- Related Topics:
- cicada
- plant hopper
- Sternorrhyncha
- Auchenorrhyncha
- Coleorrhyncha
The aphids or plant lice, soft-bodied insects that develop large populations, have several types of complex life cycles. Generally aphids overwinter in the egg stage on twigs or plant buds, usually designated as the primary host. In the spring the eggs hatch into females that reproduce parthenogenetically, giving birth to living young. Several generations may be produced during the season in this way. Early generations are usually wingless, but by the third generation winged individuals appear. In many species these winged forms migrate to a secondary host plant, usually an annual plant, and the same type of asexual reproductive process continues. In the latter part of the season, winged aphids of both sexes appear and migrate back to the primary host where mating occurs, and the females lay the overwintering eggs. There are two distinctive characteristics in the aphid life cycle: first, seasonal alternation of food plants involving a primary host (typically a perennial) during the winter and a secondary host (an annual) during the summer; second, there is alternation between sexual and asexual cycles, with eggs resulting from sexual mating and living young, usually females, being produced asexually.
Scale insects
The scale insects also have modified life cycles. For example, the oyster shell scale, Lepidosaphes ulmi, typically passes the winter as an egg beneath a secreted scale covering, whereas the San Jose scale Quadraspidiotus perniciosus produces living young. In either case newborn young, called crawlers, leave the scale covering to search for food. After a few days they molt, losing their legs, antennae, and anal spines, and retaining poorly developed eyes. They secrete a hard scale about their soft bodies, insert their mouthparts into a plant, and remain sessile. As the females mature, they increase in size, enlarging the scale covering periodically, but do not change form or develop wings.
Young males also have a crawler stage but become sessile and inactive after the second molt, passing through a more complete metamorphosis beneath the scale covering. The last preadult instar has two external wings and is called the pupa. Adult males have two wings and two small knobs or halteres where the second pair of wings would normally develop. Some males have three pairs of eyes. Adult males seek out wingless females, concealed beneath the scale covering, and mate with them. As many as three males may mate simultaneously with one female.
Reproduction and growth
Reproduction is bisexual among the homopterans, although asexual reproduction occurs in the aphids, in a few primitive leafhoppers, and possibly in species whose life cycles are not known in detail. An unusual situation occurs in the normally hermaphroditic cottony cushion scale Icerya purchasi, in which both male and female sexual organs are present in one individual and the eggs of any individual may be fertilized by its own sperm.
In the Auchenorrhyncha, eggs are laid by the female, who uses an egg-laying structure, the ovipositor, to insert eggs into plant tissue. In the Sternorrhyncha (e.g., aphids) the female places her eggs on the surface of the plant. The eggs of scale insects are retained in the body of the female or remain under the scale covering if separated from the female. In mealybugs and certain “cottony” scales, eggs are extruded from the body and remain in a mass enclosed by waxy plates or shreds. In most homopterans, each female produces a few hundred eggs. Exceptions occur in some scale insects (e.g., cottony maple scale) where a female may lay 5,000 eggs.
Growth is gradual and is accompanied by periodic molting. The nymphal stages, or instars, between egg and adult usually number five in leafhoppers and related species. Wings, if present, develop when the fifth instar molts and the adult emerges.
Sexual dimorphism occurs in most groups of Homoptera, with males and females often coloured differently. For example, the male leafhopper Arundanus nacreosus, a species common on cane, is orange, and the female is milk white. Size and form also vary between males and females. The male marsh leafhopper Hecalus lineatus is not only a different colour than the female but also only half as long. In treehoppers the pronotum (the dorsal sclerite of the prothorax) often is so different in shape and size between the two sexes that they appear to be two species. Examples of this are Umbonia crassicornis and Philya inflata. Among scale insects most females lack wings, legs, and antennae, while males have all three; males and females are so diverse in appearance that previous knowledge is necessary to associate two sexes of the same species. Most homopterans lack defense mechanisms, however, one scale insect, Phenacoccus echeveria, extrudes a honeydew-like material from the posterior ostioles as a defense mechanism.