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| Immature
  Stages of Anthomyiidae  Most larval Anthomyiidae are plant feeders, and their habit of invading
  roots gave them the name "root maggots."  Some species feed on dung, others are entomophagous.  Adult flies are mainly predaceous, most
  frequently attacking other Diptera, often of the same family (Clausen
  1940/62).  Most entomophagous species
  are predaceous, although some species are primary, internal, solitary or
  gregarious parasitoids.  A number of
  predaceous species attack the egg pods of grasshoppers and locusts, while the
  adults of other species are predaceous on other flies, often members of the
  same family.  A early review of the
  food habits of adult anthomyiids by Hobby (1934) noted the genera Lispa, Coenosia, Trichophthicus,
  Helina, Ophyra, Hylemya,
  Pegomyia and Prosaepia has having
  entomophagous species.  Lispa spp. are predaceous on various
  aquatic larvae.  Few species have been
  used in biological control, although those attacking locust eggs are
  important natural controls.   Larval
  food habits are exceeding variable; some are plant feeders, others scavengers
  on decaying vegetable matter, and a number are parasitic or predaceous on
  immature stages, and occasionally adults, of other insects.  The most valuable entomophagous species
  for natural control of crop pests are in genera Hylemya and Paregle,
  which develop as predators in egg capsules of locusts.  Acridomyia
  is parasitic in larger nymphs of Locusta
  in Russia, and Muscina pabulorium Fall. is reported as
  a natural enemy of Lymantria
  monacha L. and Dendrolimus pini L. in Europe.  Muscina
  stabulans Fall. feeds on
  caterpillars of the latter two species and on larvae of housefly.  Thomson (1937) discussing the food habits
  of a number of species noted that certain species of Myiospila, Mydaea
  and Hebecnema are partially
  dependent on living food for their development, which is provided by larvae
  of other Diptera present in dung. 
  Larvae of aquatic or semiaquatic species feed consistently on larvae
  of other Diptera.  Phaonia miribilis confines its attack mostly to larvae and pupae
  of mosquitoes, and P. variegata Meig., which is not
  aquatic, requires solely mycetophilid larvae in fungi of the genus Polyporus.  Semiaquatic species of Lispocephala and Lispa feed on Chironomus spp. and other
  larvae (Williams 1938).         Of those species
  developing as predators in locust egg capsules, one of the more interesting
  and important is Hylemya cilicrura Rond., the
  "shellat fly" or "seed corn maggot," a serious crop
  pest.  Hylemya cilicrura
  has occasionally been reared from locust eggs in North America, Riley (1878a)
  noting that during one season it also destroyed 10% of the eggs of the Rocky
  Mountain locust.  Eberhardt (1930)
  observed a maximum of 60 maggots in one egg capsule of the migratory locust
  in Dagestan.  In some areas nearly
  100% were attacked.  Blanchard (1933)
  studied H. cilicrura attacking Schistocerca paranensis F. in
  Argentina.  The female was observed to
  insert her ovipositor into the soil near the host egg capsule and to lay a
  series of eggs at 5-second intervals, a maximum of 80 being deposited.  Hatching required a minimum of 2
  days.  Larvae immediately entered the
  capsule to feed.  If the food
  contained in one capsule was inadequate, they would move to another.  Feeding was completed in 8-12 days, after
  which they burrowed a short distance away in the soil and pupated.  In summertime, the duration of the pupal
  stage was 8-15 days.  Eberhardt (1930)
  found pupation to take place 4-6 cm. beneath the egg capsules.  There were 3 generations annually, and
  hibernation was principally in the pupal stage, although some adults and
  larvae could be found in winter. 
