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Enaretta castelnaudii
Classification
Diagnostic Features of Larvae
- Mature larva. Form elongate, slender, cylindrical. Length up to 13 mm; maximum breadth (at prothorax) 4.2 mm. Head rather thick, scarcely depressed, widest across middle (maximum head-width 1.8 mm), with sides slightly constricted behind lateral limit of frons and broadly rounded posteriorly. Antennal foramen open behind; mouthframe rather strongly sclerotized, ferruginous. One pair of ocelli present; lens round, protuberant; pigmented spot indistinct. Clypeus glabrous. Labrum strongly transverse, Hypostoma with a pair of conspicuous, paramedian, oval swellings separated by a rather broad median cleavage line. Antenna 2-segmented; segment 2 bearing a conical hyaline process. Mandible with a characteristically sculptured concavity on apical third of outer face. Maxilla with palp 2-segmented; lobe very short and stout. Labial palpi with segment 2 minute. Mentum distinct from submentum. Prothorax with pronotum sparsely setose, very finely rugose, sublateral impressions and asperities absent. Abdomen with ampullae micro-granulate, devoid of conspicuous tubercles. Tergite 9 unarmed. Anus trilobed. Legs absent. Spiracles with peritreme thick, round, the inner margin produced into a crescentic membrane. This larva possesses a well-developed proventriculus which bears internally a spear-shaped sclerite. Adapted from Duffy (1957).
Biology and Economic Importance
- Members of this tribe are known from various host plant families. Species of this tribe are potentially invasive outside their native range.
Selected References to Larvae Specimens
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