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| DIPTERA, Tachinidae (Robineau-Desvoidy 1863  --  <Images>
  & <Juveniles>   Please refer also to the following links for details on this
  group:    Tachinidae = Link 1     Description & Statistics  In 1938 Thompson noted that there were few dipterous parasitoids
  of Diptera in contrast to the frequent attack by Hymenoptera on Diptera.  Among the Tachinidae, Admontia, Siphona and Trichoparia have been reared from
  tipulid larvae, and several species of the first genus are common on that
  host in certain areas.  Other records
  of attack on Diptera must be questioned; and considering their large size and
  exposed position, it is unusual that the larvae of Syrphidae are not subject
  to attack by tachinids (Clausen 1940/62).   Insect orders with aquatic larvae are also almost immune to
  attack by Tachinidae; but the few aquatic Lepidoptera are readily
  parasitized, and the species responsible show pronounced adaptations for life
  in water.  In many of these orders,
  the larvae are always immersed in water, often at a considerable depth.  However, some of them leaf it for pupation
  in the mud or sand near the water's edge, at which time they would be
  vulnerable to attack, particularly by species having planidium type larvae
  (Clausen 1940/62).   Many Tachinidae show great host specificity, but there are some
  species that have a much wider host range than is known in any other group of
  parasitic insects.  An example of the
  latter is Compsilura concinnata Meig, for which ca. 100
  different hosts are known in the United States alone (Webber & Schaffner
  1926), these representing 3 orders and 18 families.  Generally, it may be that the species of this family are less
  restricted in their host range than the Hymenoptera.   Many native Tachinidae show a degree of parasitization and
  effectiveness comparable to that attained by introduced species.  In northern Japan, Centeter cinerea Ald.
  destroys ca. 90% o of adult Popillia
  japonica beetles in alternate
  years, within 6-10 days after their emergence.  These are in years of beetle abundance, while when populations
  are low the parasitization is much lower. 
  The species is undoubtedly responsible for suppressing the pest to a
  nonproblem level in Japan (Clausen 1940/62). 
  In North America, the red-tailed tachinid fly (reported as Winthemia quadripustulata F.) frequently destroys 50% of the armyworm
  population, and sometimes parasitization nears 100%.  Trichopoda
  pennipes F. similarly builds up to
  a high level at destroys up to 80% of the adult squash bugs of several
  Pentatomidae.  Ernestia rudis Fall. in
  Europe parasitizes a high percentage of the pine moth, Panolis flammea
  Schiff.  Paradexodes epilachnae
  Ald. shows the remarkable capacity for increase of tachinids in the
  field.  Colonies of 100-200 were able
  to build up to a parasitization of 50% or more in relatively heavy
  infestations of Epilachna over a
  radius of several miles from the point of release within two
  generations.     Overall the Tachinidae may be considered beneficial, for most
  species are primary parasitoids of plant pests.  Unlike the major families of parasitic Hymenoptera, which have
  a varying portion of their species hyperparasitic, there are none in this
  category among Tachinidae.  However,
  certain species are harmful because of their direct attack on hosts that are
  themselves beneficial.  Several
  tachinid species that attack silkworms in Asia are very harmful.  Before adequate control was developed, the
  loss of silkworms from tachinid parasitism in Japan was sometimes 80%.  The tachinids also serve as vectors of the
  pebrine disease.  Other cases of
  parasitization on beneficial insects are found in the species that attack
  adult Carabidae and honeybees. 
  However, these are not widely distributed and usually are not abundant
  enough to seriously affect the host population.   Many species of Tachinidae have been used successfully in
  biological control.  An landmark
  example is the biological control of sugarcane beetle borer, Rhabdocnemis obscura Boisd. in Hawaii through the importation of Ceromasia sphenophori Vill. from New Guinea in 1910.   Also, in 1925 the biological control of
  coconut moth, Levuana iridescens B. B. in Fiji by Ptychomyia remota Ald. was achieved even though the parasitoid attacked a
  related host, Artona in its native
  Malayan range.  In many other cases
  less spectacular results utilizing tachinids have, nevertheless, led to some
  reduction in the targeted pests.  In
  the United States a high parasitization of the gypsy moth and other
  Lepidoptera has been obtained by Compsilura
  concinnata Meig., imported from
  Europe during 1906-1911.  This
  parasitoid is credited with having significantly reduced infestations.  Chaetexorista
  javana B. & B. of Japan was
  established in the northeastern United States where it exerts partial control
  of the oriental moth, Monema flavescens Wlk. although complete
  control was prevented by the parasitoid's inability to tolerate occasional
  extreme cold in winter (Clausen 1940/1962).   Tachinidae have been deployed for control of the sugarcane moth
  borer, Diatraea saccharalis F. in the neotropics.  Metagonistylum
  minense Tns, or "Amazon
  fly" was originally discovered in the Amazon basic of Brazil.  It was colonized in British Guiana and
  islands of the West Indies since 1933, where it has evoked a significant
  reduction of the infestation in some areas, Guyana in particular.   Tachinidae
  is a very large family with over 12,000 species known by 1993.  They are distributed worldwide.  The greatest number of species have been
  described from the tropics.  Important
  morphological characters include a bristly body, especially on thoracic
  dorsum and 4th to 6th abdominal segments; postscutellum of mesothorax well
  developed, protruding posteriorly; pteropleural and hypopleural bristles
  present.  The body is small to medium
  in size, gray or dull colored.  Cell
  R-5 is narrowed or closed at the wing tip.   Most tachinids are primary, solitary, endoparasitoids, but some
  are gregarious parasitoids.  They have
  a wide host range, with all major groups of insects serving as hosts.  They are important to biological control,
  as >16 species have been introduced into the United States alone.  Many more have been employed worldwide,
  mainly against Lepidoptera.   A discussion on host preferences of Tachinidae is probably best
  done on the basis of principal subfamilies. 
  The Exoristinae are the dominant group, both in number of genera and
  in species known to be of importance as parasitoids of crop pests.  Host preferences cover an extensive range,
  with the majority of species parasitic in lepidopterous larvae and in adult
  beetles of the families Chrysomelidae, Scarabaeidae and Carabidae.  Genera parasitizing caterpillars include Anetia, Compsilura, Winthemia, Sturmia, Zenillia and Exorista.  On adult beetles, Eubiomyia, Centeter and
  Chaetophleps are
  representative.  Relatively few genera
  and species parasitize larvae of sawflies. 
  A number of species attack larvae of Curculionidae, Chrysomelidae and
  Tenebrionidae, and sometimes there are species parasitic in larvae of
  Tipulidae and Vespidae and in adult phasmids, earwigs and locusts.  Species of genera Doryphorophaga, Meigenia
  and Paradexodes attack chrysomelid
  larvae, and several species of Siphona
  are included among the few parasitic natural enemies of tipulid larvae.  Important subfamilies are the
  Gymnosomatinae, Tachinae, Rutiliinae, Dexiinae and Oestrinae.   Biology
  & Behavior  Tachinidae have sustained extensive investigation since the
  beginning of the 20th century.  Early
  detailed studies were by Nielsen (1909, 1912, 1918), Pantel (1910, 1912) and
  Baer (1920, 1921).  Townsend
  (1934-1939) contributed much information on the reproductive behavior and egg
  of 1st instar larvae.  Tachinidae show
  exceptional uniformity in host relationships as compared with parasitic
  Hymenoptera and Diptera.  The larval
  stages are entirely internal during the feeding period, with one exception
  being Myiobia bezziana Baran., which Beeson & Chatterjee (1935) found to be
  an external parasitoid of caterpillars of a wood boring cossid in India, which
  was nevertheless questioned by Clausen (1940).   Most Tachinidae are solitary. 
  Even in gregarious species it is only in rare instances that more than
  3-4 develop in a single host, although sufficient food seems available for a
  larger number.  A maximum of 16
  individual Eubiomyia calosomae Coq. was recorded from a
  single Calosoma beetle, while up to
  28 Palpostoma subsessilis Malloch reach maturity in scarab beetles in
  Australia.  The largest number
  recorded was 110 Achaetoneura samiae Webber from a single Samia cocoon, and 550 A. frenchii
  Will, were reared from 44 S. cecropia L. cocoons.  Surplus 2nd or 3rd instar larvae are
  usually killed in cases of superparasitization, resulting from an apparent
  overcrowding or starvation, but also at times by direct combat.  If the number is very high, all the larvae
  may die and the host continue to maturity or also die.  Clausen (1940) remarked that in one case a
  total of 147 dead larvae of Achaetoneura
  was found in a single S. cecropia larva.   Female Reproduction.-- Females have several
  modifications of the internal reproductive system which relates to the type
  of eggs or larvae deposited (please refer to Clausen, 1940, for
  diagrams).  The basic type is one that
  produces the heavy shelled macrotype egg and in which not much uterine
  incubation occurs.  C. cinerea
  is typical of this group.  Each ovary
  has 9-10 ovarioles and a short oviduct leads to the uterus.  The latter is also short and membranous
  for its entire length, with the stalks of the three spermathecae attached
  near the middle.  In gravid females,
  each ovariole may have one mature egg and a series of immature ones.  One mature egg is usually present in each
  oviduct and a single fertilized one in the posterior part of the uterus.  Daily egg production is low, but extends
  over a protracted period.   Species that oviposit on leaves produce microtype eggs, which
  have several adaptations.  Zenillia libatrix Panz. is representative.  Dowden (1934) found each ovary to comprise 80-100
  ovarioles.  In young females each of
  these contains ca. 14 eggs in various developmental stages.  The paired oviducts are long and slender,
  and the long posterior uterus is thick-walled for most of its length.  The spermathecae are attached near the
  bases of the paired oviducts.  After
  fertilization when eggs descend to the uterus, the uterus becomes greatly
  enlarged and may have several thousand eggs packed irregularly within.  The coiled and expanded uterus may fill a
  large part of the abdominal cavity. 
  All species of this group have many ovarioles, ranging to 460 in Leschenaultia exul Tns. (Bess 1936). 
  Many genera of the Exoristinae 
  have this kind of reproductive system and lay microtype eggs.  Epidexia
  (placed in Dexiinae by Townsend) is the only member of the group known to
  produce microtype eggs.   Anetia nigripes Fall represents a third type
  that injects its larvae into the host's body.  Each ovary consists of 12-14 ovarioles, and in unmated females
  the anterior and posterior uteri are about equal in length, with the
  spermathecae attached near the juncture. 
  After mating, the eggs descend past the spermathecal openings into the
  posterior uterus, which becomes very much elongated, and lying in four
  coils.  Eggs which most recently
  passed into the uterus lie transversely in an even row, but as they progress
  downward, they lie longitudinally and usually paired, with the head end
  directed cephalad with respect to the body of the parent female.  Thus, the larva is ejected with its caudal
  end first.  In gravid females of some
  larger species this "strap-like" uterus is very long, reaching its
  greatest development in Latreillimyia
  bifasciata F. where it measures 110
  mm (Townsend 1936).  Eggs range from
  fully incubated at the posterior end of the uterus to undeveloped at the
  anterior end (Clausen 1940/1962). 
  This kind of reproductive system allows for the deposition of a
  relatively small number of larvae daily, although larviposition may extend
  over a long period.  However, in Ernestia ampelus Wlk. and Compsilura
  concinnata all the eggs in the uterus
  are in the same stage of development. 
