Video S3: Second-instar larva of Anchylorhynchus eriospathae feeding on first-instar larva
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Journal Article The Larva of Agonopteryx lecontella Get access S. W. Frost S. W. Frost Pennsylvania State College Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic PubMed Google Scholar Journal of Economic Entomology, Volume 38, Issue 1, 1 February 1945, Page 126, https://doi.org/10.1093/jee/38.1.126 Published: 01 February 1945
Frost (temperature)
Entomology
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In previous numbers of the Can. Ent. (vols. ix, p. 232, and viii, p. 137) I have given an account of a singular larva found in thorns of Gleditschia triacanthos or Honey Locust. I have never succeeded in rearing the imago from the larvæ found in the thorns, but the same larva—or one that I have not been able to distinguish from it—lives also in the pith of the “iron weed” ( Veronia ) and also in that of the “hog weed ” or “horse weed,” Ambrosia trifida ; and in the pith of these stems is also found a Lepidopterous larva which I have not been able to rear to the imago state, but which does not seem to differ from that of Laverna gleditschæella found in the thorns.
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The egg and first-instar larva of Cl_$ru arida Weise are described and illustrated for the first time from Japan, and the affinity of the subfamily Clytrinae to the Cryptocephalinae and Chlamisinae is reconfirmed on the larval characters.
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The first instar larva of Atractocerus brasiliensis (Lepetelier & Audinet-Serville, 1825) from state of Goiás, Brazil, and reared in laboratory, is described and illustrated. This is the second species with known first instar larva for the genus and the third for the family. Comparisons with mature larva of this species and with the other known first instar larvae are presented. Illustrations of first instar and mature larvae are also included.
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