Stylops Gwynanae
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Stylops Gwynanae
''Stylops'' is a genus of obligately endoparasitic insects in the family Stylopidae. Hosts are typically members of the order Hymenoptera. The name "stylops", used without a capital "s", refers as a common name to any member of the order Strepsiptera, and not only the genus ''Stylops''. Description Males are 2-3 mm long and black with white wings. Females have no limbs and are only seen from their head and thorax poking out of the host bee. Larvae are triungulin. Life cycle ''Stylops'' larvae emerge from their host bee while the host gathers pollen from flowers. The larvae then attach to other bees in order to be carried back to the nest. At the nest, the ''Stylops'' larvae enter the bodies of bee larvae and develop along with their host. Adult males leave their hosts to mate with females, who remain inside their host and hatch their eggs there. Species Many including: * '' Stylops analis'' Perkins, 1918 * '' Stylops andrenaphilus'' Luna de Carvalho, 1974 * '' Stylops at ...
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William Kirby (entomologist)
William Kirby (19 September 1759 – 4 July 1850) was an English entomologist, an original member of the Linnean Society and a Fellow of the Royal Society, as well as a country rector, so that he was an eminent example of the "parson-naturalist". The four-volume ''Introduction to Entomology'', co-written with William Spence, was widely influential. Family origins and early studies Kirby was a grandson of the Suffolk topographer John Kirby (author of ''The Suffolk Traveller'') and nephew of artist-topographer Joshua Kirby (a friend of Thomas Gainsborough's). He was also a cousin of the children's author Sarah Trimmer. His parents were William Kirby, a solicitor, and Lucy Meadows. He was born on 19 September 1759 at Witnesham, Suffolk, and studied at Ipswich School and Caius College, Cambridge, where he graduated in 1781. Taking holy orders in 1782, he spent his entire working life in the peaceful seclusion of an English country parsonage at Barham in Suffolk, working at th ...
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Stylops Dinizi
''Stylops'' is a genus of obligately endoparasitic insects in the family Stylopidae. Hosts are typically members of the order Hymenoptera. The name "stylops", used without a capital "s", refers as a common name to any member of the order Strepsiptera, and not only the genus ''Stylops''. Description Males are 2-3 mm long and black with white wings. Females have no limbs and are only seen from their head and thorax poking out of the host bee. Larvae are triungulin. Life cycle ''Stylops'' larvae emerge from their host bee while the host gathers pollen from flowers. The larvae then attach to other bees in order to be carried back to the nest. At the nest, the ''Stylops'' larvae enter the bodies of bee larvae and develop along with their host. Adult males leave their hosts to mate with females, who remain inside their host and hatch their eggs there. Species Many including: * '' Stylops analis'' Perkins, 1918 * '' Stylops andrenaphilus'' Luna de Carvalho, 1974 * '' Stylops at ...
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Stylops Obenbergeri
''Stylops'' is a genus of obligately endoparasitic insects in the family Stylopidae. Hosts are typically members of the order Hymenoptera. The name "stylops", used without a capital "s", refers as a common name to any member of the order Strepsiptera, and not only the genus ''Stylops''. Description Males are 2-3 mm long and black with white wings. Females have no limbs and are only seen from their head and thorax poking out of the host bee. Larvae are triungulin. Life cycle ''Stylops'' larvae emerge from their host bee while the host gathers pollen from flowers. The larvae then attach to other bees in order to be carried back to the nest. At the nest, the ''Stylops'' larvae enter the bodies of bee larvae and develop along with their host. Adult males leave their hosts to mate with females, who remain inside their host and hatch their eggs there. Species Many including: * '' Stylops analis'' Perkins, 1918 * '' Stylops andrenaphilus'' Luna de Carvalho, 1974 * '' Stylops at ...