  This allows the deposition of the full quota of larvae in 2-3 days
  (Tothill 1922).  Maggots of this
  species lie in the reverse position in the uterus and are thus ejected with
  their heads first (Culver 1919).   Many of the tachinids which deposit their maggots on foliage or
  on the surface of the soil represent a fourth type.  The uterus is somewhat coiled and strap-like before
  fertilization.  After fertilization it
  becomes much distended and filled with enormous number of eggs in all stages
  of development, these often lying in precise transverse rows in the anterior
  portion and longitudinally in the posterior section (Clausen 1940/1962).  The eggs of Echinomyodes are arranged with great precision in as many as 24 rows.  This kind of reproductive provides for the
  deposition of a large number of larvae in a short period of time (Townsend
  1936).  Among species which deposit
  larvae or fully incubated eggs, the posterior uterus serves as an incubation
  chamber, with its walls abundantly supplied with trachea to satisfy the
  oxygen requirements of incubating eggs.   The rhythmic development of the eggs of P. epilachnae was
  observed by Landis (1940).  The total
  number of ovarioles ranges from 16-54, each containing 6 eggs in various
  developmental stages, which represents the full reproductive capacity.  Each egg has a brood relative in the
  entire series of ovarioles, and together they descend into the oviduct at
  about the same time.  The successive
  broods descent in turn, and they may be distinguished in the uterus by the
  stage of incubation attained, the first batch being fully incubated and each
  following one being less developed than that preceding it.   Females of specie that inject eggs or larvae into the host body
  require an extensive modification of the external reproductive
  structures.  The form taken depends on
  the kind of host and the amount of force necessary to penetrate the
  integument.  A simple adaptation is
  that of species attacking caterpillars, which have relatively thin and
  flexible integuments.  Adaptation for
  penetration of such hosts is found in such common genera as Compsilura, Anetia and Lydella.  The 6th abdominal segment is developed
  into a curved, very pointed, thornlike process.  This structure, or piercing organ, is deflected downward and in
  some species lies along the mid ventral line when not being used.  It is grooved along the outer convex side,
  and the ovipositor glides along this groove in the deposition of eggs or
  larvae.  Therefore, there are two
  distinct acts involved in larviposition, (1) the puncturing of the host
  integument and (2) the insertion of the ovipositor in the wound for laying an
  egg or larva.  In species that
  larviposit they are usually placed directly between the peritrophic membrane
  and the cellular wall of the mid intestine rather than free in the body
  cavity of the host, and are then left to seek their ultimate destination
  (Clausen 1940/1962).   Chaetophleps setosa Coq. shows a striking adaptation
  for deposition of the egg or larva internally.  This is a parasitoid of chrysomelid beetles of genus Diabrotica, which was described by
  Walton (1914) as Neocelatoria ferox Walt. and studied by Bussart
  (1937).  The 6th abdominal segment is
  modified into a very long piercing organ, more than 1/2 the length of the
  abdomen.  The 2nd abdominal segment is
  greatly extended ventrally into a laterally compressed structure which bears
  at its tip a large number of heavy, flattened, spine-like processes directed
  a bit caudad.  During larviposition,
  the fly pounces on the beetle, and the latter turns on its back, after which
  its abdominal region is grasped in pincer-like fashion between the piercing
  organ and the extension of the 2nd segment. 
  The ovipositor is then driven through the elytra and into the
  abdominal dorsum.  However, many
  beetles are attacked while in flight or after alighting but while the wings
  are still spread and the ovipositor is inserted through the thin dorsal
  integument of the abdomen (House & Balduf 1925).  Bussart (1937) found that oviposition
  occurs only while the beetles are in flight. 
  This modification of the abdominal structure is clearly an adaptation
  for holding a hard bodied host during insertion (Clausen 1940/1962).  Celatoria
  diabroticae Shim. also attacks Diabrotica beetles and is similarly
  modified.  Clausen (1940) noted that a
  similar adaptation is found in the Conopidae, which parasitize adult
  bumblebees and some larger wasps.   Adult Behavior.-- In most Tachinidae adult
  emergence occurs during the early morning, although in some species of
  crepuscular or nocturnal habit emergence is in late afternoon and early
  evening.  Adults feed on honeydew
  secreted by scale insects, leafhoppers and aphids and also on various plant
  secretions, particularly nectar glands. 
  Some Dexiinae, such as Prosena
  sibirita F., possess a very long
  probosis which is used to feed at blossoms, mainly Umbelliferae.  In the laboratory Landis (1940) found that
  females of Paradexodes confined in
  cages and fed sugar and raisins lived longer if the cage was dirty.  From this it was inferred that the yeasts
  and other materials obtained from waste material have a nutrient value for
  the flies.   Tachinidae only infrequently feed on host body fluids, which is
  possible only in species having the piercing type of ovipositor.  Host feeding was observed in Doryphorophaga doryphorae Riley, a parasitoid of Colorado potato beetle larvae
  (Bruneteau 1937); and it is found also in Anetia
  nigripes (Clausen 1940/1962).   Although crepuscular and nocturnal species frequently correlate
  their attack with similar habits of the host, there are exceptions as shown
  by Hamaxia incongrua Wlk.  This
  parasitoid is active in late afternoon and early evening, even though one of
  its principal hosts, Popillia japonica Newm., is wholly diurnal and
  feeds during the morning and early afternoon.  Other scarab hosts, particularly Sericinae, are wholly night
  feeders, but there is not much difference in the extent of parasitization
  because of this seemingly favorable behavior.  The Australian Palpostoma
  subsessilis is also crepuscular,
  and Cryptomeigenia theutis Walk. is nocturnal as are
  adult Phyllophaga, its host.   Tachinids usually mate soon after adult emergence and in most
  species this is during the morning hours during bright sunshine.  However, Carcelia gnava Meig.
  and other species mate at dusk.  In
  the laboratory mating is often best secured by caging 1-2-day old males with
  newly emerged females.  Temperature,
  light and humidity are important for influencing mating, the optimum range
  often being quite narrow.  Various
  artificial stimuli have been tried to secure mating, such as exposure in
  vials to bright sunlight, vigorous shaking of cages, lining cage walls with
  green cloth, etc.  Cleare (1939) in
  studies on Metagonistylum,
  determined that light intensity is the most important factor and that mating
  occurs only within a very narrow range.   Males are able to inseminate a large number of females, as shown
  by Dowden (1933) for A. nigripes, where one male successfully
  inseminated at least 13 females over ca. 4 weeks.  Late mating revealed a progressive reduction in the proportion
  of the eggs that were fertilized, however. 
  Females have been observed to mate repeatedly in several species
  (Clausen 1940/1962).   Gestation varies considerably in Tachinidae.  A minimum of 2 days was recorded for Ptychomyia remota, and Winthemia
  required a little over 2 days.  These
  tachinids deposit unincubated eggs, and it should be expected that the
  gestation period is short.  The
  shortest period recorded for those depositing fully incubated eggs or maggots
  is that of Palpostoma subsessilis.  This species was found to contain fully developed larvae within
  4-6 days after adult emergence (Burrell 1935).  Usually larviparous species have a gestation of 8-14 days,
  although this extends to as much as 4 weeks in Ernestia ampelus.  In the latter all maggots in the uterus
  are of the same developmental stage, and deposition may be completed in 2
  days or extend over one month (Tothill 1922).   Townsend (1908) distinguished five modifications of tachinid
  reproductive behavior, based on the position of placement of the eggs or
  larva with respect to the host, as (1) host oviposition, (2) leaf oviposition,
  (3) suprocutaneous host larviposition, (4) subcutaneous host larviposition
  and (5) leaf larviposition.  This work
  was based largely on dissection of gravid females, and it was found that no
  only can the type of egg be determined by such dissections, but valuable
  clues as to the oviposition habit may be secured.  Pantel (1910) presented a different classification,
  distinguishing 10 groups and using as a basis the female reproductive system,
  the type of egg, the stage of incubation of the egg and placement of the egg
  or larva at deposition (please see Clausen, 1940, p. 345 for details).  Townsend (1934) listed 39 groups, the
  majority of which represent Tachinidae, on the same basis employed by Pantel,
  but utilizing also the general characters of 1st instar larvae (Clausen
  1940/1962).  This researcher
  distinguished oviposition from larviposition.  Oviposition was considered to refer to the deposition of all
  eggs adapted for attachment to surfaces, whether flattened or provided with a
  pedicel, and of which the embryo may be in any developmental stage.  Therefore, the deposition of all microtype
  macrotype and membranous eggs are defined included in oviposition.  On the other hand, larviposition refers to
  the deposition of fully formed maggots, followed by their immediate activity,
  irrespective of whether they are naked or enveloped in the membranous chorion
  (Clausen 1940/1962).   In Tachinidae, reproduction may be oviparous, ovoviparous or
  larviparous, and various adaptive modifications occur as a consequence of
  these differences.  There are four
  general types of eggs, the microtype, macrotype, pedicellate and
  membranous.  These are associated with
  certain morphological modifications of parent females and serve to aid the
  parasitoid to reach the body cavity or some internal host organ (Clausen
  1940/1962).  Females of species
  depositing incubated eggs or larvae directly on their hosts and require the
  stimulus of the host presence for normal oviposition or larviposition can,
  under stress, deposit them at random in order to reduce pressure in the
  uterus.  Those which inject them into
  the host body will retain them indefinitely if hosts are not available, and
  they may finally die as a result of penetration of the body cavity by
  imprisoned larvae, as was observed in Ernestia
  ampelus (Tothill 1922).   Reproductive Capacity.-- This
  varies greatly among different groups and species, being directly related to
  the position in which the eggs or larvae are deposited with respect to the
  host, and to hazards encountered before the larvae reach the host body
  cavity.  The minimum deposition of
  eggs or larvae occurs in species where females inject their eggs or larvae
  into the host body or deposit them directly on the body.  In this group are many of the most common
  and important species, such as Compsilura
  concinnata, Trichopoda pennipes,
  and Winthemia quadripustulata.  In these
  species reproductive capacity is c. 100-200, with some depositing
  <100.  Phorocera agilis R.D.
  has a capacity of >200 eggs, laid at the rate of 4-5 daily (Prell 1915,
  Burgess & Crossman 1929).   A second group includes
  species that deposit larvae or fully incubated eggs in the vicinity of the
  host.  Bigonicheta setipennis
  Fall. places the eggs very near the host, or at times on it, and its total is
  relatively low (ca. 25), while others in which the association is not so
  close produce a higher number.  Those
  placing eggs or larvae on foliage and of which the hosts are fee living
  caterpillars deposit 400-1,000 eggs or larvae.  When hosts are enclosed in a tunnel in a plant stem, as in cane
  borers, and the larva is deposited near the entrance hole, the number is
  usually around 1,000.  Gravid females
  of Theresia claripalpis v.d.W. contain >500 eggs and larvae (Jaynes 1933),
  and Metagonistylum minense parasitic on Diatraea and having the same general
  habits as Theresia, produces
  500-700 maggots (Myers 1934b).   A third group are
  parasitoids of white grubs, which deposit their eggs or larvae on the soil
  surface.  Prosena sibirita often
  contains over 800 larvae and eggs in various stages of development.  Townsend (1934) found that ca. 2,000 eggs
  were in the uterus of a female Microphthalma
  disjuncta.   A fourth group includes
  species which deposit microtype eggs and those in which the larva is attached
  to the substratum by a membranous cup, which consists of the old eggshell,
  enveloping the caudal segments.  The
  microtype eggs must be ingested by the hosts, while the fixed larvae are
  dependent on passage of the host larva within reach.  The chances of reaching the host are more
  or less equal, as shown by the reproductive capacity of the two forms.  Reamur (1738) estimated that a female Echinomyia contained 20,000 maggots,
  but this figures was considered too high by later researchers of this species.  Clausen (1940) remarked that Von Siebold
  estimated 7,000 for Echinomyia fera L.  However, Townsend mentioned 13,000 for Echinomyodes, which is the highest number determined by actual
  count.  He also found ca. 3,2000 eggs
  and maggots in the uterus of Eupeleteria
  maginicornis Zett., which was
  thought not to represent the full reproductive capacity.  Records for species with microtype eggs
  range from 2-6,000.   This method of reproduction in which the minute eggs are
  deposited apart from the host larvae and must be ingested by the latter
  before hatching, is known to occur in a large number of species, principally
  in the Exoristinae.  Townsend (1908)
  recorded 14 species and Pantel (1910) listed European species of 8 genera
  with this habit.  Since then a large
  number in many genera have been found to reproduce in this manner.  Well known genera are Exorista,
  Gonia, Frontina, Parachaeta, Masicera, Sturmia, Gaedia, Chaetogaedia, Leschenaultia, Prosocilipes
  and Pales.     This kind of oviposition was first observed in S. cilipes
  Macq. (= sericariae Rond.) by U.
