THE PARASITISM OF INSECTS. 



387 



the thorax, while the tergal disks develop into the tergal 

 halves of the corresponding somites, with their appendages, 

 the wings and the halteres. The anterior pair of disks origi- 

 nate the head and proboscis of the fly. As the imaginal 

 disks develop, the preexisting organs contained in the head 

 and thorax of the larva undergo complete or partial resolu- 

 tion. On the other hand the abdomen of the fly is produced 

 by the continuous modification of the constituents of the lar- 

 val abdomen. 



As in the Crustacea, so in Insecta, the parasitic habit is 



Fig. 111.— The left-liarid fiirnre reprepetits an adnlt female of Stylojm aterrtmns con- 

 tainini: two nearly hatched e<,'t;s. and the rio:ht-hand fi-ure, a luwly bom larva of 

 Stylops on a hair of Andnrvd Trimvurana. A. ventral surface ol tiie thorax ; 

 B\ Mie abdomen; a, mandibles ; h labial plate>^ and mouth ; c, vulva ; 1, 2, 3, the 

 three thoracic segments united. (After Newport.) 



accompanied by extreme modification of form. In this re- 

 spect the ^trep8iptera^vi!\\\Q\\ are parasitic upon Bees, present 

 a remarkable history. The female (Fig. Ill) has the form of 

 a sac with a short neck, and never leaves the body of the 

 Hymenopteran in which she is parasitic. The males, on the 

 contrary, are exceedingly active insects provided with a sin- 



