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| DIPTERA, Cecidomyiidae (Macquart 1838) --  <Images>
  & <Juveniles>   Please refer also
  to the following link for details on this group:           Cecidomyiidae:   Link
  1   Description & Statistics             Cecidomyiidae (sometimes
  spelled Cecidomyidae) is a family of flies (Order Diptera) known as gall
  midges or gall gnats.  Most gall
  midges feed within plant tissue, creating abnormal plant growths called
  galls.           These are very delicate
  small insects usually only 2-3 mm in length and many are less than 1 mm long.
  They are characterised by hairy wings, unusual in the Order Diptera, and have
  long antennae. Worldwide there are 3000+ species but since 1,100 are from
  well-studied North America this may be an underestimate. Many are
  economically significant especially the important insect pest of wheat, the
  Hessian fly, the galls causing severe damage to the crop. Other important
  pests include the lentil flower midge (Contarinia lentis), the lucerne
  flower midge (C. medicaginis) and the alfalfa sprout midge (Dasineura
  ignorata) on the Leguminosae; the Swede midge (Contarinia nasturtii)
  and the brassica pod midge (Dasineura brassicae) on the Cruciferae;
  the pear midge (Contarinia pyrivora) the raspberry cane midge (Resseliella
  theobaldi) on fruit crops; and the rosette gall midge (Rhopalomyia
  solidaginis) on goldenrod stalks.             Many species are natural
  enemies of other crop pests. The larvae of these species are predaceous, and
  some are even reported as parasitoids. The most common prey are aphids and
  spider mites, followed by scale insects , then other small prey such as
  whiteflies and thrips and many eat the eggs of other insects or mites.
  Because the tiny larva are incapable of moving considerable distances, there
  usually has to be a substantial population of prey present before the adults
  will lay eggs and Cecidiomyiidae are most frequently be seen during pest
  outbreaks. One species Aphidoletes aphidomyza is an important
  component of biological control programs for greenhouse crops and is widely
  sold in the United States of America.             Cecidomyiidae are also
  known for the strange phenomenon of paedogenesis in which larvae are able
  to  reproduces without maturing first.
  In some species the daughter larvae are even produced within a mother larva ,
  and they consume the mother and in other species reproduction occurs in the
  egg or pupa.   = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =   References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references
  may be found at:  MELVYL
  Library]   Barnes, H. F. 
  1929.  Bull. Ent. Res. 20:  433-42.   Cole, F.
  R.  1969. 
  The Flies of Western North America. 
  Univ. Calif. Press, Berkeley & Los Angeles.  693 p.   Fedotova, Z.
  A. & E. E. Perkovsky.  2009: New
  gall midges of the tribe Leptosynini (Diptera, Cecidomyiidae) from the Late
  Eocene ambers and the classification of the supertribe Heteropezidi. Paleontological
  journal, 43(9): 1101-1147.   Felt, E. P. 
  1940.  Plant and Gall
  Makers.  Comstock Publ. Co., Ithaca,
  NY.  364 p.   Gagne, R.
  J.  2004: A catalog of the
  Cecidomyiidae (Diptera) of the world. Memoirs of the Entomological Society
  of Washington, 25   Heong, KL, YH
  Chen, DE Johnson, GC Jahn, M Hossain, RS Hamilton. 2005. Debate Over a GM
  Rice Trial in China. Letters. Science, Vol 310, Issue 5746, 231-233 , 14
  October 2005.   Huang, J.,
  Ruifa Hu, Scott Rozelle, Carl Pray. 2005. Insect-Resistant GM Rice in
  Farmers' Fields: Assessing Productivity and Health Effects in China. Science
  (29 April 2005) Vol. 308. no. 5722, pp. 688 – 690   Jahn, GC and
  B. Khiev. 2004. Gall midge in Cambodian lowland rice. pp. 71-76. In: J.
  Benett, JS Bentur, IC Pasula, K. Krishnaiah, [eds]. New approaches to gall
  midge resistance in rice. Proceedings of the International Workshop, 22-24
  November 1998, Hyderabad, India. Los Baños (Philippines): International Rice
  Research Institute and Indian Council of Agricultural Research. 195 p.    Kocak, A. O.
  & M. Kemal.  2010: Nomenclatural notes on the genus group names of
  the order Diptera. Centre for Entomological Studies Ankara miscellaneous
  papers, 151: 5-7.   Maia, V. C. 
  2010: A new replacement name for Brethesia Maia (Diptera,
  Cecidomyiidae). Revista brasileira de entomologia, 54(1): 146.    Maia, V. C.,
  G. W. Fernandes & D. Negreiros. 
  2009: A new genus and species of gall midge (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae)
  associated with Myrcia retorta (Myrtaceae). Revista brasileira de entomologia, 53(1): 38–40.   Prichard, A. E.  1951.  Univ. Calif.
  Publ. Ent. 8:  239-75.   Prichard, A. E.  1953.  Calif. Insect
  Surv. Bull. 2:  125-50.   Sato, S. &
  J. Yukawa.  2009: Descriptions of two
  new Mikiola species (Diptera:
  Cecidomyiidae) that induce leaf galls on Fagus crenata (Fagaceae) in Japan. Studia
  dipterologica 15 (1/2): 151-164.   |