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| HEMIPTERA,
  Anthocoridae (Amyot & Serville 1843) --  <Images> & <Juveniles>     Description
  & Statistics           
  Barber (1936) gave an early account of the behavior of Orius (=
  Triphleps) insidiosus Say in North America.  In corn this species was a predator of
  Thysanoptera, Homoptera and to some extent Hemiptera, Lepidoptera and
  Acarina.  It was considered the most
  important natural enemy of the corn earworm, Heliothis obsoleta
  F., in certain areas of the United States. 
  Records from Virginia showed that the proportion of eggs destroyed
  ranged from 14-54% during the season. 
  Young larvae were also attacked, though to a lesser extent (Clausen
  1940/1962).            
  Pirate bugs average about 1.5 mm to 5 mm long. Their body is oval to
  triangular and somewhat flattened, sometimes with a black and white patterned
  back.            
  Pirate bugs feed on other small insects, spider mites and insect eggs.
  They cut a hole into their prey, pump saliva into it and drink the contents.
  This makes them beneficial as biological control agents. Orius insidiosus,
  the "insidious flower bug", for example, feeds on the eggs of the
  corn earworm (Helicoverpa zea). Especially O. insidiosus is
  often released in greenhouses against mites and thrips.             These small insects can bite
  humans, with surprising pain for such a small insect. However, they do not
  feed on human blood or inject venom or saliva. In some people the bite swells
  up, in others there is no reaction             Orius insidiosus was also the most
  effective natural enemy of a number of species of thrips attacking truck
  crops and fruit trees, and this was also true in relation to the European red
  mite and other mites on various crops. 
  McGregor & McDonnough (1917) performing feeding experiments, found
  that a nymph consumed an average of ca. 33 mites daily and adults a slightly
  lesser number.  Mite eggs were
  attacked only when the young and adults became scarce.  Extensive feeding was noted on the winter
  eggs of the European red mite during late summer.  Several species of Acanthocoris were found to feed on
  aphids in Britain; A. nemoralis F. had the unusual habit of
  attacking leaf mining larvae of the lepidopteran genus Lithocolletis
  (Butler 1923).             This cosmopolitan
  family had around 302 known species as of 2011.  Diagnostic characters of these "minute pirate bugs"
  of "flower bugs" include a forewing usually with a well-defined
  embolium, a clavus, and a membrane with few or no veins and no closed
  cells.  The rostrum and tarsi have 3
  segments; ocelli are present; and antennae have 4 segments.  Most species are black with white markings
  and are small (2-5 mm.).            
  Most Anthocoridae are predaceous, a few species are phytophagous, and
  one species is known to be a facultative, though regular, bloodsucker of
  humans, horses and cattle.  Most
  anthocorids feed on small insects and insect eggs, mostly Thysanoptera and
  Homoptera, and sometimes on Hemiptera, Lepidoptera, Acarina, and
  Coleoptera.  The more common species
  live around flowers, but some also occur under loose bark, in leaf litter,
  and in decaying fungi and animal wastes. 
  Some species apparently are cosmopolitan on account of their being
  transported via stored products such as rice and copra, among which they find
  coleopterous larvae and other insect pests and mites.  One species was introduced from the
  Philippines via Hawaii into California for biological control of the Cuban
  laurel thrips.     References:   Please refer
  to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional
  references may be found at  MELVYL Library ]   China, W. E. &* N. C. E. Miller.  1959. 
  Checklist and keys to the families and subfamilies of the
  Hemiptera-Heteroptera.  Bull. Brit.
  Mus. Nat. Hist. Ent. 8(1):  1-45.   Miller, N. C. E.  1971. 
  The Biology of the Heteroptera. 
  E. W. Classey Ltd., Hampton Middlesex, England.  206 p.   Southwood, T. R. E. & D.
  Leston.  1959.  Land and Water Bugs of the British
  Isles.  London Publ.  436 p.   |