  Sasaki in 1873, and the first record is that by H. Pryer in his catalogue of
  the Lepidoptera of Japan, published in 1884, in which he stated, "I have
  noticed that the Uji, a diptera, which is parasitical upon it and causes an
  immense amount of damage, deposits its eggs about the larva on the leaves and
  not on the insect." (Clausen 1940/1962).  Dr. C. Sasaki, son of the discoverer, published an extended
  account of the habits of S. cilipes in 1886.  Such behavior was so bizarre at the time
  that little credence was given to it for many years.  It was not until 1908 when Swezey
  described the behavior of Chaetogaedia
  monticola Big. and Townsend that of
  several other species in the same year, that full credit was accorded to
  Sasaki's contribution.  Clausen (1940)
  remarked that the parallelism between the course of events here outlined for
  Tachinidae of this type, and that which takes place in the Trigonalidae in
  Hymenoptera, is especially interesting, because in both cases the eggs are
  minute, hard of shell and deposited on the food plant of the host.  They are capable of remaining viable for
  long periods, and are consumed by the host and finally hatch in the digestive
  tract from which position the larvae migrate into the general body cavity.   Host Stage Attacked.-- Most Tachinidae attack
  the larval stages of the host.  This
  behavior is consistent among those which parasitize Lepidoptera, and none is
  known to attack the pupa directly, although some complete feeding in that
  stage.  Several species, such as Zenillia libatrix, delay development beyond the first instar until host
  pupation.  Those which deposit
  macrotype eggs on the host body usually limit themselves to the late larval
  instars, while others may gain entry at almost any time during the larval
  period.  Dexia and Prosena are
  able to parasitize scarab grubs in any stage, but they do not complete
  feeding until the latter are mature. 
  Tachinids parasitizing chrysomelid larvae, such as Paradexodes, sometimes successfully
  attack the prepupa and pupa (Clausen 1940/1962).  Edelsten (1933) reported an exceptional case of emergence of a
  tachinid maggot from an adult moth.  A
  female Zygaena lonicerae Esp. emerged normally but lived only two days, during
  which she laid 30 eggs.  Ten days
  later a mature maggot of Phryxe vulgaris Fall. emerged from the body,
  after having completely consumed the contents.  Previously the emergence of a larva of this species form a living
  female of Nyssia lapponaria Boisd. was reported.  Emergence of Manduca atropos L.
  moths from pupae that had yielded tachinid maggots, the latter having emerged
  from the wing pads, has been also observed (Clausen 1940/1962).   A large number of tachinids attack only the adult stage of their
  hosts, which is true of almost all those which parasitize Orthoptera and
  Hemiptera.  It is interesting that
  many species attacking adults tend to limit their oviposition to the female
  sex., which may be important from the point of view of natural control.  Centeter
  cinerea lays 80-95% of its eggs on
  female beetles of Popillia japonica Newm., and other examples of
  this behavior are Hyalomya aldrichi Tns., attacking mostly adult
  females of the false chinch bug, Nysius
  ericae Schill., and Thrixion halidayanum Rond., which is restricted to female Phasmidae.  By contrast, most chrysomelid hosts of Chaetophleps setosa are male (Clausen 1940/1962).   Silvestri (1910b) studying Erynnia
  nitida R.D. found a very unusual
  seasonal differentiation in host selection, where the larvae of the elm leaf
  beetle were attacked by the summer broods of the parasitoid and only the
  adult beetles by the last brood. 
  Clausen (1940) noted a comparable peculiarity in behavior with a few
  species of Hymenoptera.   Among tachinids that deposit eggs directly on the host body, most
  are often found to be largely confined to a particular part of the body.  Species of a single genus may differ in
  this respect, even though they attack hosts of the same group which are
  similar in size, form and behavior. 
  Therefore, Centeter cinerea places most of its eggs on the
  dorsum of the thorax of female P. japonica (Clausen et al. 1927).  While ovipositing, the female parasitoid
  usually attacks pairs of beetles who are mating and dashes diagonally across
  the female's thorax, lowering the tip of the abdomen momentarily to deposit
  the egg.  By contrast, C. unicolor
  Ald. attacking Anomala and Phyllopertha beetles, places its eggs
  ventrally on the posterior portion of the abdomen (Parker 1934).   Among Tachinidae attacking caterpillars, the variation in
  position is also great.  On free
  living caterpillars, either the last two thoracic segments or the last
  abdominal segments are usually chosen. 
  In W. quadripustulata the thoracic position on Cirphis unipuncta Haw.
  is a provision for the eggs' protection, as a high percentage of those placed
  farther back are crushed by the host's mandibles (Allen 1925).  The presence of these eggs apparently
  causes some irritation, which causes the host to try to brush them off or
  destroy the.  An unusual position for
  egg placement was recorded by Ainslie (1910) for Exorista larvarum L. on
  larvae of Hemileuca oliviae Ckll.  The latter is attacked only while in
  motion and at the moment when the posterior portion of the abdomen is
  raised.  The egg is usually placed on
  the sole of the psuedopod, within the crescent of hooklets.  On Pentatomidae and other Hemiptera, the
  tachinid egg may be placed on the side of the abdomen or thorax, which is
  common, on the venter of the prothoracic margin, as in Gymnosoma fuliginosa
  R.D., or on the dorsum or sides of the abdomen while the wings of the host
  are spread, as in Phasia crassipennis L., Siphona geniculata DeG.
  and S. cristala F. (Roubaud 1906), which parasitize tipulid larvae,
  oviposit on the stigmatic crown, presumably because this is the only portion
  of the host body exposed (Clausen 1940/1962).   In Carcelia gnava the pedicellate egg is attached
  by the tip of the pedicel to a hair of the caterpillar host (Clausen 1940),
  while in C. evolans Wied. the egg is placed on one of the thoracic segments
  of the bagworm host, a position which is obligatory because that is the only
  part of the body that is ever extruded from the bag (Skaife 1921b).   In hosts that inhabit soil, the eggs or larvae of the tachinids
  are laid on the soil surface, although Davis (1919) found that the female of Microphthalma disjuncta Wied. places them in crevices.  They are nevertheless probably placed in
  proximity to host grubs in considerable numbers rather than singly.  Species attacking hosts in plant stems,
  such as Theresia and Metagonistylum, which attack sugarcane
  moth borer, place larvae near the entrance of the host tunnel.  They must burrow through the frass that
  fills the entrance before reaching host larvae.  This behavior is found in a great many species attacking hosts
  that are concealed but that have an open entry or later make holes for other
  purposes in fruits, stems or seeds (Clausen 1940/1962).   Female Rondanioestrus apivorus Vill. pounce on worker bees
  while they are in flight, but touch the body only lightly to lay the maggot
  on it (Skaife 1921a).  Tachinids that
  lay macrotype eggs seem to show no discrimination in their choice of hosts.  This often results in individual hosts
  receiving an excessive number of eggs. 
  A certain portion of these eggs is lost through molting of the host,
  this varying with the length of the incubation period and the interval between
  host molts.  If the egg incubation
  period is the same as the length of the host larval stage, there would be
  virtually a complete loss of the eggs before hatching, while if the egg stage
  is, for example, 3 days and the host larval stage 6 days, the loss from this
  cause would be ca. 50% (Clausen 1940/1962). 
  It seems that early portions of the host stage, immediately after
  molting, are preferred for oviposition, which would reduce the loss
  considerably.   At time there is a failure in successful parasitization even when
  oviposition is extensive.  Toward the
  end of outbreak periods of the nun moth, Lymantria
  monacha L. in Europe, almost every
  caterpillar bears tachinid eggs and yet the attack is rarely successful, with
  the hosts developing and emerging normally. 
  In a collection of 235 gypsy moth caterpillars, each bearing 1-33 eggs
  of Exorista larvarum, only four parasitoids were produced.  Another collection of 252 did not yield a
  single parasitoid.  Although only part
  of this loss can be explained by the molting factor, it probably accounts for
  the loss of a considerable portion of the reproductive capacity of species
  laying unincubated eggs on caterpillars (Clausen 1940/1962).   One field collected larva of Datana
  minestra Drury yielded a maximum of
  228 macrotype tachinid eggs (Clausen 1940).  A larva of Samia cecropia with 40 tachinid eggs was
  still able to reach adulthood. 
  Tothill et al. (1930) noted where 72 eggs of Ptychomyia remota were
  deposited on a single Levuana
  larva, in which only one parasitoid can develop to maturity.  Observations on Winthemia indicate that the number of eggs laid on different
  hosts and on various instars of the same host vary directly with the host's
  size (Allen 1925).  Clausen et al.
  91933) showed in Centeter cinerea that there was no selective
  oviposition, but that the egg distribution appeared random.   Microtype eggs are laid on plant foliage that serves as host food
  and adhere to the leaf surface by a mucilaginous material that is partially
  water soluble.  Sometimes a particular
  plant or plant group serves as the oviposition stimulus, which is thus
  independent of the host itself.  Other
  times the attraction seems to be to foliage bearing, or visited by, host
  larvae.  Dowden (1933) observed that
  cut leaves, as well as the presence of host larvae, stimulate oviposition by Zenillia libatrix, which simulates the condition existing while the host
  larvae feed.  Eggs of Racodineura are laid on any plant
  material upon which earwigs have fed the previous night.  In most species, the eggs are laid on the
  undersides of leaves, scattered about, but in other species the are placed at
  the leaf margins.  Females of Gonia capitata Deg., parasitic on Porosagrotis
  in North America and Europe, lay most of their eggs on the upper sides of
  leaves of Graminae, in particular the bluejoint grass, Agropyron smithii
  (Strickland 1923).  However, the host
  feeds mainly on the cultivated grains and attacks the bluejoint grass only
  when other preferred vegetation is not available.  It also feeds extensively on alfalfa, but the parasitoid does not
  oviposit on that plant.  The
  parasitoid's value is thus restricted, for host larvae on their preferred
  food plants are able to avoid attack. 
