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| HEMIPTERA, Lygaeidae (Schilling
  1829) --  <Images>
  & <Juveniles>   Description  The subfamily Rhyparochrominae has been regarded as principally predaceous.  Adults and nymphs of Geocoris punctipes Say
  are common predators on European red mite, Paratetranychus pilosus
  C. & F., on cotton in the southern United States (McGregor &
  McDonough 1917).  The nymphs consume
  ca. 1,600 red spiders during their development, and adults account for ca. 80
  per day.  Eggs are laid singly among
  the hosts, and the life cycle from egg to adult is ca. 30 days.  In Fiji, Germalus pacificus
  Banks is regarded as an important natural enemy of the fruit fly, Chaetodacus passiflorae Frogg.  Nymphs
  and adults suck the contents of the eggs, which are embedded in the fruit
  rind (Clausen 1940/1962).             There are about 22
  genera, and include the insects that are known as chinch bugs, milkweed bugs,
  and also some seed bugs.  Most species
  feed on seeds, although some are predators of other insects.  There are also sap feeders  (mucivory), and others that are hematophagous
  (blood-sucking).   Lygaeidae is a large cosmopolitan family with more than 2,050
  species described species as of 1993. 
  Diagnostic characters include a forewing membrane with only 4-5 simple
  veins, 4-segmented antennae and rostrum, 3-segmented tarsi, there are
  pulvilli present, and the ocelli  are
  ususally  present.  Most are dull colored and of 3-15 mm. in
  size.   Most species are phytophagous, but some in the subfamily
  Geocorinae, the "big-eyed bugs," are facultative predators with a
  wide  host range that includes
  phytophagous insect.  There are
  Myrmecophilous, coprophagous, and saprophagous, but the seed-feeding species
  outnumber other types.  They are not
  used in biological pest control directly, but some  Geocoris spp. are
  considered important to the agroecosystem.   References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references
  may be found at:  MELVYL
  Library]   Grimaldi,
  D. A. & Michael S. Engel (2007). "An unusual, primitive Piesmatidae
  (Insecta: Heteroptera) in Cretaceous amber from Myanmar (Burma)" (PDF). American
  Museum Novitates 3611: 1–17   Miller, N. C. E.  1971.  The Biology of the Heteroptera.  E. W. Classey Ltd., Hampton Middlesex,
  England.  206 p.   van Duzee, E. P.  1917.  Catalogue of the Hemiptera of America
  North of Mexico, Excepting the Aphididae, Coccidae and Aleurodidae.  Univ. Calif. Publ., Tech. Bull. Ent.
  II.  902 p.   |