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| Immature Stages
  of Agriotypidae               Immature stages of Agriotypidae were discussed in
  detail by Clausen (1940), as follows:             The egg of Agriotypus  gracilis Waterston measures 0.
  9 mm.  in length and 0. 18 mm. in
  greatest width and is slightly larger than that of A.  armatus.  It is slightly convex dorsally and broadest
  at the anterior end, and the posterior end is smoothly rounded.  The chorion is exceedingly thick and
  tough.  At the anterior end is a heavy
  pedicel of variable length, ranging up to 0.25 mm., the distal extremity of
  which is irregularly expanded.  This
  "button" is embedded in the integument of the host and anchors the
  egg firmly in position.  Both pedicel
  and button become black and shriveled after deposition.  It is noteworthy that the pedicel
  mentioned is not represented by any modification in the ovarian egg, which is
  elongated and oval in form and has the anterior end smoothly rounded.  This, and the fact that the pedicel
  darkens and shrivels quickly after formation, would indicate that it may be
  formed from secretions of the accessory glands or from material that appears
  to envelop the anterior end of the ovarian egg, though this aspect has not
  been studied.  It may be emphasized,
  also, that the pedicel is situated at the anterior end of the egg, whereas in
  other pedicellate ichneumonoid eggs the pedicel and its "anchor"
  are represented by definite structures on the ovarian egg and are situated at
  the posterior end.  As the embryo
  develops, the paired caudal processes can be seen lying along the mid‑ventral
  line and extending forward to the posterior margin of the head.               Please CLICK on
  picture to view details:               The first‑instar larvae
  (Fig. 41A, B) of the two species present no apparent points of
  distinction.  The body comprises 13 segments,
  exclusive of the head, and measures 1.2 mm. in length to the base of the
  caudal processes.  The head is heavily
  sclerotized, slightly broader than long, and bears dorsally a pair of horn‑like
  structures markedly similar to those of the planidia of the
  Perilampidae.  There are four pairs of
  minute setae dorsally and three pairs ventrally.  The mandibles are simple. 
  Each body segment except the last bears a median transverse row of
  heavy spines dorsally, and these diminish in length caudad.  On the first five segments, the rows are
  continuous across the dorsum, but on those following the rows are
  interrupted medially.  The first
  segment bears two pairs of lateral setae, and the following segments bear one
  pair.  The venter of each of the first
  eight segments bears a broad band of minute setae, and on each of the
  following four segments the band is interrupted medially.  The caudal segment is bifurcate, and the
  two tapering, heavily sclerotized prongs are 0. 9 mm. in length, diverge at
  an angle of about 80 deg., and are directed somewhat ventrad.  The lobes at the base of the prongs bear
  numerous robust setae dorsolaterally. 
  The anal opening is ventral on the last segment.  There are no spiracles and no visible
  internal tracheal system.              Henriksen describes the supposed
  first‑instar larva of A.  armatus
  (Fig. 42) which he states was found internally in Silo and Goera.  Aside from its occurrence internally, it
  differs markedly in form from the actual first‑instar larva described
  by Fisher.  The body is 1.4 mm. in
  length, cylindrical, with the caudal end bluntly rounded and lacking the
  bifurcate process.  Certain
  characters, however, seem to link it with the Agriotypidae, these being the
  "horn‑like" structures on the head and the transverse rows of
  spines on the dorsum of the body.  It
  seems Improbable that this larva can be of Agriotypus, but if this proves to be the case it must be
  the second instar rather than the first.             The second‑instar larva of A. armatus (Fig. 41D) described by Fisher differs from the
  first in lacking the heavy integumentary spines, and the long bifurcate
  caudal process is replaced by a pair of shorter, heavy, opposed hooks.  The mandibles are conspicuously toothed.  An internal tracheal system is present though
  there are no spiracles, and the transverse commissures, also, are apparently
  lacking.              The third and last larval instar
  is similar to the second, though the caudal hooks are relatively much
  smaller.  The head is quadrate in
  form, and the mandibles are coarsely dentate.  In A. armatus, there are thought to
  be no spiracles, whereas nine pairs occur in A. gracilis.  In view of the conditions under which the
  mature larva passes the last portion of the stage, in which it is surrounded
  by air rather than water, open spiracles would seem to be essential (Clausen
  1940     References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>,
  [Additional
  references may be found at: MELVYL Library ]   |