  The extent of oviposition of Gaedia
  puellae Nishik. on mulberry foliage
  is correlated with the infestation of aleyrodid, Bemisia myricae Kuw.,
  on the secretions of which the female flies feed (Nishikawa 1930).  The silkworm, principal host of this
  tachinid, does not occur on mulberry in the field, although species of Acronycta, Bombyx and Porthesia,
  some of which are usually present, are more normal hosts (Clausen 1940/1962).   Immature Development (Egg Incubation, Hatching and Host Entry).--
  There is a wide range of behavior regarding incubation, hatching and host
  entry.  Activities of 1st instar
  larvae in penetration of the host vary as much as any other group of
  parasitic insects (Clausen 1940/1962). 
  The frequent occurrence of partial or complete uterine incubation of
  the several types of eg produced, which is relatively rare in other dominant
  parasitic groups, particularly Hymenoptera, serves as one means to overcome
  or avoid certain hazards that might otherwise be disadvantageous during
  external incubation.   Macrotype eggs generally undergo the entire embryonic development
  outside the parent female's body. 
  Occasional rare exceptions this occur, such as in Ptychomyia remota
  (Tothill et al. 1930), where there is a partial and variable degree of
  uterine incubation.  The normal period
  of external incubation in this species is 36-50 hrs; but some eggs have been
  found to hatch in 30 min., and other required 4 days.  Among other species in which the
  incubation period has been determined, it most frequently requires 2-3 days,
  with a minimum of one day.  The eggs
  of Eubiomyia calosomae are almost fully incubated at the time of deposition,
  usually hatching in <24 hrs., though some hatch in <3 hrs (Collins
  & Hood 1920).   Two ways exist in which hatching and entry into the host body are
  accomplished by larvae from macrotype eggs. 
  Centeter, Trichopoda and Meigenia and others have the indehiscent form of macrotype egg
  where the larva bores directly downward through the thin chorion on the
  ventral side of the egg and through the heavily chitinized integument.  Of course there is no external evidence to
  indicate that hatching has occurred. 
  This method is particularly common among those species attacking adult
  Hemiptera and Coleoptera.  Larvae from
  eggs of this type are usually provided with teeth on the distal margin of the
  mouth hook, which serve to rasp (see Clausen, 1940 for diagram).  An exception is shown by E. calosomae,
  in which young larvae escape from the egg through a hole in the thin ventral
  chorion.  However, instead of
  continuing into the host body immediately, they emerge from beneath the egg
  and enter at some other point on the host. 
  In the second form, hatching occurs by the lifting of a definite lid,
  or operculum, at the anterior end of the egg.  The fracture takes place along a horizontal line around the
  front of the egg, a bit below the median transverse line and often extending
  slightly dorsad at each end.  The
  larva emerges partly from this opening and with the caudal segments still
  enclosed within it, braces itself and penetrates the integument just in front
  of the egg.  Ernestia, Phorocera and
  Winthemia have this behavior,a nd
  it is probably common among the species attacking caterpillars and other
  relatively thin-skinned hosts (Clausen 1940/1962).  In some species the larva abandons the eggshell altogether and
  enters through the intersegmental membrane or at some other vulnerable spot.   In the majority of tachinids that lay microtype eggs, uterine
  incubation is also partial or complete, and the entire quota of the female
  may be present in the uterus and partly or completely incubated before any of
  them are laid (Clausen 1940).  Such
  species, as Zenillia libatrix, are thus able to lay a large
  number in a short time.  Such eggs,
  whether or not incubated at the time of laying, are protected from
  desiccation and injury by the heavy and variously sculptured chorion.  Hatching does not occur until they are
  ingested by the host larva.  They
  remain viable for 3-5 weeks in most species, with a record from Gonia ornata Meig. being alive 2/5 months after laying, at which time
  the caterpillars of the 2nd generation of Euxoa
  were present in the field (Sakharov cited by Clausen, 1940).  This ability to persist in an inactive
  condition for a long time is advantageous to the species and counteracts,
  partly at least, the disadvantage of being laid apart from the host.  Several genera and species with apparently
  mature eggs in the uterus show very little evidence of embryonic development,
  being laid before this is complete (Townsend 1908, Clausen 1940).  In these species, ingestion of the eggs by
  host larvae cannot lead to successful parasitization unless the eggs are at
  least 1-2 days old.   Clausen (1940) pointed out that opinions vary concerning the
  manner in which hatching of microtype eggs takes place.  The chorion of the ventral side of the egg
  is thin and membranous, contrasted with a thick walled dorsum.  Townsend implied that the action of the
  digestive juices provides the stimulus for hatching and considered that the
  heavy chorion served to protect the embryo from injury by the host mandibles
  while the egg was being swallowed. 
  Swezey (Clausen 1940) questioned this, and believed that the chorion
  was cracked by the mandibles of the host, thus allowing the larva to
  escape.  He supported his conclusion
  by the snapping open of the shell, and the escape of the larva, when pressure
  is applied to it.  Also, hatched
  larvae were found in large numbers in the crop of caterpillars almost
  immediately after the eggs were eaten. 
  Severin et al. (1915), Nishikawa (1930) and Dowden (1933) immersed
  eggs of Chaetogaedia in the fluids
  ejected from the mouths of Heliophila
  larvae; hatching of some of the individuals resulting in less than one minute
  and 97% hatching within 3 hrs.  The
  same results was obtained with the juices of other caterpillars.  The presence of such fluids stimulates the
  larva, and the thin ventral chorion of the egg is broken as a result of its
  movements.  Many eggs hatched when
  immersed in distilled water for 36 hrs, and this was brought about by an
  increased turgidity of the larva (Clausen 1940/1962).  The egg absorbs a lot of fluid, often
  resulting in a doubling in size.  In
  some species the thin ventral chorion bulges out, blister-like, so that the
  greater part of the larval body is enveloped by only a thin membrane.  As a result, the rupture of the heavy
  dorsal chorion is not required.   Nishikawa confirmed the conclusions of his colleagues with
  respect to Gaedia, stating that
  hatching occurs only after immersion in the digestive juices; but he found
  that a higher percentage hatch resulted with a higher concentration.  The mouth hook apparently breaks the
  ventral chorion of the egg.  Dowden
  (1933) reported that the mere immersion of the eggs of Z. libatrix in the
  digestive fluids of the host fails to induce hatching but does result in a
  pronounced swelling which renders them susceptible to rupture due to
  variation in pressure within the host's digestive tract.  Hatching takes place in this species at
  any point in the digestive, while in others it is mostly in the fore intestine.   Most Tachinidae in which the eggs undergo partial or complete
  incubation while still within the uterus of the parent produce the membranous
  type of egg, and in some cases actual hatching of all eggs in the uterus
  occurs.  Female Prosena sibirita never
  deposit eggs and the eggshells are retained in a "brood pouch,"
  whereas in Dexia ventralis they are voided at the time
  of larviposition.  In the latter,
  uterine incubation is usually complete, with hatching taking place before
  larviposition.  During periods of
  extensive reproductive activity, the brood pouch may be emptied before all
  the eggs are fully incubated, and some of them may require as much as two
  days of further development before they can hatch (Clausen 1940/1962).   Larvae that are laid externally as such or that arise from the
  membranous type of egg usually enter the host through the intersegmental
  membranes or at some other point where the integument is thin.  This is especially true of the species
  attacking heavily armored hosts, such as beetles and locusts.  In several species, such as Lixophaga diatraeae Tns., Siphona
  cristata, Eubiomyia calosomae and
  S. geniculata, it was found that entry is through a spiracle.  Clausen (1940) expressed some doubt about
  this, however.  Strickland (1923)
  noted that many of the planidia of Bonnetia
  comta Fall. are bitten off and
  killed by the cutworm larva while they are trying to penetrate the
  integument, and Muesebeck (1918) noted that brown-tail caterpillars make
  frantic efforts to dislodge or destroy the larvae of Sturmia nidicola Tns.
  as they bore into the body.  This
  mortality factor does not operate in the case of species with microtype eggs,
  and is comparable to the loss of macrotype eggs through the same agency.  Most hosts, however, show no discomfort
  during the time maggots are penetrating.   Stimuli attracting planidium type of larvae to their hosts are
  not completely understood.  Many
  attach themselves to almost any moving object within reach.  Those of Archytas analis F. are
  attracted to many species of caterpillar in which they cannot develop, but
  they show no interest in certain other species.  Generally, the larvae that find the host and enter its body
  through their own efforts do so immediately after coming into contact with
  it.  Complete penetration is often
  achieved in 15 min., though some species require more time.  The variation is probably due mainly to a
  difference in the thickness and toughness of the host's integument.  However, in the case of the planidia of A. analis,
  which, when they reach the host exude a liquid that fastens them horizontally
  to the skin of the host.  They may
  remain in this position for 24 hrs. or longer before attempting to penetrate
  (Clausen 1940/1962).   First instar larvae of Dexia
  ventralis Ald. and other species of
  Dexinae, must search through soil for their hosts and have the planidium type
  larva.  The penetrate the integument
  at almost any point as soon as the host is located.  Experiments have shown that the larvae do not discriminate
  among grubs, but that differences in parasitization of different host species
  and instars is related to the thickness and hardness of the integument.  In this way, under comparable conditions
  there was a parasitization of only 18% of mature Anomala grubs and 85% in 2nd and early 3rd instar grubs of Phyllophaga, the integument of the
  latter being very thin and bare. 
  Although initial parasitization was high, the parasitoid could not
  mature in the latter, however.   Many species, such as Bonnetia
  comta, Ernestia ampelus, Archytas analis and Eupeleteria magincornis, use the egg shell as a
  cup-like device that serves to anchor the larvae to the substrate while
  awaiting a host.  The shell is
  fastened to the leaf or other surface by a mucilaginous substance from the
  colleterial glands of the parent female. 
  it closely envelopes the caudal end of the larva (see Clausen, 1940
  for diagram).  B. comta larvae stand
  erect in the shell, even when resting, with the anterior segments retracted,
  whereas larvae of A. analis lie horizontally on the substratum
  when resting (Allen 1926).  The
  presence of the collapsed eggshell is not essential to the well-being of the
  planidia.  Both of these species
  frequently leave the shell entirely when excited, such as occurs when a host
  approaches.  They are still able to
  assume the erect position at will.  It
  does not seem that this adaptation serves any essential purpose, however
  (Clausen 1940).   The majority of species that inject their membranous eggs
  directly into the host body partially incubate their eggs in the uterus.  However, a few regularly lay them before
  much embryonic development has occurred. 
  The pedicellate egg, which is attached to a hair or to the
  caterpillar's integument, hatches quickly after deposition.  The young larva seeks out a vulnerable
  spot on the host where it enters.  Its
  activities thus do not differ much from those of other forms of larvae from
  membranous eggs, except that it is spared effecting the initial contact with
  the host.   Larval Activity in the Host.-- Clausen
  (1940) mentioned that there is much less diversity in behavior among
  Tachinidae once the host is penetrated. 
  This was because for all larvae the same general medium is inhabited,
  even though the final destination after entry differs a lot among different
  types of larvae and species.  Most
  species do not associate with any particular organ, yet others have a regular
  habit in this regard.  The organs with
  which they may be associated are nerve ganglia, gonads, salivary glands,
  intestines, muscles and fat body.  The
  greatest adaptations are found in microtype larvae, which find their way into
  the body cavity from the intestine. 
  Young Sturmia cilipes larvae enter one of the nerve
  ganglia of the silkworm, usually the 2nd to 5th, and during its stay of about
  1 week in this position causes a proliferation or enlargement of the
  ganglion, which also changes in color to white.     Clausen (1940) remarked that the occurrence of these larvae in
  the ganglia resembled the same localization of attack by some species of the
  hymenopterous family Platygastridae. 
