scholarly journals LIFE-HISTORY OF SABULODES ARCASARIA, WLK.: (Sabulodes arcasaria, Wlk., ♀. Sabulodes sulphurata, Pack., ♀.)

1904 ◽  
Vol 36 (4) ◽  
pp. 103-106
Author(s):  
Otto Seifert

On April 24th two ♀ ♀ of this month were found resting on the ground within a cluster of Sumach-brush, at Wooside, Long Island, N. Y. Their bright yellow colour had faded to pale ochre.Eggs were deposited from April 24th to 28th, only during the night. According to circumstances they are secreted within the fissures of the leaf-buds and narrow crevices of bark, or into the folds of decaying leaves of the food-plant. In the first case the nearly elliptical eggs are fgastened erect, close together, in a single row; when attached to a broader surface they are arranged in small regular patches or rows, but deposited lengthwide, the next one always overlapping the preceding one with its, blunt, micropylar end.


1892 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 35-36
Author(s):  
Herbert Osborn ◽  
H. A. Gossard

This leaf-hopper is considered a clover pest, but is also known to feed on beets, rutabagas, cabbages and blue grass. It is active even in midwinter on sunshiny days. The eggs are thrust beneath the epidermis of the food-plant, and the first brood of larvæ appears from the middle of May until July 1st. The earliest individuals of the brood are nearly mature by the first of July and are supposed to begin egg-laying a little later. Larvæ can be found in all stages of growth from this time until the advent of winter, but most of the individuals are believed to be included in two broods.



2009 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 239-244 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomasz Baran

The morphology of larva and pupa, as well as larval mines of Elachista zonulae (Sruoga, 1992) are described and illustrated for the first time. Carex firma Host is reported as a new host plant ofthe species; previously only Carex sempervirens Vill. was known to be host plant of E. zonulae. Some information on life history of this elachistid moth is also provided. The mature larva is 4.5—5.5 mm long. Pupation takes place usually at base of leaf blade of the food plant. The species is univoltine and hibernates as young larva.



2003 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomasz Baran

Egg, second, and last instar larvae, as well as pupa of Scythris siccella (Zeller, 1839) are described and illustrated in detail. Life history of this scythridid species is also presented. The eggs are laid singly or in small groups. The larva mines leaves of Hieracium pilosella and Rumex acetosella; it lives in sandcovered silken tubes attached to food plant. The full-grown larva is 8–10 mm long, and pupation takes place in a dense cocoon encrusted with grains of sand. The adults fly in one generation, from the end of May to the end of July. In Poland, Scythris siccella (Zeller) inhabits open, lowland dunes with xerothermic vegetation.



BMJ ◽  
1920 ◽  
Vol 1 (3089) ◽  
pp. 359-360 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. R. Murray


1960 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 217 ◽  
Author(s):  
AJ Bearup

A list is given of the trematode cercariae which are commonly found in the estuarine gastropod, Pyrazus australis Quoy & Gaimard. These include: cercariae of a schistosome, Austrobilharzia terrigalensis Johnston, 1917, and of a heterophyid, Stictodora sp.; a monostomate xiphidiocercaria, probably belonging to the Microphallidae; two megalurous cercariae, probably belonging to the Philophthalmidae; and one echinostome cercaria. The life history of the latter, Acanthoparyphium spinulosum Johnston, 1917, is described. No sporocysts were found. Two generations of rediae precede the cercariae, which have a collar with 23 spines in a single row, as in the adult. Cercariae encyst readily in Salinator fragilis (Lamarck), another gastropod living in the same habitat. Cysts were also found occasionally in P. australis and in small polychaetes of the Phanaerocephala group. Adults were obtained by feeding S. fragilis, which contained encysted cercariae, to the silver gull, Larus novae-hollandiae.



The two chief modifications of the normal course of the life-history of a fern, apogamy and apospory, are of interest in themselves, but have acquired a more extended importance from the possibility that their occurrence may aid in indicating the true relation between the sexual and spore-bearing generations, and so throw light on the nature of “alternation of generations” in archegoniate plants. This aspect has been recognised since the discovery of the phenomena, and will be best appreciated by tracing the progress of opinion on the nature of alternation from the time of Hofmeister to the present day. Only the more important contributions bearing on the subject can be mentioned in this place. With the publication of the ‘Vergleichende Untersuchungen’ (1851), the fact of the regular alternation of a sexual with an asexual generation in the life-history of Bryophyta, Pteridophyta, and Gymnosperms was established. Hofmeister subse­ quently extended the observation to Angiosperms. In the work mentioned, and in the ‘Higher Cryptogamia,’ published some ten years later, no views as to the nature of alternation of generations are discussed. With the extension of accurate know­ledge of the life-histories of Thallophytes, the attempt was made to compare the different individuals of the same species of Alga and Fungi with the sexual and asexual generations of archegoniate plants. Two main views of the nature of alter­nation in the latter were put forward. On the one hand, Celakovsky regarded alternation of generations in the Archegoniatse and a few Thallophyta as essentially different from that found in the majority of the latter group. He distinguished the two types as antithetic and homologous alternation respectively. Pringsheim however, held that the sexual and spore-bearing generations were homologous with one another, alike in Thallophyta and Archegoniatse. In support of this view he relied upon the instances of apospory which he had experimentally induced in Mosses, together with the occurrence of apogamy in Ferns, the first case of which had been discovered by Farlow a few years before. He also compared the life-histories of a number of Thallophytes witli one another and with that of the Moss, and showed how the reduction of the first neutral generation in some of the formerled to a condition of things not dissimilar to the relation existing between the moss sporogonium and the sexual plant. Additional cases of apogamy in Ferns were subsequently discovered by DeBary and the subject fully discussed. Subsequently Druery found the first instance of an aposporous fern, and this and other examples were investigated by Bower.



2006 ◽  
Vol 96 (6) ◽  
pp. 613-618 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.A. Azidah ◽  
M. Sofian-Azirun


1887 ◽  
Vol 24 (612supp) ◽  
pp. 9781-9781
Author(s):  
C. V. Riley
Keyword(s):  


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