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| Immature Stages
  of Braconidae              Immature stages of Braconidae were discussed in
  detail by Clausen (1940), as follows:             The Egg.--The general form of the
  eggs of the Braconidae is simple, ranging in outline from broadly oval to
  almost cylindrical but frequently somewhat pear‑shaped, or elongate and
  tapering at both ends and usually without a stalk or pedicel.  The egg of Microbracon lendicivorus
  (Fig. 13B) differs from those of other Vipioninae in having a slender
  tapering stalk, slightly longer than the egg body, at what is presumably the
  anterior end. In Dendrosoter
  protuberans Nees (Fig. 13G),
  the stalk is very broad and bent back upon the egg body in a characteristic
  way, whereas, the stalk of Coeloides
  subconcolor Russo (Fig. 13F)
  is long and has a distinctly segmented appearance (Russo, 1938).  Most of the species of Apanteles have a short peduncle
  at the posterior end, and Opius
  crawfordi Vier. has this
  peduncle equal to or longer than the egg body. Other species of the latter
  genus lack the peduncle entirely or have it in a very reduced form (Fig. 13D,
  E).  A thin, transparent membrane
  possibly the exochorion envelops the egg of O. tryoni, which is broken during the period of incubation owing
  to increase in size of the egg. This recalls a similar egg envelope found by
  Dowden in Brachymeria compsilurae Cw.               Please CLICK on
  pictures to view details:                 The Euphorinae have the stalk at the posterior
  end, and in some species of Perilitus
  it is nearly as long as the main body. The same is true in a number of
  species of Meteorinae.  The egg of Alysia manducator (Fig. 13C) bears a pronounced buttonlike
  tubercle at its larger, presumably anterior end.  Although the evidence is not complete and there are several
  apparent exceptions, it appears that tho stalk of the braconid egg, when
  present, is usually situated at the posterior end.  In no instance does it serve any definite purpose after
  deposition.             The eggs of Ascogaster, Phanerotoma,
  and Chelonus, which are
  dcposited in those of the host, are of minute size, measuring 0.2 mm. or less
  in length.  In all species of the
  family the chorion is thin and transparent, and usually has no surface
  sculpturing, though in Meteorus
  versicolor and Microdus dimidiatus it bears minute hexagonal markings.              First‑instar Larvae. --The
  first‑instar larvae of the Braconidae represent a considerable variety
  of forms, comprising the hymenopteriform, mandibulate, caudate, vesiculate
  and polypodeiform.  It is often
  debatable; particularly in reference to this family, as to whether a
  particular larva should be classified as mandibulate, caudate, vesiculate, or
  polypodeiform, for it may possess two, or in some cases three, of the
  characters upon which the grouping is based. 
  The hymenopteriform larva has a medium‑sized head, 13 body
  segments, which usually bear transverse bands or rows of setae, and spiracles
  on the first thoracic and the first eight abdominal segments.  This type of larva is representative of
  the ectophagous forms, comprising the Vipioninae and representatives of the
  Braconinae and Horminae, and will doubtless be found in other groups.  Bracon sp., probably B. hylobii
  Ratz., is distinguished by the lack of spiracles (Munro, 1917).              The mandibulate larvae are found
  generally in the Opiinae and, in combination with the caudate character, in
  the Euphorinae, Triaspinae, Alysiinne, and Pambolinae.  Vesicle‑bearing larvae of this type
  occur in the Macrocentrinae.  The
  larva of Opius tryoni (Pemberton and Willard,
  1918) is typical of the Opiinae and has a large, heavily sclerotized head,
  large falcate mandibles, and short, blunt antennae.  A pair of fleshy finger‑like
  processes is found ventrally at the anterior margin of the first thoracic
  segment.  A well‑defined tracheal
  system, with anterior and posterior commissures, is present and filled with
  air, but there are no spiracles.  The
  larvae of O. humilis, O. fletcheri  (Fig. 
  15), and O. fullawayi are very similar to
  that of O. tryoni.  Keilin and Picado (l913) have made an
  extended study of the first‑instar larva of O. crawfordi (Fig. 
  16A), which has an almost spherical head, a pair of very large mamma‑like
  processes, each surmounted by three sensory papillae, on the first thoracic
  segment and a smaller conical‑shaped pair on the third segment.  These processes are on the concave side of
  the body, as is also the anal opening. 