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Stylops Nevinsoni
''Stylops'' is a genus of obligately endoparasitic insects in the family Stylopidae. Hosts are typically members of the order Hymenoptera. The name "stylops", used without a capital "s", refers as a common name to any member of the order Strepsiptera, and not only the genus ''Stylops''. Description Males are 2-3 mm long and black with white wings. Females have no limbs and are only seen from their head and thorax poking out of the host bee. Larvae are triungulin. Life cycle ''Stylops'' larvae emerge from their host bee while the host gathers pollen from flowers. The larvae then attach to other bees in order to be carried back to the nest. At the nest, the ''Stylops'' larvae enter the bodies of bee larvae and develop along with their host. Adult males leave their hosts to mate with females, who remain inside their host and hatch their eggs there. Species Many including: * '' Stylops analis'' Perkins, 1918 * '' Stylops andrenaphilus'' Luna de Carvalho, 1974 * '' Stylops at ...
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Stylops Moniliaphagus
''Stylops'' is a genus of obligately endoparasitic insects in the family Stylopidae. Hosts are typically members of the order Hymenoptera. The name "stylops", used without a capital "s", refers as a common name to any member of the order Strepsiptera, and not only the genus ''Stylops''. Description Males are 2-3 mm long and black with white wings. Females have no limbs and are only seen from their head and thorax poking out of the host bee. Larvae are triungulin. Life cycle ''Stylops'' larvae emerge from their host bee while the host gathers pollen from flowers. The larvae then attach to other bees in order to be carried back to the nest. At the nest, the ''Stylops'' larvae enter the bodies of bee larvae and develop along with their host. Adult males leave their hosts to mate with females, who remain inside their host and hatch their eggs there. Species Many including: * '' Stylops analis'' Perkins, 1918 * '' Stylops andrenaphilus'' Luna de Carvalho, 1974 * '' Stylops at ...
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Stylops Melittae
''Stylops melittae'' is a species of the order Strepsiptera of flying insects, that parasitize various species of sand bees (''Andrena'').Bleidorn, Christoph; Feitz, Fernand; Schneider, Nico; Venne, Christian''Zum Vorkommen von Stylops melittae Kirby, 1802 (Insecta, Strepsiptera) in Luxemburg''Bull. Soc. Nat. luxemb. 105 (2004) p. 137–142 Biology The female ''Stylops melittae'' gives birth to a large number of motile primary larvae, that are strewn upon blossoms. From there they can be delivered along with the pollen at the nest construction of the sand bees for which the species is specialized. In the nest construction the primary larvae penetrate into the host larvae and molt into exclusively endoparasitic secondary larvae. These roam about feeding in the host, and after a few further moltings establish themselves in the abdomen, and with their anterior portion break through between two abdominal segments of the host's skin, where they pupate. The exit point lays mostly betw ...
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Stylops Maxillaris
''Stylops'' is a genus of obligately endoparasitic insects in the family Stylopidae. Hosts are typically members of the order Hymenoptera. The name "stylops", used without a capital "s", refers as a common name to any member of the order Strepsiptera, and not only the genus ''Stylops''. Description Males are 2-3 mm long and black with white wings. Females have no limbs and are only seen from their head and thorax poking out of the host bee. Larvae are triungulin. Life cycle ''Stylops'' larvae emerge from their host bee while the host gathers pollen from flowers. The larvae then attach to other bees in order to be carried back to the nest. At the nest, the ''Stylops'' larvae enter the bodies of bee larvae and develop along with their host. Adult males leave their hosts to mate with females, who remain inside their host and hatch their eggs there. Species Many including: * '' Stylops analis'' Perkins, 1918 * '' Stylops andrenaphilus'' Luna de Carvalho, 1974 * '' Stylops at ...
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Stylops Madrilensis
''Stylops'' is a genus of obligately endoparasitic insects in the family Stylopidae. Hosts are typically members of the order Hymenoptera. The name "stylops", used without a capital "s", refers as a common name to any member of the order Strepsiptera, and not only the genus ''Stylops''. Description Males are 2-3 mm long and black with white wings. Females have no limbs and are only seen from their head and thorax poking out of the host bee. Larvae are triungulin. Life cycle ''Stylops'' larvae emerge from their host bee while the host gathers pollen from flowers. The larvae then attach to other bees in order to be carried back to the nest. At the nest, the ''Stylops'' larvae enter the bodies of bee larvae and develop along with their host. Adult males leave their hosts to mate with females, who remain inside their host and hatch their eggs there. Species Many including: * '' Stylops analis'' Perkins, 1918 * '' Stylops andrenaphilus'' Luna de Carvalho, 1974 * '' Stylops at ...
