| File: <chlor1.ima.htm>        [For educational purposes only]       Terminology       Glossary    <Principal Natural
  Enemy Groups >  <Citations> | 
 
| Immature Stages
  of Chloropidae  Detailed information on immature stages of Chloropidae (=
  Oscinidae) is being acquired.  However,
  Clausen (1940) noted that Latrodectes
  mactans F. (Jenks 1936) lays
  spindle shaped eggs on the outer surface of a spider's egg sac; and after
  hatching in 2-3 days, the young larvae burrow through the covering to feed on
  the eggs.  After consuming the eggs
  over a period of ca. 2 days, they pupate in the same area.  Chloropisca
  glabra Meig. is a predator
  of the sugar beet root aphid, Pemphigus
  betae Doane, and has been
  considered to be the most effective natural enemy of this pest (Parker
  1918).  Hundreds of individuals are
  found on a single infested plant.  The
  female crawls down the base of the plant to insert her ovipositor by a
  backward thrust into a soil crevice, where the eggs are laid.  Aphids in the habitat provide the
  oviposition stimulus because no eggs are found on uninfested plants.  Eggs hatch in 3-5 days, and each larva
  consumes up to 50 mature aphids during a 9-12 day development period.  They remain, as pupae for ca. 9 months,
  although some individuals emerge in 2-3 weeks and there is therefore a
  partial 2nd generation.      
  References:   Please
  refer to  <biology.ref.htm>,
  [Additional references may be
  found at: MELVYL Library ]   |