  In Gonia capitata, the maggot first remains for
  a period of 4-28 days in the mesenteron of the intestine without
  feeding.  Then it progresses to the
  salivary gland, and finally reaches the supraesophageal ganglion.  A few species are known to inhabit the
  salivary gland throughout this period. 
  Gaedia puellae, parasitic on silkworms, has the habit and may
  occasionally be found in the reproductive organs.  The period passed within the salivary gland by some species
  varies directly with the age of the host larva, which may be from 4-22
  days.  The maggot of Leschenaultia exul may reach the gland within 2 hrs. after ingestion of the
  eggs by the caterpillar, and it remains there for 8-10 days.  It lies in the gland itself, rather than
  in the duct, and a pronounced malformation is produced.  The first-instar larva of Zenillia libatrix may be found in a muscle, the salivary gland or
  occasionally in a histoblast.  S. scutellata
  R.D. consistently passes the first stage in a muscle, and its presence results
  in hypertropy of the tissue.  In Ghaetogaedia monticola this period is passed in a sac, apparently formed by an
  enlarged tracheal tube, near one of the host spiracles.  However, this may be only a respiratory
  funnel plus a membranous sheath. 
  First instar larvae of Racodineura
  antiqua Meig. lie free in the body
  cavity of the host, thereby departing from the usual habit of this group.   The planidium and tachiniform larvae which gain entry to the host
  through the body wall, either by direct penetration or by injection by the
  parent female, are not known to enter nerve ganglia or the salivary gland at
  any time.  Maggots of Plagia trepida Meig. and P. ruricola Meig. enter a muscle and pass
  the entire first stage therein, a habit they have in common with S scutellata.  However, in such instances the tissue is
  killed and thus no enlarged pouch or sac is formed (Thompson 1915b).  The larvae of Rondanioestrus apivorus,
  parasitic in adult honeybees, feed in the abdomen throughout the
  developmental period, while those of the sarcophagid, Myiapis angellozi
  Seguy, are often found lodged in the thoracic muscles (Seguy 1930).  The majority of these species lie free in
  the body cavity of the host, for the greater part, if not all, of the first
  stage, but a number are intimately associated with the intestine (Clausen
  1940/62).  Young maggots of Compsilura concinnata are always found between the peritrophic membrane and
  the cellular wall of the mid-intestine, and the same is found in Anetia hyphantria Tot.  A. piniariae
  Hart and A. nigripes are found in the mid-intestine, frequently attached to
  the walls by spiracular hooks.  The
  young maggot of Zygobothria nidicola (Muesebeck 1922) lies free in
  the body cavity for 10-14 days after penetration and then enters the esophagus,
  where it lies dormant for ca. 9 months, while that of Archytas analis remains
  for a period up to 15 days between the skin and the hypodermal layer before
  entering the body cavity.  The larvae
  of Chaetophleps setosa are often located in the fat
  body (Clausen 1940/62).   There may be an obligatory association of certain species with a
  salivary gland, muscle, nerve ganglion or intestine, but not when in a gonad
  or the fat body (Clausen 1940). 
  Species associated with a definite host organ as 1st instar larvae
  usually leave it right before or after the first molt, and most then assume a
  fixed position in the hot body for the rest of the feeding period, which is
  related to respiration.   A large number of species have 1st instar larvae that pass a long
  period of time without feeding or apparent growth, especially those which are
  association with host organs. 
  However, one this starts it is extensive before the molt occurs.  Zenillia
  libatrix, e.g., increases from 0.23
  mm. to 2.0 mm. in length before the end of the 1st instar.   Some free living species show migratory behavior during
  development, as shown by Centeter cinerea.  The egg is laid on the thoracic dorsum of the female beetle,
  and young larvae bore directly downward into the host.  Feeding and the first molt occurs in the
  thorax, and the 2nd instar then enters the abdomen right after the molt.  It slowly works its way to the tip of the
  abdomen, turns and reenters the thorax. 
  The host dies and the second molt occurs.  The thorax contents are consumed after which the larva reverses
  its rout to complete feeding in the abdomen. 
  However, in male hosts the second molt occurs in the abdomen rather
  than the thorax.  First instar larvae
  of A. analis persist in the host caterpillar until the latter pupates,
  after which it molts and then positions itself in a wing pad, in which it
  causes an easily recognized characteristic bulge.  The respiratory funnel is formed at this position (Clausen
  1940/1962).   In some tachinids the larvae are partially or completely
  enveloped by a membranous sheath, which like the respiratory funnel, is of
  host origin.  It is soft and flexible,
  of varying thickness, and almost opaque in species that induce its greatest
  development.  Clausen (1940) believed
  it could be the result of a defensive reaction on the part of the host
  similar to that where phagocytes attack a foreign body, and thus it differed
  from funnel formation, which results from healing.  The sheath of Sturmia
  is made of hypodermal cells, leucocytes, and compressed fat cells and
  envelops only the funnel and the posterior portion of the body (Muesebeck
  cited by Clausen, 1940).  In Siphona cristata and other species, young overwintering larvae are
  completely enclosed in the sheath, but older individuals have the sheath open
  at the anterior end.  A closed sheath
  also envelops young larvae of Acita
  diffidens Curr. and Winthemia quadripustulata, which occur in caterpillar bodies only in
  midsummer, and thus the sheath must be permeable to host blood from which
  larvae derive nourishment.   Host death does not necessarily occur in the same stage as that
  which is originally attacked.  Among
  Lepidoptera, initial attack is frequently on larvae, usually when they are
  half grown or larger.  In most host
  species, death does not occur in that same stage, but a large number
  consistently pupate.  A few tachinid
  species are indiscriminate in this regard, and the stage at which the host is
  killed depends on the age of the larvae when parasitized.  Many tachinids kill the host early with
  respect to their own stage of development, often when they are in the 2nd
  stage, and death is followed by a rather complete liquefaction of the host
  body, this conditions being distinct from putrefaction.   Cirphis unpuncta caterpillars parasitized by Winthemia die two days after the
  parasitoid larvae penetrate, but the latter are still able to complete
  development.  Death of worker bees
  parasitized by Rondanioestrus apivorus occurs suddenly, often they
  are stricken while in full flight and die within minutes after falling to the
  ground.  The mature larva emerges from
  the body within 10 min. thereafter. 
  Because of the continued activity of the affected bees until the
  parasitoid larvae are mature, it is possible that the latter feed only on the
  body fluids and that, when ready to emerge, they cut the nerve cord and thus
  cause almost instantaneous death (Clausen 1940/1962).   There are several variations in the manner of emergence of the
  mature larva from the host, which depends on the host stage and whether or
  not it is alive.  In larval hosts, the
  mature tachinid larvae usually make an incision in the ventral area of the
  abdomen, at which point the integument is very thin.  Some researchers believed that this was
  done by use of mouth hooks, but other thought that it occurs by pressure of
  the caudal end, aided by the solvent action of body secretions.  The emergence of Bessa selecta Meig. is
  with its rear end foremost (Nielsen 1909). 
  Microphthalma michiganensis Tns, attacking scarab
  grubs, dissolves a large opening in the body wall of the grub permitting exit
  (Petch & Hammond 1926).  The
  aperture may be made some time before actual emergence and may be used in the
  meantime for respiration.  Emergence
  from pupae of Lepidoptera usually occurs at some point on the body venter and
  sometimes from the wing pads.   In hemipterous hosts, many species are still alive at the time of
  emergence of mature tachinid larvae. 
  In Nezara and Anasa, parasitized by Trichopoda pennipes, Eurygaster by
  Clytiomyia and Dysdercus by Alophora
  and Catharosia, the larvae leave
  the body through the anal opening or through the intersegmental membrane
  close by.  The host does not die for
  several days.  Coleopterous hosts also
  show a similar condition at times. 
  The larvae of Minella chalybeata Meig. emerge from the
  chrysomelid beetle, Cassida deflorata Suffr. through a dorsal
  aperture between the 1st and 2nd abdominal segments.  Because the vital organs are not affected,
  the host does not die until later.  The
  death of parasitized earwigs also follows, rather than precedes, parasitoid
  emergence from the body, and maggots exit through the intersegmental
  membranes near the posterior abdomen. 
  Larvae of Thrixion emerge
  from the body of the phasmid host through the wound at the side of the thorax
  which had been previously used for respiration, and thus the mechanical
  injury that occurs at this time is slight.   Several species, such as Zenillia
  pexops B.B., that attack larval
  hosts in exposed situations, pass winter as mature larvae within the dry host
  skins.  Thus they are exposed to
  sudden changes in both temperature and humidity and must adapt to such
  conditions.  These larvae are golden
  yellow in color owing to large quantities of fatty substances stored within
  the body, and the integument is much heavier than in species not so exposed
  (Clausen 1940/1962).   Tachinidae generally have three larval instars, but four and
  possible five may occur in some as in Microphthalma
  michiganensis.  In Actia
  diffidens, Paradexodes epilachnae,
  and others, it was noted that the inner wall of the puparium is lined with a
  distinct transparent membrane, the true cast skin discarded after a short but
  definite prepupal stage (Clausen 1940).   Pupation.-- Tachinidae pupate at variable
  sites, especially those attacking Lepidoptera.  Most form the puparium outside the host, those from free-living
  caterpillars usually enter soil, while others developing in stalk borers,
  leaf rollers, etc. usually pupate within the burrow or leaf roll.  Some such as Voria ruralis Fall, Echinomyia fera and Sturmia nidicola pupate in the host larval
  skin.  In solitary parasitoids the
  puparium is oriented the same way as the host, but if gregarious the puparia
  lie transversely in an even row.  Species
  reaching maturity in the host pupa often form the puparium within the pupal
  case.  Pupation on sawfly larvae
  usually occurs either within the larval skin or in the soil.  When attacking Coleoptera, tachinids
  usually pupate within the larval skin. 
  When adult beetles are hosts, most species pupate within the abdomen
  of dead beetles, with the head at the posterior end of the abdomen, thereby
  facilitating emergence.  This is
  especially obvious in Centerer, Hamaxia, Trophops and Erynnia.  Some gregarious species also pupate in the
  host body, especially Palpostoma subsessilis, where as many as 28
  develop in one beetle, and Cryptomeigenia
  theutis.  In Eubiomyia calosomae, that may produce up to 16
  individuals in a single Calosoma
  beetle, ca. 40% pupate within the host abdomen, and the rest do so externally
  in the space between the abdomen and the elytra.  A few solitary species emerge from the host beetles for
  pupation, among which are Degeeria funebris Meig. and Minella chalybeata.  Mature larvae
  of Chaetophleps emerge from the
  dead or dying chrysomelid host through an incision at the juncture of the
  head and thorax and pupate in the nearby soil (Clausen 1940/1962).   Tachinids that attack Hemiptera usually emerge from the host body
  to pupate in the soil.  However, Trichopoda pennipes differs in that the summer generation pupates in the
  soil while puparia of overintering broods are found in the dead hosts.  Tachinids attacking earwigs pupate outside
  the host body as do the few species with dipterous hosts.  Mature larvae of Prosena, Dexia and
  other white grub parasitoids leave the body and pupate in the soil, ca. 2-4
  cm. below the host remains (Clausen 1940/1962).   The normal habit of dipterous larvae, which enter the soil for
  pupation is to reverse their position so that when the puparium is, formed
  the head end points upward (Thompson 1910). 
