| File: <conio1.ima.htm>        [For educational purposes only]       Terminology       Glossary    <Principal Natural
  Enemy Groups >  <Citations> | 
 
| Immature Stages
  of Coniopterygidae            Both adults and immatures feed on
  small, relatively inactive prey such as coccids, mites and aphids.  They are mainly found on shrubs and trees,
  although some species seem to be confined to low vegetation.              Eggs are laid singly on infested
  foliage.  They are oval in outline,
  flattened dorsoventrally, and slightly pointed at the micropylar end.  The chorion surface bears reticulate
  markings.  Eggs of C. hageni Banks are yellowish-pink, although some may have an
  orange tint (Quayle 1913).  Conwentzia psociformis lays a total of ca. 200 eggs.             The number of larval instars was
  noted as 4 for C. hageni (Quayle 1913).  Larvae of this species feed on all stages
  of red mites, the body contents being entirely sucked out from a single
  puncture.  One larva consumed 226 red
  mites during its feeding period.  The
  oval, flattened cocoons of Conwentzia
  are usually found on the underside of leaves or on bark.  They consist of a double layer of silk
  with loosely woven margins.  Cocoons
  of Semidalis aleyrodiformis Steph. do not
  have a clear double layer of silk. 
  Withycombe (1923, 1924a) found that the pupal skin is often left
  within the cocoon rather than discarded after adult emergence.             The life cycle of C. hageni is 37-43 days in summer, of which the egg, larval
  and cocoon stages cover 6-8, 18-22 and 13 days, respectively.  Semidalis
  aleyrodiformis overwinters
  as mature larvae within the cocoon, while a portion of the adults of the
  first brood of C. psociformis persist in
  sheltered spots until the following springtime (Clausen 1940/62).      
  References:   Please
  refer to  <biology.ref.htm>,
  [Additional references may be
  found at: MELVYL Library ]   |