, and the pupal period is 6-8 days. 
  The cycle from egg to adult requires slightly more than 1 month.  Mature larvae of C. zaglouli may go into
  diapause for several months under adverse conditions.  The meconium is in the form of a large
  number of minute pellets rather than a single spherical mass such as found in
  Lygocerus.  A maximum of 33 individuals were reared
  from a single puparium.             Most if not all members of the family develop externally,
  although within the cocoon, puparium, or dead body of the primary of
  secondary host.  There is no case in
  which attack is on naked larvae or pupae.            
  For
  detailed descriptions of immature stages of Calliceratidae, please see
  Clausen (1940/1962).     References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references
  may be found at:  MELVYL
  Library]   |