  Flies emerge by using the ptilinum and the backwardly directed spines
  of the body in order to force their way through the soil.  Landis (1940) found that in Paradexodes, 46% of the pupae had
  their head end directed upward, but 29% had it directed downward, and 25%
  were laying horizontally.   When pupating within the skin of a larval host, gregarious
  tachinids often adopt a regular transverse position.  Those pupating outside the host are usually
  scattered, or they may be closely packed but without any order.  An exception is found in Sturmia cubaecola Jaenn. and S.
  protoparcis Tns. where several
  dozen puparia from one host are cemented together in an upright position in a
  disk-like mass (Greene 1921).   Temperature and humidity changes affect tachinid pupae
  variably.  Those pupating in soil are
  protected from sudden changes and are not able to tolerate prolonged exposure
  to temperatures or humidities that differ a lot from those experienced under
  natural conditions.  Resistant forms
  are found in those that pupate above ground and pass winter as pupae.  Such pupae withstand large fluctuations in
  both temperature and humidity.  A
  maximum emergence is secured in culture from species pupating above the
  ground when they are held under comparatively low humidities, while with most
  soil-inhabiting forms an almost saturated atmosphere is most favorable.  Maximum emergence from puparia of Parasetigena segragata Rond, was secured by Grösswald (1934) from material
  which had been stored at 7°C. and 100% RH.  Experiments with W. quadripustulata
  resulted in 33.4% emergence at 7.1% RH and 100% at RH of 73-100% (Hefley
  1928).  The viability of puparia of
  both summer and winter broods is proportional to the atmospheric humidity up
  to 73%, above which it remains at 100% (Clausen 1940/1962).  By contrast the emergence of host adults
  from healthy pupae that are found in the soil is inversely proportional to
  RH.  Therefore, optimum conditions for
  the host are disadvantageous to the parasitoid and vice versa.  Parasitoid pupal stage duration is also
  much influenced by changes in RH; at 17°C. the range was from 26.3
  days at 7.1% to 15.7 days at 73%, and then lengthened to 20 days at 100%.   Larval & Pupal Respiration.--
  Cutaneous respiration satisfies the oxygen requirements of tachinid larvae
  within the host body.  They
  temporarily tap an air sac or tracheal branch of the host, or they establish
  a fixed source of exchange with the outside air through the host tracheal
  system or directly through the integument. 
  The latter involves the formation of a respiratory funnel within which
  the caudal end of the parasitoid larva, having posterior spiracles, is
  enclosed.  Cutaneous respiration is
  the only way in which young larvae embedded in muscular tissue, a ganglion or
  a salivary gland are able to secure their oxygen requirements.  As they mature this source probably proves
  inadequate and there is a greater need and another source is secured.   Many tachinids that are free living in the host body have
  posterior spiracles equipped with sharp, heavily chitinized hooks, which are
  used to puncture an air sac or tracheal branch.  This is especially common among the parasitoids of adult
  beetles, and permits free movement, for the connection is only
  temporary.  Many of these larvae
  persist in a free state throughout the larval period, although the spiracular
  hooks may be lacking in the later instars. 
  Spiracular hooks in Anetia
  spp. are present on the 1st instar larvae, while in Centeter spp. and Hamaxia
  incongrua they are found only in
  the 2nd instar.  They are employed to
  puncture an air sac to provide for respiration in Centeter, whereas in Anetia
  piniariae and Compsilura concinnata
  they also serve to hold the larva in a definite feeding position.   The larval respiratory funnel, in which the posterior end of the
  body with the functional spiracles is fixed, is an adaptation of general
  occurrence in Tachinidae.  However, it
  is found elsewhere in only a very few highly specialized parasitic species of
  the closely related Sarcophagidae, but in no other families of parasitic
  Diptera.  The only case of the
  development of an apparently similar relationship elsewhere is found in the
  chalcidoid family Eucharidae, of which two species of Orasema are internal parasitoids of larvae (see Clausen, 1940 for
  diagrams).  Funnels in Tachinidae may
  be integumentary in origin, giving direct access to the outside air, and
  formed at the point of entry of the young larvae or at some other point by a
  larva that has already passed a period of free live in the host body.  Or it may be of tracheal origin, usually
  arising on one of the main lateral trunks or on a spiracular stalk, but sometimes
  on a tracheal branch or air sac.   There are two classes of respiratory funnels, based on the manner
  of origin .  Those which develop at
  the point of entry of the parasitoid larva into the host body are called
  primary and are always integumentary. 
  Others arising as a result of the activities of the larva from within
  the body are secondary.  The latter
  may be either intergumentary or tracheal in origin.  However, there is not much difference in form or function of
  the two (Pantel 1910-1912).   When the respiratory connection is made with the formation of a
  funnel is variable.  In a large number
  of species it takes place at the time of initial entry into the host, and
  funnel formation can frequently be distinguished within a few hours after
  penetration.  Species that inhabit
  Lepidoptera and have this habit are Ernestia
  ampelus, Bonnetia comta, Ptychomyia remota, Phorocera agilis, Winthemia quadripustulata
  and Sturmia inconspicua Meig.  Bigonicheta setipennis parasitic in earwigs and Dexia ventralis in scarab
  grubs similarly fix themselves at the point of entry.  However, in hosts that are in the adult
  stage when attacked, the immediate formation of the funnel at the point of
  entry is rare.   Funnels formed at the point of entry are often relatively consistent
  in position for a given species.  The
  planidium of Bonnetia comta usually penetrates the
  integument of the noctuid caterpillar host on the dorsum of the 1st thoracic
  segment.  Bigonicheta does this in the intersegmental areas of the
  thorax.  In these cases the location
  of the funnel is a matter of choice by the planidium, but in species that lay
  macrotype eggs it is determined by the location of the egg on the host
  body.  In Winthemia and others that have a dehiscent egg, the larva remains
  with its posterior end in the eggshell while penetration is being attempted,
  and the funnel is thus found just in front of the egg.   Those species making the respiratory attachment after a period of
  free life in the host or of confinement in a definite organ, it may be either
  with the integument or with the tracheal system.  There is an approximately equal division between the two points
  of attachment.  Among species having
  caterpillar hosts, Actia diffidens Curr. is invariable found in
  an integumentary funnel on the mesothorax, while Sturmia nidicola and Leschenaultia exul are located in the posterior region of the abdomen (Prebble
  1935).  Gonia capitata and  Archytas
  analis, which form the funnel only
  after the host has pupated, are located in a wing pad, while Zenillia libatrix chooses a point between any of the ventral plats of the
  head sclerites.   Of species making their attachment to the tracheal system, S. cilipes
  and Compsilura concinnata do so with the short stalk leading from a spiracle to
  the main longitudinal trunk, often close enough to the spiracle as to be
  considered connected with it.  Most
  species make their attachment to the longitudinal trunk itself, but near the
  base of a spiracular stalk, and in caterpillars and coleopterous larvae a
  spiracular stalk in the 1st or 2nd abdominal segment is the preferred
  location (see Clausen, 1940 for diagram). 
  The connection is with one of the smaller tracheal branches permeating
  the fat body of the Pyrausta larva
  in Zenillia roseanae B.B., whereas Eubiomyia
  calosomae forms the funnel on a
  tracheal branch in the beetle's metathorax. 
  An unusual adaption was recorded by Matthey (1924) in Exotista larvarum L., where occasional larvae are found to have broken the
  longitudinal tracheal trunk of the host and to have used the broken end of
  the trunk itself as a funnel enveloping the posterior body.  Gymnosoma
  rotundatum L., parasitic in
  Pentatomidae, makes its connection during the intermediate larval period,
  with one of the air sacs in the thorax (Clausen 1940/1962).   Species making respiratory connections with the tracheal system
  rarely reveal any external evidence of their presence until near the end of
  feeding.  If the funnel is formed
  close to a spiracle, it may sometimes be visible.  However, integumentary funnels are usually visible almost
  immediately after the connection is made, not only because of the actual
  perforation but by the dark funnel showing through the host integument if the
  latter is thin and not heavily sclerotized (Clausen 1940/1962).   The tracheal funnel represents a defensive reaction of the host
  to the irritation caused by making the perforation and to the persistence of
  the posterior end of the body of the parasitoid in the wound.  Prell (1915) called it a wound-scab
  formation, which if true should cause it to have a constant makeup whether it
  arises from the integument or a trachea. 
  Tothill et al. (1930) believed that the tracheal funnel of Compsilura consisted of an inner
  chitinous layer, a median hypodermal layer and an outer basement membrane.   There is much variation in size and form of the funnel, both
  among species and among different parasitoid instars.  It is relatively short, flat and almost
  button-like in Thrixion (Pantel
  1898), parasitic in Phasmidae. 
  However, in most cases it is cup-like and closely envelops several
  posterior segments of the parasitoid body. 
  It increases gradually in size with larval growth, and the basal
  portion may appear as a slender stalk. 
  The funnel is usually much darkened in color, this being more
  pronounced near the point of attachment where the wall is thickest.  In a few species the funnel is almost
  colorless.  At times it has a
  distinctly segmented appearance due to a different in size and form to
  accommodate later instars (Clausen 1940/1962).   One or both molts may occur during the period of connection with
  the funnel.  When this takes place,
  the exuviae remain in the form of a wrinkled lining on the inner wall of the
  funnel instead of being matted into its base, where they would interfere with
  respiration.  The first exuviae are
  more often ejected from the mouth of the funnel (Baer 1921).  This is possible in species forming the
  funnel at the point of entry, for the opening is often large.  Anetia
  nigripes, shows an unusual kind of
  molting.  The 1st instar larva, lying
  in the mid gut of the caterpillar host, forms a transverse split just above
  the caudal spiracles, after which the skin is cast over the head (Clausen
  1940/62).   When the host molts, the union between the funnel and integument
  is severed, and thus no interruption of function or injury to the parasitoid
  larva occurs.  However, sometimes it
  was found that the funnels of 1st instar larvae have been pulled out of the
  wound as the skin was cast; but the larvae remained in situ, with posterior
  portions of the body extruded from the wound.  They had no problem with forming new funnels at the same spot.   In Compsilura, the
  initial perforation in the tracheal tube is made by the larva's mouth hooks
  (Tothill et al. 1930).  In Thrixion and other species this is
  accomplished with the posterior end of the body (Pantel 1898).  The 3rd instar larva of Paradexodes epilachnae in the larva of Epilachna
  varivestris Muls. frequently
  abandons the funnel that it has used and makes a final respiratory opening on
  the host's dorsum.  To do this the
  kidney shaped spiracular plates are flexed against the inner side of the
  integument until it is cleared of muscular and other tissue.  They are then pressed closely to the
  surface, and a partial vacuum is created, which causes the integument to come
  into close contact with the serrate edges of the plates, and the rasping
  action of the plates results in perforation (Landis 1940).   Usually a single respiratory attachment is made during the life
  of the larva, and its position remains fixed in the host body from the time
  of formation of the funnel until it is abandoned for feeding in the 3rd
  stage.  However, Archytas analis,
  occupying a funnel in the wing pad of the host pupa, leaves this one in the
  early 3rd stage and makes a second breathing pore in the head or anterior
  thorax.  In Paradexodes, the first funnel, arising from a spiracular stalk,
  is formed at the end of the first stage, and this is abandoned at the second
  molt and attachment made to another spiracular stalk.  This second funnel is for a portion of the
  stage only, following which a third opening is made, this time in the
  integument, or the larva enters the intestine and lies at either end, using
  the natural openings of the host to respirate (Clausen 1940/62).   Initial funnel formation may occur right after entry into the
  host or during a later larval stage. 
