- adaptation, and it is not
limited to any
particular species or morphology.
Planidia of
different species differ variously from each
other in form. The first-instar...
- include:
Planidia elongulata Obenberger, 1922
Planidia freudei Jelinek, 1971
Planidia hauseri Obenberger, 1931
Planidia vansoni Obenberger, 1936
Planidia velutina...
-
genus Campodea).
There is however,
considerable variety in the
forms of
planidia that
occur in
various families and orders; in the
beetle family Meloidae...
- are
called "
planidia".
Adult females lay eggs on
vegetation (often flowers)
frequented by
their host insects;
after hatching, the
planidia attach themselves...
- the
trees and
wasps have
coevolved and are mutualistic.
Latina rugosa planidia (arrows, magnified)
attached to an ant larva; the
Eucharitidae are among...
- Some
insects that
exhibit hypermetamorphosis begin their metamorphosis as
planidia, specialised, active,
legged larvae, but they end
their larval stage as...
-
finds a
suitable host, she
deposits planidia (first
instar larvae)
which then
quickly burrow into the host. The
planidia develop within the body of the field...
- on, the ants. Once inside, they s**** out ant
larvae as hosts.
There the
planidia attach to ant host
larvae or
prepupae where they feed. On
completing their...
-
feeding until it
emerges from its host. The
average time of
development from
planidia to
adult is 29.5 days; the
average pupal stage is 8.2 days.
Because orasemine...
-
Females lay
large number of eggs, up to 5,000, and
after hatching, the
planidia s**** out spiders. They do not
resemble the
triungulin of most
beetles with...