  Gestation of females was exceptionally long, taking 30-60 days, and
  adults lived more than 3 months.   A gregarious internal parasitoid of 5th instar nymphs and adults
  of Locusta migratoria L., Acridomyia sacharovi Stack females feed on the body fluids of the
  host.  The feeding puncture serves
  also as a point of insertion for oviposition (Olsaufiev 1929, Rukavishnikov
  1930).  A maximum of 103 larvae were
  found in a single host, although the average number completing development
  was 20-30.  Some hosts recovered from
  attack by this parasitoid if the number of larvae was small.  The spiracles, the anterior pair each with
  11 papillae and the posterior pair with 9 openings, arranged in a 3/4 circle,
  distinguish mature larvae.  The first
  brood of adults appeared in June, and there was at least 3 generations
  annually.  Winter was passed as pupae
  in the soil.   Phaonia mirabilis Ringd. shows a great
  deal of adaptability to a predaceous life. 
  Larvae are aquatic in habit and feed on larvae and pupae of mosquitoes
  (Tate 1935).  The white eggs are 1.8
  mm. long, ventrally keeled, and with lateral flanges.  They are deposited on the water surface in
  recesses of tree trunks, etc.  The
  larvae that emerge from these eggs have all the characters of typical 3rd
  instar cyclorrhaphous larvae, which was verified by an examination of larvae
  still within the egg.  Thus, the early
  appearance of this form is not due to rapid molting after hatching.  No molts occur during the active larval
  stage, and there are three groups of long, slender hairs, presumably sensory,
  on the ventral surface of the thoracic segments; and paired retractile
  protuberances, surmounted by numerous curved hooks, are present ventrally on the
  2nd to 8th abdominal segments.  The
  anterior spiracles are 4-5 lobed, and the posterior ones have three
  openings.  The tracheal system is
  modified for aquatic life, the main lateral trunks being expanded into two
  large reservoirs, one in the thorax and the anterior portion of the abdomen,
  and the other in the mid abdominal region. 
  Near each posterior spiracle, a short stout trachea is given off
  ending in a blind sac, and mouthparts are well developed (see Clausen, 1940,
  for diagrams).   Please
  CLICK on picture
  to view details:       The precocious assumption of the 3rd instar characteristics by the
  larva at the time of hatching is seemingly correlated with the predatory role
  that is immediately assumed, for the larva must overcome an active host in
  water (Clausen 1940/62).  It swims
  freely, either entirely submerged or with posterior spiracles protruding
  through the surface film.  When
  encountering a mosquito larva of pupa, it quickly encircles it by the
  anterior portion of the body, and firmly grasps it with the ventral
  protuberances.  More mosquitoes are
  killed than consumed, so that each individual anthomyiid may account for more
  than 100 during its lifetime (Clausen 1940/62).  The egg stage lasts 3-4 days, and larval development requires
  one month, and the pupal stage ca. 2 weeks. 
  Pupation occurs in crevices in decaying wood slightly above the water
  surface.   Thomson (1937) reported on the peculiar biology of Phaonia variegata Meig. in Scotland.  Eggs are deposited on the upper surface of the pileus of fungi
  of the genus Polyporus, and
  the larvae are predaceous on those of Mycetophilidae in the fungus.  Third instar larvae also were found to
  hatch from the egg, and it was found that the scarcely recognizable exuviae
  of a preceding instar are present. 
  Thomson believed that hatching of 3rd instar larvae from an egg could
  be found commonly in the family.  He
  suggested that the occurrence of three active larval instars would prove to
  be the exception in species of Mydaea
  and Phaonia.  The larva of P. variegata
  differs from that of P. mirabilis by lacking the
  conspicuous ventral pseudopods, surmounted with hooks, upon the abdomen,
  which are replaced by bands of ventral spines at the anterior margins of the
  first 8 abdominal segments.  The anal
  plate is found on the venter of the last abdominal segment.   The larvae of several additional species of Phaonia were described by Keilin (1917), from decaying
  wood, forest litter, etc.  Larvae of P. leilini Coll, found in very moist decaying wood, are
  similar to those of P. mirabilis, while larvae of P. cincta Zett., inhabiting wounds and rotting areas in
  trees, have the same adaptive modifications as P. variegata.  These studies deal particularly with
  larval morphology, and include a discussion of a number of carnivorous
  species in genera Allognota,
  Melanochelia and Graphomyia.   References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>   [Additional
  references may be found at:  MELVYL Library]   |