  When this is done is relatively constant for any given species.  In most species it is during the first
  stage, but it occurs only after the first molt in Leschenaultia exul, Zenillia roseanae and Gonia capitata.  A small group of species do not make a definite attachment or
  induce the formation of a respiratory funnel at any time.  Among these are Anetia piniariae and A. nigripes,
  which are parasitic in caterpillars Hamaxia
  incongrua, Centerer cinerea and Palpostoma subsessilis in adult scarab grubs (Boas 1893), Trichopoda pennipes in adult Pentatomidae and Fortisia foeda Meig. in
  Lithobius.  Dissection is usually not adequate to
  detect the larvae, but it is thought that most of them if not visible from
  the exterior, are somehow attached to the internal tracheal system.   Cutaneous respiration is normal in the first larval stage of many
  species, especially those inhabiting one of the host organs, and spiracles do
  not occur in Racodineura and a few
  other species.  Tachinids that are
  free living as larvae secure their air during later stages largely by means
  of frequent temporary connections with an air sac or tracheal branch.  The time when the connection with the
  respiratory funnel is broken varies with the species and the physical
  condition of the host.  Clausen (1940)
  thought that the determining factor was probably whether or not the larva
  could reach its food source during this period.  In Degeeria luctuosa Meig. on Haltica beetles, the connection is maintained until the end of
  the 3rd stage.  This is possible
  because the attachment is to a tracheal trunk near an abdominal spiracle and
  all organs of the abdomen on which the larva feeds are within reach.  On the other hand, the larva of Eubiomyia calosomae is attached to a tracheal branch in the metathoracic
  region.  Thus, to complete feeding,
  the connection is broken very early in the 3rd stage, and thereafter it
  wanders free in the body of the live host. 
  The persistence of the respiratory connection reaches an extreme in Siphona geniculata, where larvae sometimes maintain their connection with
  the funnel even after emergence from the host (Rennic & Sutherland 1920).   Other adaptations that relate to respiration are known.  The young larva of A piniariae which
  inhabits the mid gut of the host, resumes feeding in springtime which is
  marked by the cutting of two openings in the intestinal wall.  One of these is near the head for feeding
  purposes, and the caudal spiracles are thrust through the second
  opening.  In this position many
  tracheal branches are held by the spiracular hooks, and the air supply is
  derived from them.  The mature larvae
  of Ginglymyia acrirostris Tns. that are found in aquatic larvae of Elophila fulicalis Clem. (Lloyd 1919), extrude the large stalked spiracles
  completely through the dorsal integument of the host (see Clausen, 1940 for
  diagrams).  Just before pupation, the
  host replaces its thin, web-like covering with a heavy, oval, roof-like
  structure, making up the cocoon, which has several openings at each end.  Water passes freely beneath this covering,
  and a large bubble of air formes at its center.  The forked spiracular structure of the parasitoid extends from
  the middle region of the host body into the bubble, thus securing for the
  mature larva and pupa an adequate air supply.  Clausen (1940) speculated on the manner in which this
  adaptation may have arisen. 
  Transitional forms are not known, and these presumably would not
  fulfill the requirements.  It is
  probable that the parasitoid adapted concurrently with the host, for the
  latter is one of the few species that has adapted an aquatic mode of life.   Another respiratory adaptation is in the 1st instar larva of Plagia trepida (Thompson 1915b), which bears a well-developed anal
  vesicle in the form of a large plate occupying the greater portion of the
  ventral surface of the last segment and in the center of which the anal
  opening is located.  This vesicle is
  formed of large cells appear like the striate wall of the middle
  intestine.  This larva normally lies
  in a dead host muscle, and the great development of the vesicle is in
  response to the need for oxygen. 
  Other larvae confined to host organs are bathed in abundant secretions,
  resulting partly from the hypertrophy of the parts involved, and thus the
  need for respiratory adaptations is not great.  Pantel (1898) recognized a respiratory purpose for this
  structure in Tachinidae.  It has not
  been found in any genus of the family except Plagia but is present in bilobed form in Conopidae.  The structure appears to be homologous
  with the anal vesicle of some parasitic Hymenoptera, where it is highly
  developed (Clausen 1940/62).   Information on tachinid pupal respiration reveals that the
  spiracles of the puparium, representing those of the 3rd larval exuvia, are
  not utilized directly.  There is no
  connection with them.  Species having
  extruded prothoracic cornicles may obtain their air supply from outside, but
  the extensive development of the internal spiracles in all species indicates
  that these are the principal organs serving the purpose.  Where the cornicles do not penetrate the
  puparium, the larval spiracles may remain sufficiently open to permit the
  passage of air into the general cavity of the puparium.  Snodgrass (1924) concluded that the
  anterior larval spiracles of Rhagoletis
  pomonella Walsh provide the
  channels through which air enters the puparial chamber.  At molting, the tracheal branch or stalk
  that leads to the spiracle is withdrawn from the body, and it remains
  distended, even though broken, on the inside of the puparial shell.  Clausen (1940) thought that the same
  adaptation may occur in Tachinidae.   Adult Emergence.-- As true for many Diptera,
  emergence from the puparium is by an expansion of the ptilinum which forces
  off the two parts of the operculum. 
  The fly then works its way out. 
  Soil penetration or other material is accomplished by alternate
  expansion and retraction of the ptilinum, aided by the backwardly directed
  spiens of the head and thorax, and by use of the legs.  The way adult flies emerge from puparia
  that are still enclosed within host cocoons or burrows has caused
  speculation.  Where the puparium is
  contained within the dead host skin, this is usually thoroughly dried and
  adheres closely to the outer surface of the puparium.  It is broken by the outward pressure of
  the expanding ptilinum.  In dead
  beetles on or in the soil, the intersegmental membranes of the abdomen are so
  thin and weakened by decay that the fly has no difficulty in forcing the
  segments apart (Clausen 1940/62).   Cocoons of Tenthredinidae and Lepidoptera ore different, however,
  for the walls are composed of varying quantities of silk and other
  material.  This makes them too tough
  and heavy to be broken by pressure alone. 
  The manner in which emergence is accomplished by Diplostichus janitrix
  Htg. from the cocoons of Diprion pini L. differs.  After feeding in the body of the host, the
  parasitoid larva emerges and prepares for a later exit by cutting a circular
  groove with its mouth hooks around the inner wall of one end of the cocoon
  (Robbins 1927).  When the fly emerges
  from the puparium, it forces this cap away, which is only lightly attached by
  the outer silken layer.  Cocoons
  containing unparasitized sawfly larvae do not show this inner groove, and
  adult sawfly emergence is effected by cutting away a cap, which is a bit
  larger than that removed by Diplostichus,
  with the mandibles (Prell 1924) .  De
  Fluiter (1932, 1933) found that the parasitoid may emerge from either end of
  the host cocoon, thereby establishing definitely that the cap structure is
  related only to the parasitoid. 
  However, most do emerge from the anterior end.   Even Lepidoptera with very heavy walled cocoons sustain tachinid
  parasitization.  Chaetexorista javana
  seems to have no difficulty in emerging from the egg-like cocoons of Monema flavescens, that are very hard and tough and can be cut only with
  a sharp knife.  The cap, which is
  usually forced off by the host itself, is similarly removed by the
  parasitoid.  The circular line of
  union of the cap with the rest of the cocoon is relatively weak, and an oral
  secretion may serve to soften the lining so that the pressure the fly is able
  to exert causes the braking away.  Some
  Lepidoptera that spin silk cocoons leave a definite opening or loosely woven
  area at the anterior end of the cocoon, through which the parasitoid larva or
  adult is able to emerge without trouble. 
  Winthemia datanae Tns. parasitic on Samia cecropia shows that sometimes there is difficulty in emergence
  with some hosts.  The larvae seem
  unable to penetrate the cocoon wall, and they die from desiccation even
  before pupation.   Life
  Cycle  Tachinids have life cycles ranging from 10 days in Metagonistylum minense in the tropics to a full year for others.  Most multibrooded species complete the
  cycle in 3-4 weeks in summer.  The
  incubation period is vary variable, for many species are larviparous or ovoviviparous,
  and the microtype eggs, though fully incubated at oviposition, must be eaten
  by the host before they can hatch.  In
  some species they remain viable for as long as 2 1/2 months.  The unincubated macrotype eggs hatch in
  2-4 days.  Free living larvae, which
  await a host or must search for it, are able to survive for up to 10 days in
  the case of Ernestia ampelus.   Summer broods have short larval feeding periods, in some cases
  being only 4-6 days as in W. quadripustulata, 7 days in Lixophaga, and 6-8 days in Centeter spp.  However, 12-16 days is more frequent for
  feeding of summer broods.  In Bigonicheta the period is nevertheless
  variable, ranging from 21-90 days, the duration depending on the amount of
  food available in the individual hosts (Mote et al. 1931).  In contrast, the developmental period of Paradexodes epilachnae larvae is not affected in this way, and the duration
  of feeding is the same, whether in young or mature larvae, prepupae or pupae
  (Clausen 1940/62).   Summer developing broods have a pupal period ranging from 5-7
  days in Hyalomya aldrichi to 25-30 days in Sturmia nidicola, with 8-12 days as a general average for the
  family.  Dowden (1933) observed that
  the pupal stage of female Zenillia libatrix is 1-2 days longer than for males,
  which Clausen (1940) thought was probably a consistent difference for the
  sexes generally.   Tachinids hibernate mainly in the pupal stage, although there are
  some departures from this.  The next
  most common behavior is in an early larval stage within the living host larva
  or pupa, which occurs commonly in lepidopterous hosts.  Of the Dexiinae, the single brooded Prosena sibirita is in the first stage within the host grub, while Dexia ventralis and Microphthalma
  are in the second stage during that period. 
  Species which attack adult beetles that persist through the winter are
  usually in the early larval stage within the body.  Species of Chaetophleps,
  Degeeria, Erynnia, Eubiomyia, Erynnia, and Stomatomyia show this behavior. 
  Several species of Winthemia
  hibernate in the mature larval stage in the soil.  Zenillia pexops (Wardle 1914) that develops in
  sawfly larvae, overwinters in its mature larval stage within the dried host
  integument, and a few other species have this behavior.  Hibernation of a large number of North
  American species were recorded by Schaffner & Griswold (1934).  North American tachinids do not overwinter
  as adults in temperate regions, although in Japan and Korea Hamaxia incongrua apparently does so (Clausen 1940/62).   Hibernation in the pupal stage is most often the result of low
  temperatures, but this is not the only factor responsible.  A large number of species pass into a
  state of diapause irrespective of prevailing temperatures.  Sometimes this can be broken prematurely
  by subjecting pupae to a period of pronounced cold.  Thompson (1928) found that Bigonicheta
  setipennis appears to have two
  types of puparia.  In one the fly
  develops and emerges rapidly, while the second persists until the following
  spring, when the adult flies appear. 
  Emergence of the first form cannot be indefinitely retarded by low
  temperatures, nor can that of the second type be forced by high
  temperatures.  According to Pantel,
  the two types of pupae ar found most often in species restricted to a single
  host or to a very small number of hosts and is an adaptation that increases
  the opportunities of the brood for finding hosts, inasmuch as a portion
  emerge during autumn and the rest in springtime.   The generations per year ranges from one in a large number of species
  of temperate regions to 8-10 in Lixophaga
  (Scaramuzza 1930) and Prosopaea indica Curr. in the tropics.  The number in Metagonistylum is probably much higher, for host stages suitable
  for parasitization are available throughout the year, and there is no
  hibernation or estivation (Clausen 1940/62). 
