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| HYMENOPTERA, Agriotypinae:  Ichneumonidae
  (Ichneumonoidea). --  <Images>
  & <Juveniles>               Agriotypinae
  is a Palaearctic subfamily of the parasitic Ichneumonidae.  Agriotypus is the only genus in the
  group  .The known species are aquatic
  ectoparasitoids of Trichoptera pupae. 
  The placement Agriotypus is not clear as it has been classified
  with both the Proctotrupoidea and  as
  a separate family of Ichneumonoidea.   There are not many species in this
  family, which in 1940 was represented by only two species, Agriotypus armatus in England (Walker 1832) and A. gracilis Waterst. in
  Japan (Clausen 1940/1962).  Both of
  these are aquatic in habit and develop as external parasitoids on prepupae
  and pupae of caddis flies.  A. armatus
  has been found in various parts of Europe, and general observations on its
  habits and biology, with incomplete descriptions of the early stages, have
  been made by Klapalck (1889, 1893) and Henriksen (1918, 1922).  Clausen (1940) noted that it was not until
  1932 than an adequate account of its habits and descriptions of all instars
  were presented.  The Japanese A. gracilis
  was observed by Ota (1917, 1918), who thought it to be distinct from the
  European form, and its habits and early stages were studied by Clausen
  (1931b).   Biology & Behavior  Both of the above species pass
  winter as adults within the cocoon in the caddis fly case and emerge in
  springtime when the water temperature raises enough to induce activity, ca.
  to 13°C in the case of A. armatus.  Of 21 parasitized caddis fly cases
  containing  A. gracilis collected
  at Lake Hakone, Japan on Mar. 25th and placed in a jar of water that quickly
  reached air temperature, complete emergence occurred within two hours.  Females predominated in a ratio of ca. 66%
  &&.   Mating took place very soon after
  emergence, and oviposition followed ca. one week later.  In order to reach caddis fly cases
  occurring on stones, etc., at a depth of 6-15 in. beneath the water surface, the
  female crawls down a plant stem or the side of an exposed stone and searches
  about for them.  There is apparently
  no attempt to swim at any time, and thus it is remarkable that cases
  parasitized by A. gracilis were found as distant as 25
  ft. from the nearest exposed stone or bank. 
  When an inhabited case was found, the ovipositor explored its
  contents.  If the caddis fly were
  still in an active stage, this oviposition thrust caused it to extrude the
  head and thorax from the case, at which time the parasitoid immediately left
  it and searched for another containing a prepupa or pupa.  The ovipositor is inserted, often with
  considerable difficulty, and the egg deposited externally.  When emerging from the water, the female
  merely releases her foothold and floats to the surface, there being no
  movement of either the wings or the legs at this time.  The female may take wing immediately upon
  reaching the surface, or she may coast for several inches, with the wings
  beating rapidly, the middle and hind legs trailing on the water and the
  forelegs sharply raised.   A. gracilis females were found to remain
  under water up to 14 min under experimental conditions, but this was thought
  to be exceeded in nature.  Upon entry
  into the water, the body is completely enveloped in an air bubble that
  conforms to the body outline and encloses the antennae, which are held back
  over the dorsum and the wings.  The
  formation of this bubble is made possible by the dense pubescence that
  clothes the entire body.  The oxygen
  contained within the bubble serves to fill the requirements of the wasp while
  immersed, and the supply is considered much augmented from the surrounding
  water (Clausen 1940/1962).  The
  antennae, being held within the air bubble, are seemingly entirely
  functionless as far as locating the host and determining its suitability are
  concerned.   During hatching, A. gracilis
  eggs form a small break in the tough chorion immediately beneath the mouth of
  the larva, and this aperture is slowly enlarged by a steady forward thrust of
  the body.  The head is bent back over
  the thorax, and the venter of the latter is forced through the aperture
  first.  A further enlargement of the
  opening releases the head, and complete emergence is finally affected.  The emergence hole is circular in outline
  and 2/3rds the width of the egg.  The
  edges are curled back, and there is no splitting along a longitudinal line
  such as occurs in many other Hymenoptera. 
  From 5-8 hrs are required for hatching of the larva from the egg
  (Clausen 1940/1962).   Modifications in form of the 1st
  instar larva are adaptations for locomotion and to prevent it from being
  washed out of the host case.  The
  dorsal rows of spines can be raised to a nearly vertical position and serve,
  in conjunction with the head and the bifurcate caudal appendage, to
  facilitate ready movement between two curved surfaces such as are presented
  by the caddis fly body and the wall of the case.  Respiration is obviously cutaneous, and the oxygen supply is
  derived from the water that flows through the case.  The point of feeding of the young A. armatus larva is
  usually on the underside of the thorax of the prepupa and beneath a wing pad
  on the pupa.  The first molt takes
  place ca. one week after hatching.   There is thought to be an
  internally parasitic phase in the development of the larva, as indicated by
  the supposed 1st instar larva of A.
  armatus found by Henriksen
  (1922).  Only three instars have been
  described, all of which feed externally. 
  The normal number of instars for the order is 5, and two are
  consequently not accounted for.  If
  the larva found by Henrikesn is actually Agriotypus,
  the habits and manner of development are of special interest, because entry
  into the body of the host would be by 1st instar larvae, followed by an
  immediate molt, after which two stages would be passed internally and these
  succeeded by the two external stages that are now known as the 2nd and 3rd.   After the host body contents are
  completely consumed, the Agriotypus
  larva spins its cocoon within the host case. 
  The last larval exuviae of the host, and the pupal remains, are left
  in the form of a pad at the posterior end of the case and are partitioned off
  by the parasitoid cocoon.  This cocoon
  lines the sides of the host case, and its wall is thickest at the anterior
  end.  The ribbon-like appendage, that
  is characteristic of parasitized cases, is then formed, being extruded
  dorsally at the anterior end of the case. 
  This ribbon is 1.0-1.5 mm in width and may be almost 5.0 cm in
  length.  It consists of a closely woven
  outer covering enclosing a mass of tangled silken strands.  Ota considers the ribbon to be a
  protective device.  That it serves in
  respiration is certain, as experiments of Muller (1889, 1891) revealed that
  the larvae and pupae invariably died when the band was removed, although they
  survived if removed from the water. 
  The respiratory requirements of the early larval stages upon the
  living host are met by the absorption of oxygen from the water flowing
  through the case; but after the cocoon is spun the parasitoid larva and its
  following stages are surrounded by air, and some means are necessary to
  replenish the oxygen supply during the many months passed within it.  The way in which oxygen from the
  surrounding water reaches the parasitoid in the cocoon is not definitely
  known, but Clausen (1940) thought that a lower air pressure within the cocoon
  may draw the gas from the water and through the interstices of the silken
  ribbon into it.  Fisher (1932)
  concluded that the gas content of the cocoon may at first be CO-2 exhaled by
  the larva and that this escapes and is replaced by oxygen as soon as the
  ribbon begins to function.    Following spinning of the cocoon,
  the larva remains quiescent for 7-10 days before pupating.  The meconium is cast by the prepupa and is
  found in the form of a ring surrounding the tip of the pupal abdomen but
  separated from it by the last larval exuviae.  There is one generation each year; adults usually emerge during
  April, and the adult stage is again attained at the end of September.  Then the water temperature is declining
  and adults remain quiescent in the cocoon until the following spring (Clausen
  1940/1962).             For detailed
  accounts of the immature stages of Agriotypidae, please see Clausen
  (1940/1962).        References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references may be found at: MELVYL Library ]     |