  The authors assert that the concave side of the body, to which the
  mouth opening is directed, is in reality the dorsum and support their
  conclusion by demonstrating the presence of the nerve cord along the convex
  side and of the heart on the concave side. Recognition of the markedly
  concave side of the first‑instar larva as dorsal rather than ventral is
  also reported by Baume‑Pluvinel (1914) in Adelura gahani
  B.‑P. (Fig.  16B), which
  develops in the larvae of various Phytomyzinae.  Further investigation of this interesting point in other
  species would be desirable.               The larva of Ascogaster quadridentata
  has an exceedingly large head and 13 body segments of diminishing width, with
  no tail or other fleshy processes, whereas Chelonus annulipes,
  which is of modified mandibulate form, has a short tail following the 8 or
  less distinct body segments.  The
  larva of Macrocentrus ancylivoruss is elongate in
  form and has a pair of short fleshy processes and a short caudal horn on the
  last segment.  The anal vesicle is
  relatively small.  In the Euphorinae
  the large, heavily sclerotized head, bearing the falcate mandibles at the
  front, is followed by 12 or 13 body segments of decreasing width and a rather
  short tail, which bears setae on the distal half or two‑thirds.              The true vesticulate larvae are
  found mainly in the subfamily Microgasterinae, of which the principal studies
  have been made in the genera Apanteles
  and Microgaster.  At the time of hatching, many of these
  have the general appearance of mandibulate larvae, and they may bear a fleshy
  tail approaching half the length of the body proper.  Usually only 10 or 11 ring-like body
  segments are distinguishable, the last segment apparently representing
  several that have fused.  Each of the
  segments usually bear a transverse row of setae dorsally.  In A.
  tasmanica Cam. (Dumbleton
  1935) and Miscogaster tibialis (Fig. 17a) (Vance,
  1932a), the rows of setae are lacking on the first two segments, while in
  other species they are missing on only the first segment.  The vesicle appears shortly after feeding
  begins, and its width is then equal to or greater than that of the preceding
  segments (Fig. 17C).  The body at this
  time is somewhat cylindrical, and the tail, which previously was prominent,
  now appears as only a small ventrally directed "horn" beneath the
  vesicle.  In A. militaris
  (Tower 1915), A. hyphantriae Riley, and A. thompsoni, there is no indication of a tail structure at
  any time, and the bulb-like vesicle is well developed even before hatching.             Please CLICK on
  pictures to view details:                
  The wall of the proctodeum of the first‑instar larva of Orgilus obscurator Nees is relatively thin (Fig. 18), but it
  increases greatly in thickness in the second instar (Thorpe 1932).              The simple caudate type of larva,
  without other adaptive modifications, is found principally in the Meteorinae
  and Aphidiinae, whereas the tail in some form is present in practically all
  groups which develop internally.  In Meteorus, there are 12 or 13
  segments exclusive of the tail, and the latter may exceed the body in length,
  though in some species it is only one‑eighth as long.  Each segment usually bears a transverse
  row of setae on the dorsum, and the tail may also bear setae.  The first‑instar larvae of many of
  the Aphidiinae are recognizable principally by the possession of a row or
  comb of heavy setae at the posterior margins of each body segment and by the
  two ventrally directed lobes of the last segment.  The tail in this subfamily is usually somewhat tubular in form
  with the distal end rounded.  There
  are 13 distinct body segments.  The
  fringe of spines at the posterior margin of each segment dorsally and
  extending to the lateroventral margins is, so far as known, found only in Praon, while in P. simulans,  studied
  by Timberlake (1910), they occur only on the third thoracic segment and on
  all abdominal segments except the last. 
  Janiszewska (1933) describes the larva of an undetermined Aphidiine
  believed to be Aphidius, in
  which this row or comb of spines is present on each body segment.  In Ephedrus
  incompletus Prov. (Wheeler
  1923) and other species of the genus, the larva (Fig. 19) bears on each
  segment a median transverse ridge which is more pronounced on the dorsum and
  sides and is strongly serrate, with the teeth directed caudad.  The tail also is heavily and completely
  spined, with the spines arranged in rings about it. These adaptations are
  possibly locomotory in function.  The
  ventrally directed bilobed process of the caudal segment is found in Praon, in Ephedrus, and in some species of Aphidius, and consists of two conical or finger‑like
  processes, about the length of one segment, situated ventrally at the base of
  the tail.  The majority of the species
  of the genus Aphidius have
  simple caudate larvae, which lack entirely the integumentary spines and the
  paired caudal process, and the tail is only lightly spined on its distal
  portion.  Larvae of the Aphidiinae
  have the anal opening ventrally at the base of the tail rather than dorsally;
  in the species having the lobed processes, it is situated between the bases
  of the lobes and the tail.              The polypodeiform larva is found
  in isolated species in a number of subfamilies.  That of Dacnusa
  navicularis var. cynaraphila Ric. (Ricchello
  1928) (Fig. 20A) is, except for its paired ventral processes, typically
  caudate, with a transverse row of setae dorsally on each abdominal
  segment.  The paired ventral processes
  occur upon each of the 12 body segments and are surmounted by a group or row
  of setae.  The larva of D. areolaris (Fig. 