  Species parasitic in adult chrysomelid beetles and Pentatomidae often
  have a much greater number of generations per year than do their hosts.  This is especially true in those which
  overwinter in an early larval stage in their hibernating hosts.  Degeeria
  luctuosa has this habit and
  completes its development early enough in springtime to produce an additional
  generation on the hibernating brood of beetles.  Chaetophleps setosa usually passes through 5
  generations annually under temperatures prevailing in Illinois.  Clytiomyia
  helluo F. completes 4 generations,
  and sometimes 5-6 in Eurygaster,
  which has an annual cycle (Jourdan 1935).   For most species the seasonal cycle of the parasitoid is
  correlated with that of the preferred host, but in quite a few cases thee is
  an obligatory alternation of hosts. 
  This is true especially among multibrooded species that pass winter in
  the early larval stages in the bodies of the live hosts.  Therefore, a species having this habit
  would be unable to exist solely on a host species that hibernates in the egg
  stage.  Compsilura concinnata
  is one of these parasitoids.  The
  gypsy moth is a favored host, but the parasitoid would be unable to persist
  on it alone.  An exceptional adaptation
  to bridge the winter has been developed in Erynnia nitida, a
  parasitoid of the elm leaf beetle. 
  The two summer generations develop in the larvae whereas the
  overwintering brood develops in the hibernating beetles (Silvestri 1910,
  Clausen 1940).   In Dexia ventralis the seasonal is of interest
  because of an unusual alternation of hosts (Clausen et al. 1927).  This species is a solitary internal
  parasitoid of some scarabs in Asia. 
  In Korea there are normally three generations annually.  The larvae produced by the spring brood of
  females attack the grubs of Popillia
  spp., the 2nd generation occurs in Serica
  spp. and the overwintering generation in miridiba
  koreana N. & K.  Thus, the successive generations during
  the season develop each upon a different scarab subfamily.  However, part of the population has only 2
  generations annually, and in this case the overwintering host is P. castanoptera
  Hope rather than Miridiba.  Popillia
  grubs pupate ca. one month later than those of Miridiba, and Dexia
  development is delayed also, so that the following generation is directly on Serica, the intervening one on Popillia being omitted.  The parasitoid thus shows considerable
  adaptability, but the complexity of the annual cycle and the host preferences
  suggest that the species requires at least one alternate host to become
  numerically abundant.  Adults appear
  in the field around the same time as adult beetles of the host brood on which
  they had developed.  Therefore, with a
  single host having a strictly annual cycle, only 1st instar grubs would be
  available for attack for a prolonged period. 
  This makes it difficult for the planidia to locate them in soil, and
  they are not in a suitable physical condition for extensive parasitization.  Clausen (1940) therefore questioned
  whether the species would be able to maintain itself on a single host species
  unless the latter had at least a partial 2-year cycle, as a result of which
  grubs in a stage of development suitable for parasitization would be
  available at all times.   Sex Ratio & Parthenogenesis.-- Sexes
  are not superficially easily distinguished in Tachinidae.  Reports from New Zealand on Hystricina lupina Swed. by E. S. Gourlay (Clausen 1940) shows a sex ratio of
  4:1 in favor of females.  In Paradexodes the ratio is ca. 50:50,
  with a tendency toward proportionally more females at higher temperatures.   Parthenogenetic reproduction was reported in G. puellae by Nishikawa
  (1930).  He found that uninseminated
  females lay few eggs, usually <10, in contrast to several thousand laid by
  mated females, and that these unfertilized produced normal larva when
  ingested by silkworms.  Unmated Ptychomyia remota females sometimes lay eggs, though these do not
  hatch.  Compsilura concinnata
  may puncture the host caterpillar, as in normal larviposition, but no eggs or
  larvae are laid.  it seems to be the
  general habit to retain the eggs in the ovarioles until after mating.  If unmated, the eggs are broken down and
  resorbed.  However, Webber (1932)
  found that the eggs of unmated females of Carcelia
  laxifrons Vill, Phorocera agilis, etc. descent into the uterus and may be laid, whereas
  this does not occur in Sturmia inconspicua.   There are wide fluctuations in relative abundance of the two
  sexes during different times.  In some
  multibrooded species, females predominate during autumn.  Allen (1926) concluded that a definite
  sexual segregation took place in Archytas
  analis in the field at times.  It is believed that most females migrate
  to new areas soon after mating, in case suitable hosts are not abundant
  locally, leaving males to mate with whatever females may emerge later.  The dispersal tendencies of females seems
  lacking in the males.  Allen (1925)
  noted the occurrence of large gyrating swarms of Winthemia quadripustulata,
  consisting entirely of males, in localities lacking in host infestations and
  food sources.   Parasitism Effects on Hosts.--
  Tachinid parasitism effects adult hosts variably, depending on their age at
  the time of attack and the rate of the parasitoid's larval development.  During early larval stages, feeding is
  principally on body fluids and fat bodies, which inhibits development or
  causes atrophy of the reproductive organs of the host, a condition of
  parasitic castration similar to that in Hymenoptera.  In C.
  cinerea attacking Popillia beetles, parasitization
  usually occurs very soon after the beetles emerge, and this combined with the
  lapse of only 6 days from egg laying to host death, ensures that little or no
  oviposition by the latter will occur. 
  Overwintering beetles of Galerucella
  that harbor the young larvae of Erynnia
  nitida are killed in springtime
  soon after feeding starts, and no eggs are deposited.  In Eubiomyia
  calosomae, with several generations
  per year and which attacks Calosoma
  beetles having an adult life of 2 or more years, the summer broods kill the
  host in 9-12 days.  Overwintering
  parasitized beetles die within a few days after the beginning of activity in
  springtime.  The effect on the host
  population is much less than in the cases previously noted, because a large
  portion of the reproductive potential may already have been realized (Clausen
  1940/62).   When parasitizing Orthoptera, parasitoid larval feeding seems to
  be restricted mostly to the blood, which results primarily in a reduction of
  the fat bodies.  Mature larvae of Ceracia ajarifrons Ald. have been taken from several locusts that had
  oviposited during the preceding 12 hrs (Clausen 1940).  Pantel (1898) had shown that the
  degeneration of the reproductive system of female Phasmidae as a consequence
  of parasitism by Thrixion was only
  temporary and that in some cases these females were again able to produce and
  deposit eggs after the parasitoid larvae had left their bodies.  In the European earwig, which is
  frequently attacked in the late nymphal instars, there is a partial atrophy
  of reproductive organs, and death usually occurs before eggs can be laid.   Clausen (1940) noted that in the case of parasitism of Hemiptera,
  the false chinch bug, Nysius ericeae Schill. is rarely able to
  deposit eggs when parasitized by Hyalomya
  aldrichi, but adult females of Anasa tristis DeG., that contain larvae of Trichopoda pennipes
  oviposit, seemingly without serious interruption, until the final larval
  stage of the parasitoid is attained. 
  The parasitized individuals of the autumn brood do not reach sexual
  maturity, however (Worthley 1924).   For detailed descriptions of immature stages of Tachinidae,
  please see Clausen (1940/62).     References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references
  may be found at:  MELVYL
  Library]   Aguilar, J. D.  1957.  Revision des Voriini de l'ancien Monde
  (Dipt. Tachinidae).  Ann. Epiphytes
  3:  235-70.   Allen, H.
  W.  1925.  Biology of the red-tailed tachina-fly, Winthemia quadripustulata
  Fabr.  Miss. Agr. Expt. Sta. Tech.
  Bull. 12.  32 p.   Blanchard,
  E. E.  1956. 
  Parapolios grioti, nuevo Actiino útil argentino
  (Dipt.).  Rev. Soc. Ent. Argent. 19: 
  45-6.   Burrell,
  R. W.  1935.  Notes on the habits of certain Australian Thynnidae.  J. NY. Ent. Soc. 43:  19-28.   Clausen, C. P.  1940/1962.  Entomophagous Insects.  McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc., NY. &
  London.  688 p.  [reprinted 1962 by Hafner Publ. Co., NY.].   Cole, F. R.  1969.  The Flies of Western North America.  Univ. Calif. Press, Berkeley & Los
  Angeles.  693 p.   Dupuis, C.  1956 (1953).  Variations
  convergentes ou comparables de certains caractères des tachinaires, notamment
  des Phasiinae (Dipt. Larvaevoridae): leur signification taxonomique
  différente selon les lignées.  Proc. Intern. Cong. Zool. 14:  474-76.   Dupuis, C.  1957a.  Contributions à l'étude des Phasiinae
  cimicophages (Diptera Larvaevoridae). XIX. 
  Etude de Cylindromyia pilipes (Lw.) s. str.  Cahiers Nat. (n.s.) 13:  9-22.   Dupuis,
  C.  1957b. 
  Idem. XXI.  Notes taxonomiques et biologiques diverses.  Cahiers Nat. (n.s.) 13: 
  71-9.   Hertig, B. 
  1940.  Monog. Z. angew. Ent. 16:  1-188.   Herting,
  B.  1957. 
  Die Raupenfliegen (Tachiniden) Westfalens und des Emslandes.  Abh. Landesmus. Naturkde. Münster Westf.,
  Jhg. 19.  40 p.   Landis, B. J.  1940.  Paradexodes
  epilachnae, a tachinid parasite of
  the Mexican bean beetle.  U. S. Dept.
  Agr. Tech. Bull. 721.  31 p.   McLeod,
  J. H., B. M. McGugan & H. C. Coppel. 
  1962.  Commonwealth Inst. Biol.
  Contr., Tech. Comm. 2:  1-216.   Mesnil,
  L. P.  1955. 
  Contributions à l'étude de la faune entomologique du Ruanda-Urundi
  (Mission P. Basilewsky, 1953). 
  Diptera Tachinidae.  Ann. Mus. R.
  Congo Belge 40:  359-67.   Mesnil, L. P.  1956.  Trois nouveaux
  Tachinaires d'Afrique (Dipt. Tachinidae). 
  Entomophaga 1:  76-80.   Mesnil, L. P.  1957.  Nouveaux Tachinaires d'Orient.  Mém. Soc. R. Ent. Belgique 28:  1-80.   Mesnil, L. P.  1962.  Die Fliegen der
  Palaearktischen Region 8:  753-848.   Paramonov, S.
  J.  1957.  Notes on Australian Diptera. XXIII.  Notes on some Australian Ameniini (Dipt., Tachinidae).  Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 10:  52-62.   Peris, S.
  V.  1956. 
  Notas sobre Acemyiini (Dipt. Tachinidae).  Graellsia 14:  1-7.   Reinhard,
  H. J.  1956.  A synopsis of the tachinid genus Leucostoma (Diptera).  J. Kan. Ent. Soc. 29:  155-68.   Reinhard, H. J.  1957.  New American muscoid Diptera
  (Sarcophagidae, TAchinidae).  Ent.
  News 68:  99-111.   Tothill,
  J. D., T. H. C. Taylor & R. W. Paine. 
  1930.  The coconut moth in
  Fiji.  London Publ.  269 p.   Townsend,
  C. H. T.  1934-1939.  Manual of myiology in twelve parts.  Pt. 3, 4. (8 vols.), Sao Paulo, Brazil.   Zimin, L. S.  1957.  Révision
  de la sous-tribus Ernestiina (Diptera, Larvaevoridae) de la fauna
  paléarctique. I.  Rev. Ent. URSS 36: 
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