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| HYMENOPTERA, Trigonaloidea, Trigonalidae   Description &
  Statistics  Trigonalidae are parasitoids of Vespidae or of parasitoids of
  caterpillars.  Some species are
  primary parasitoids of the larvae of sawflies.  The females deposit their eggs on foliage.  In species attacking caterpillars, the
  eggs hatch when consumed by a caterpillar, and the trigonalid larva attacks
  the ichneumonid, tachinid or other parasitoid larva present within the
  caterpillar.  In those attacking
  vespoid larvae, it is believed that a caterpillar, which in turn is eaten by
  a vespid wasp, consumes the eggs. 
  When regurgitating the caterpillar and feeding it to its young, there
  is a transfer of the trigonalid larvae from the caterpillar to the wasp larva.   All members of this superfamily are small, and rather rare. There
  were less than 5 species kinown in North America as of 2000.  Trigonalids are small and usually
  bright-colored and rather sturdy. 
  They have the appearance of wasps, but their antennae are longer with
  at least 16 segments (Mason 1993)   Discussion             This is one of the more
  unusual families of hymenopteran insects, of unknown affinity within the suborder
  Apocrita (though sometimes believed to be related to the Evanioidea), and
  presently placed in its own superfamily, Trigonaloidea. Trigonalidae is
  divided into two subfamilies, Orthogonalinae and Trigonalinae. These wasps
  are extremely rare but very diverse, with about 94 species in over 15 genera,
  and are distributed worldwide.             Studies on the biology
  of these insects indicates a rather unusual life history where almost all
  known species have females that lay thousands of minute eggs, "clamping"
  them to the edges or injecting them inside of leaves. The egg must then be
  consumed by a caterpillar. Once inside the caterpillar, the trigonalid egg
  either hatches and attacks any other
  parasitoid larvae (including its siblings) in the caterpillar, or it waits
  until the caterpillar has died  and
  fed to a vespid larva, which it then attacks. Therefore, they are parasitoids
  or hyperparasitoids, but in a unique manner among the insects, where the eggs
  must be swallowed by a host. However, there are some species that are known
  to directly parasitize sawflies.     References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references
  may be found at:  MELVYL
  Library]   Townes, H. 
  1956.  The nearctic species of
  trigonalid wasps.  Proc. U. S. Natl.
  Mus. 106:  295-302.   |