  20D), on the other hand, lacks the tail and the paired ventral
  processes (Haviland, 1922a).  Bassus dimidiator
  (Fig. 21) (Silvestri, 1923a), B.
  pumilus Ratz. (Thorpe,
  1933), B. stigmaterus Cress, and Macrocentrus gifuensis are distinguished by
  having two pairs of fleshy processes on each segment.  In M.
  gifuensis, these are present
  on the first 12 segments and are of uniform size, whereas in the first two
  species named they are lacking on the first segment and are of slightly
  greater size on the abdomen.             
  The respiratory system of first‑instar larvae of certain of the
  endoparasitic species, such as the Opiinae, consists of the two lateral
  trunks with branches at the various segments and an anterior dorsal and a
  posterior ventral commissure.  In a considerable
  number of species, however, there is a complete lack of the tracheal system
  in this instar.             
  n the great majority of species, the mandibles are simple, though
  several exceptions occur.  Those of Microbracon brevicornis are dentate on the
  lower border, whereas in Bracon
  tachardiae they are dentate,
  the teeth being long and spine‑like, and in Heterospsilus cephi
  (Hill and Smith, 1931) the main tooth is followed by five or six elongate
  teeth in comb‑like arrangement along the inner edge.  It will be noted that these departures
  from the normal are in species which feed externally.             
  Intermediate‑ and Final‑instar Larvae. --The intermediate
  larval instars of the ectoparasitic species do not differ in any essential
  character from the first instar. 
  Among the internal parasites, the mandibulate‑type larva loses
  the large, heavily sclerotized head, with its long falcate mandibles, at the
  first molt, and in the caudate forms the tail is reduced in size with each
  succeeding molt and is entirely lacking in the last instar.  In some species having five instars, it
  disappears after the second molt, and in Cosmophorus
  henscheli it is entirely
  absent in the second and following instars.             
  Many first‑instar Apanteles
  larvae have a tail, or "caudal horn," situated beneath the vesicle,
  which in some species disappears entirely at the first molt and in others persists
  in reduced size in the second‑instar larva.  In contrast to this, the anal vesicle of the larvae that
  possess it increases in size with each molt but is absent in the final
  instar.  In A. thompsoni,
  it is said to be present for only a short time after the second molt.  The paired ventral processes on the last
  segment of many aphidiine larvae do not persist beyond the first instar.  Many species reveal an increasing number
  of small teeth on the inner margin of the mandibles in the intermediate
  instars.  In Bracon tachardiae
  Cam., the four teeth of the first instar are succeeded by five in the second
  and third, whereas the mandibles of Microbracon
  mellitor Say are simple in
  all instars.             
  The paired ventral processes that occur on the bodies of first‑instar
  polypodeiform larvae, such as those of some species of Bassus and of Macrocentrus
  gifuensis, persist in much
  reduced form in the second instar. 
  According to Parker, the larva of the latter species lacks mandibles
  in this instar.            