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Stylops Lusohispanicus
''Stylops'' is a genus of obligately endoparasitic insects in the family Stylopidae. Hosts are typically members of the order Hymenoptera. The name "stylops", used without a capital "s", refers as a common name to any member of the order Strepsiptera, and not only the genus ''Stylops''. Description Males are 2-3 mm long and black with white wings. Females have no limbs and are only seen from their head and thorax poking out of the host bee. Larvae are triungulin. Life cycle ''Stylops'' larvae emerge from their host bee while the host gathers pollen from flowers. The larvae then attach to other bees in order to be carried back to the nest. At the nest, the ''Stylops'' larvae enter the bodies of bee larvae and develop along with their host. Adult males leave their hosts to mate with females, who remain inside their host and hatch their eggs there. Species Many including: * '' Stylops analis'' Perkins, 1918 * '' Stylops andrenaphilus'' Luna de Carvalho, 1974 * '' Stylops at ...
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Stylops Liliputanus
''Stylops'' is a genus of obligately endoparasitic insects in the family Stylopidae. Hosts are typically members of the order Hymenoptera. The name "stylops", used without a capital "s", refers as a common name to any member of the order Strepsiptera, and not only the genus ''Stylops''. Description Males are 2-3 mm long and black with white wings. Females have no limbs and are only seen from their head and thorax poking out of the host bee. Larvae are triungulin. Life cycle ''Stylops'' larvae emerge from their host bee while the host gathers pollen from flowers. The larvae then attach to other bees in order to be carried back to the nest. At the nest, the ''Stylops'' larvae enter the bodies of bee larvae and develop along with their host. Adult males leave their hosts to mate with females, who remain inside their host and hatch their eggs there. Species Many including: * '' Stylops analis'' Perkins, 1918 * '' Stylops andrenaphilus'' Luna de Carvalho, 1974 * '' Stylops at ...
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Stylops Kinzelbachi
''Stylops'' is a genus of obligately endoparasitic insects in the family Stylopidae. Hosts are typically members of the order Hymenoptera. The name "stylops", used without a capital "s", refers as a common name to any member of the order Strepsiptera, and not only the genus ''Stylops''. Description Males are 2-3 mm long and black with white wings. Females have no limbs and are only seen from their head and thorax poking out of the host bee. Larvae are triungulin. Life cycle ''Stylops'' larvae emerge from their host bee while the host gathers pollen from flowers. The larvae then attach to other bees in order to be carried back to the nest. At the nest, the ''Stylops'' larvae enter the bodies of bee larvae and develop along with their host. Adult males leave their hosts to mate with females, who remain inside their host and hatch their eggs there. Species Many including: * '' Stylops analis'' Perkins, 1918 * '' Stylops andrenaphilus'' Luna de Carvalho, 1974 * '' Stylops at ...
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Stylops Ibericus
''Stylops'' is a genus of obligately endoparasitic insects in the family Stylopidae. Hosts are typically members of the order Hymenoptera. The name "stylops", used without a capital "s", refers as a common name to any member of the order Strepsiptera, and not only the genus ''Stylops''. Description Males are 2-3 mm long and black with white wings. Females have no limbs and are only seen from their head and thorax poking out of the host bee. Larvae are triungulin. Life cycle ''Stylops'' larvae emerge from their host bee while the host gathers pollen from flowers. The larvae then attach to other bees in order to be carried back to the nest. At the nest, the ''Stylops'' larvae enter the bodies of bee larvae and develop along with their host. Adult males leave their hosts to mate with females, who remain inside their host and hatch their eggs there. Species Many including: * '' Stylops analis'' Perkins, 1918 * '' Stylops andrenaphilus'' Luna de Carvalho, 1974 * '' Stylops at ...
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