| File: <chrys1.ima.htm>        [For educational purposes only]       Terminology       Glossary    <Principal Natural
  Enemy Groups >  <Citations> | 
 
| Immature Stages
  of Chrysopidae            Larvae, or "aphis
  lions," and adults of all chrysopids are predaceous, usually feeding on
  aphids, whiteflies, mealybugs and other soft-bodied insects and mites.  Eggs are stalked and the size, shape and
  surface features of the egg are diagnostic. 
  Larvae are distinguished in some species by their habit of carrying a
  packet of trash over the dorsum, which is renewed after the molt.  They pupate in white, spherical, silken
  cocoons, which usually are attached to the underside of leaves.             The eggs of all species are
  similar in form, being oblong in outline, with a small micropylar structure
  at the anterior end.  They are usually
  borne at the ends of filamentous but rigid stalks.  There is a lot of variation in the form of the stalk itself and
  the position in which it is placed. 
  The length of the stalk varies directly with the length of the
  female's abdomen (Smith 1921, 1922b). 
  In the larger species the maximum length is ca. 15 mm.  Some species lay their eggs singly or in
  small groups on the underside of leaves, but C. albolineata
  Kill. places them at the edge, with the stalks in the same plane as the
  leaf.  Chrysopa flava
  Scop. and C. flavifrons Brauer lay the
  cluster of eggs, numbering up to 40, on a common stalk, from the tip of which
  they radiate like a brush (Withycombe (1923).  The stalk really represents a number of individual stalks which
  have fused.  In Notochrysa capitata
  F. the eggs are placed radially on pine needles, and the stalks are knotted
  at regular intervals, or moniliform. 
  The provision of a stalk on which the eggs are borne is thought to be
  for protection.  However, this is not
  entirely successful, for newly hatched larvae often feed on the still
  unhatched eggs, and they may be parasitized by several species of
  Scelionidae.  Williams (1931) found
  that the numerous species of Anomalochrysa,
  native to Hawaii, have elongated oval eggs which are laid on the foliage and
  lack the stalk entirely (see Clausen, 1940 for diagrams).  Eggs are white or pale yellowish-green
  when freshly laid, but change to bluish-green and finally to gray before they
  hatch.             Please CLICK on
  picture to view details:               The newly
  hatched larvae of C jacobsoni v.d.W. return to the
  egg cluster during the first two nights after hatching and remain head downward
  on the stalks (Jacobson 1912).               The three larval instars do not
  differ very much.  Each has a rather
  elongated body, with 9 abdominal segments, and is clothed with hairs which,
  in trash-carrying species, are hooked at the apex.  The head is flat, and the gigantic sickle-like jaws and the
  maxillae extend directly forward.  The
  mandible and maxilla on each side are held together by a flange which fits
  into a groove, which forms a sucking tube through which the body fluids of
  the host are removed.  The true mouth
  seems to be completely closed.               Carrying a packet of trash
  dorsally over the body serves as a means of distinguishing the larvae of
  certain species of the family from those of Hemerobiidae.  These larvae have the abdomen arched and
  shortened.  The packet is rebuilt
  after each molt.  Various materials
  such as host remains and debris, are used in its construction.  In C.
  lineaticollis Fitch the
  larva first thrusts its head beneath the bit of debris and then utilizes the
  jaws in working it backward to the thorax. 
  The numerous fragments are a bit woven together and are forced
  backward as new additions are made at the front.  The anterior half of the packet is free but rests on the
  thoracic tubercles (Smith 1921, 1922b). 
  In other species the fragments are thrown backward over the dorsum and
  are not fastened together.  Species
  carrying trash packets live almost entirely in the open, and the adaptation
  is thus considered to be for protection. 
  When mature, the larvae of some species seek protected places for
  pupation, while others spin the cocoon on the flat leaf surface (Clausen
  1940/62).             The oval, parchment-like cocoon is
  formed from silken strands produced by modified Malpighian tubules and
  released through the anal opening. 
  The pupa pushes off the hinged lid at the time of emergence rather
  than being cut with the mandibles. 
  Jacobson (1912) found that the larva forms this lid at the time of
  cocoon formation, but other researchers are uncertain regarding the way it is
  formed.  The pupa lies curled within
  the cocoon and becomes active only a short time before adult eclosion.  It is able to inflate its body to several
  times the original volume, thus facilitating the opening of the cocoon lid,
  after which it crawls out, wanders about for 1-2 hrs. and then transforms to
  the adult.  Some individuals pass
  through the pupal stage without forming a cocoon.  In multibrooded species, overwintering adults are somewhat
  brownish as contrasted with the green of the summer broods.  This seasonal color change is comparable to
  that found in Hemerobiidae.             Wildermuth (1916) recorded the
  duration of the egg, larval and cocoon stages of C. californica
  Coq. as 6-12, 11-22 and 14-23 days, respectively.  Eggs of C. rufilabris hatch in 3-5 days,
  and the larval and cocoon stages require 18 and 6 days, respectively.  Hibernation may be in any stage except the
  egg, although most pass the winter in the larval or prepupal stage within a
  cocoon.  Chrysopa californica,
  C. carnea Steph., and C.
  ploribunda Fitch hibernate
  as adults in protected spots.  The
  generations per year vary, ranging from only one for C. albolineata
  in England to at least 6 for C.
  californica in Arizona.        References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references may be found at: MELVYL Library ]   |