- Eucharitidae
Taxobox
name = Eucharitidae
regnum =Animal ia
phylum =Arthropod a
classis =Insect a
ordo =Hymenoptera
subordo =Apocrita
superfamilia =Chalcidoidea
familia = Eucharitidae
familia_authority = Latreille, 1809
diversity = 2 subfamilies
53 genera
c. 470 species
diversity_link = biodiversity
subdivision_ranks = Subfamilies
subdivision =Eucharitinae Oraseminae The Eucharitidae are a specialized group of ant
parasitoid s within theChalcidoidea . There are 53 genera and >470 species worldwide, mostly in the tropics; very few genera are shared between the Old andNew World . They are often peculiarly "hunch-backed", with a bulbousmesosoma and a small, petiolatemetasoma . They are generally very strongly sculptured, often with strong spikes or prongs projecting backwards from the thorax, and are generally dark, sometimes metallic. Theprothorax is not visible from above, and the labrum is multidigitate. This latter feature is shared with thePerilampidae , the family from which the Eucharitids apparently are derived.Eggs of eucharitids are deposited into plant tissue.
Oraseminae andPsilocharitini deposit their eggs into punctures made by theovipositor ,Eucharitini all deposit their eggs into preformed cavities (plant buds or inflorescences), onto the undersurface of leaves, or into the outer skin of fruits. As in Perilampids, the first-instar larvae are called "planidia" and are minute, less than 0.13 mm, strongly sclerotized, active, and are responsible for gaining access to the ant host. Access to the host ant colony is by various means, most often throughphoresy on intermediate hosts, or directly via ant workers.Larval development takes place in the ant nest. Eucharitine planidia attach externally to the host larva, whereas Oraseminae all burrow into the host
thorax just behind the head and do limited feeding (slight expansion oftergite s). Further development does not take place until the hostpupa tes. In all cases, the first instar larvae migrate to the ventral region of the host pupa where they feed until most or all of the host is consumed. Only one host is consumed and only very rarely do more than one eucharitid develop on a host. Adults emerge within the nest and may remain for a period of time (unknown how long) within the nest. Adults, and immature stages where exposed, are generally well treated within the nest by the ants, which will feed them, groom them or carry them away to protect them if the colony is under attack, suggesting chemicalmimicry of the host ants. Adults must leave the nest to mate and lay eggs.References
* [http://hymenoptera.ucr.edu/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=60&Itemid=119 UC Riverside Eucharitid Page]
* [http://www.faculty.ucr.edu/~heraty/literature%20copy/aa-references.html Primary descriptions] pdfsExternal links
* [http://www.nhm.ac.uk/research-curation/research/projects/chalcidoids/encyrtidae.html Universal Chacidoiod Database]
* [http://cedarcreek.umn.edu/insects/album/025023xxxap.html Cedar Creek] Images of pinned specimens.
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