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| DIPTERA, Drosophilidae --  <Images> & <Juveniles>   Please refer also
  to the following links for details on this group:    Drosophilidae = Link 1   The majority of species of Drosophilidae develop in decaying
  fungi, fruits and similar materials, but there is a small number which are
  predaceous or parasitic in habit. 
  Larvae of genera Acletoxenus,
  Gitona and Gitonides are predaceous on Homoptera, and Titanochaeta ichneumon
  Knab was reared from spider egg sacs (Knab 1914).  Gitonides perspicax Knab is a predator on
  mealybugs in Hawaii and Asia, and Pseudiastata
  brasiliensis C.L. attacks Pseudococcus in South America.  Rhinoleucophenga
  obesa Lw. is predaceous in egg sacs
  of Aclerda campinensis Hemp. in Brazil, and an undetermined species is found
  in those of Orthesia in
  Brazil.  Acletoxenus seems restricted in its host preferences to
  Aleyrodidae, and a short account of the habits of A. indica Malloch was
  given by Clausen & Berry 1932). 
  In some parts of Java it is the dominant predator attacking Aleurocanthus spp.  The eggs are somewhat oblong, measuring
  0.4 X 0.2 mm., and are covered with a white waxy incrustation.  They are laid singly on the leaf surface
  adjacent to mature host larvae or pupae. 
  The larva is at first translucent white, but later becomes distinctly
  greenish.  It is very sluggish and
  never moves from the leaf on which the egg was laid.  A single host cluster provides ample food
  for its development.  The larva in its
  later stages secretes an adhesive substance of the body which attaches
  various extraneous matter, including host exuviae, to it.  Pupation occurs in situ on the leaf
  surface, and the developing fly can be readily seen through the
  semitransparent puparial wall.  Empty
  puparia are noticeable among host colonies by their white color.  The life cycle takes ca. 2 weeks (Clausen
  1940/62).   The dominant genus Drosophila
  contains several species of questionable parasitic or predaceous habit.  Bonnamour (1921) reared D. rubrostriata
  Beck. from caterpillars of Pieris brassicae L. confined with gravid
  females.  Host larvae probably die by
  oviposition of the fly.  Liquefaction
  of the body contents is rapid, and the larvae then feed mostly as
  scavengers.  Drosophila paradoxa
  Lamb and D. inversa Wlk. have been found to attack nymphs of the cercopid
  genus Clastoptera in tropical
  America.  Clausen (1940) noted that
  there is some question as to the role of the larvae attacking this host, as
  some researchers consider that they are inquilines, feeding mostly if not
  entirely on the spittle surrounding them. 
  However, Lamb (1918) noted that half the masses contained D. paradoxa
  larvae, with their heads embedded in the bodies of the host nymphs.  In D.
  inversa Baerg (1920) found that the
  larvae usually lie diagonally across the host's dorsum, with mandibles
  embedded in the 4th or 5th abdominal segment.  He did not consider this species to be a true parasitoid but
  rather that it fed only on spittle. 
  The fact that the larvae have a fixed position and embed the mandibles
  or even the entire head in the host body suggests a closer relationship than
  would be necessary for a scavenger (Clausen 1940/62).  The larval habits and host relationships
  recall those of epipyropid larvae that are associated with Fulgoridae and
  related families (Clausen 1940/62).     References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references
  may be found at:  MELVYL
  Library]   |