  The mature larvae of the Braconidae are of normal form and have few
  characters that distinguish them, aside from the tracheal system.  In many species, the mandibles have minute
  teeth, often slender and spine‑like, on the inner margin, approaching
  30 in number in some species, giving a comblike appearance.  Voukassovitch, in describing the mature
  larva of M. abdominalis mentions a bilobed
  chitinous "anal capsule," of which the ventral lobe is more heavily
  sclerotized and bears a small ventrally directed process.  The anal opening is between the two lobes
  of the capsule.  Beeson and Chatterjee
  refer to a prominent "process" ventrally on the fifth and sixth
  abdominal segments of the larva of Perilitus
  mylloceri Wlkn. but do not
  otherwise describe it.              The mature larvae of many of the
  ectophagous species bear a dense coating of fine hairs; in some instances,
  this is uniform over the body, and in others it occurs in a transverse band
  on each segment and may be absent ventrally.              It has already been pointed out
  that the respiratory system of the ectoparasitic first‑instar braconid
  larva has normally nine pairs of spiracles, situated on the first thoracic
  and the first eight abdominal segments In these species, largely included in
  the Vipioninae, this number and arrangement persist through all the following
  instar.  The early‑instar larvae
  of the species that develop internally lack the open tracheal system; and, in
  species that are known to have five instars, the spiracles first appear on
  the fourth.  The species in which only
  three or four larval instars have been distinguished reveal the spiracles
  only on the last instar.              De Leon (1934) has summarized the
  information available regarding the respiratory system of mature braconid
  larvae and has attempted to group the subfamilies on the basis of spiracle
  number and position and on the presence or absence of certain
  commissures.  The information
  available is sufficient for only a very few subfamilies to permit of
  generalizations in this respect.  It
  appears, however, that the Vipioninae quite consistently have the number and
  arrangement given above, and limited information indicates that this is true
  of the Braconinae also.  The most
  common spiracular arrangement, however, has the same number, but the thoracic
  pair is situated on the second segment rather than the first.  This order appears to predominate in the
  Macrocentrinae, Meteorinae, Euphorinae, Opiinae, and Alysiinae.  Macrocentrus
  ancylivorus is said to have
  the spiracles on the second and third thoracic and the second to eighth
  abdominal segments, whereas M.
  abdominalis has 10 pairs,
  the additional one being upon the ninth abdominal segment.  In the Microgasterinae, the occurrence of
  eight pairs is quite general, and in most species the single thoracic pair is
  on the second segment, whereas in a smaller number it is upon the third.  Microgaster
  connexus, however, has only
  six abdominal pairs rather than seven, and Apanteles lictorius
  Rein.  is said to have nine pairs,
  though their position is not given.              On the basis of information
  regarding a limited number of species, it seems that the greatest variation
  in spiracle arrangement occurs in the Aphidiinae.  Aphidius granarius L. has spiracles on
  the first thoracic and eight abdominal segments, and Ephedrus plagiator
  Nees (Skriptshinskij, 1930) on the second and third thoracic and seven
  abdominal segments.  Wheeler (1923)
  states that tracheal system and spiracles are absent in the aphidiine species
  studied, representing three genera but this is so unusual as to require
  verification.              The tracheal system of the mature
  braconid larvae is distinguished from that of the Ichneumonidae chiefly by
  the absence of the secondary lateral commissures in the thorax, which connect
  with the main trunks by three branches. 
  The anterior dorsal commissure is present in all species, but the
  absence of the posterior ventral commissure has been noted in species of Chelonus, Apanteles, Microplitis,
  and Meteorus.  Ventral abdominal commissures occur in the
  first eight segments in several species of Vipioninae and in Doryctes gallicus Rh.             Among the species that develop
  within the host, many have an internal tracheal system but no spiracles in
  the early instars, and the spiracles appear only in the last larval
  instar.  In Bracon sp.  (probably B.  hylobii) studied by Munro (1917),
  which is the single species of external habit that lacks spiracles in the
  early instars, they appear first in the fourth (penultimate) instar.              According to Glover (1934), who
  has studied the immature forms of B.
  tachardiae, the head widths
  of the five larval instars conform to Dyar's principle, though the extremes
  overlap, whereas mandible length shows no overlapping.              De Stephani Perez (1902) has
  described the so‑called chrysalis of Giardinaia urinator
  Perez, found upon the stems of Potamogeton,
  which he considers to be the last larval exuviae and within which pupation is
  said to take place.  The last body
  segment is bifurcate, and the terminal "hooks" are embedded in the
  stem of the plant.  They may bear
  spiracles, and the supply of air would thus be derived from the plant.  The figure of this chrysalis shows 14
  segments.  The parasite pupa
  illustrated within it is slightly more than half its length and one‑sixth
  to one‑eighth its volume.  At
  emergence, the wasp breaks through the dorsum of the chrysalis and climbs to
  the surface of the water.  It is
  extremely improbable that this chrysalis is the last larval skin of Giardinaia; it is much more
  likely to be that of its host.  This
  parasite has been recorded from Hydrellia
  sp. in Europe and the "chrysalis" described by Perez may be the
  empty larval skin of a species of Ephydridae.  The aquatic larvae of some representatives of this family are
  known to possess caudal spiracles upon a bifurcate process and to derive
  their air supply from plants (Clausen 1940).        References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references may
  be found at: MELVYL Library ]   |