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The Strepsiptera (/ s t r ɛ p ˈ s ɪ p t ər ə /) are an order of insects with eleven extant families that include about 600 described species. They are endoparasites of other insects, such as bees , wasps , leafhoppers , silverfish , and cockroaches .
Xenos vesparum is a parasitic insect species of the order Strepsiptera that are endoparasites of paper wasps in the genus Polistes (most commonly Polistes dominula) that was first described in 1793. [1]
The Strepsiptera (twisted-wing parasites) consist entirely of parasitoids; they usually sterilise their hosts. [42] Two beetle families, Ripiphoridae (450 species [26]) [43] [44] and Rhipiceridae, are largely parasitoids, as are Aleochara Staphylinidae; in all, some 400 staphylinids are parasitoidal.
Articles relating to the Strepsiptera, an order of insects with nine extant families that include about 600 described species. They are endoparasites in other insects, such as bees, wasps, leafhoppers, silverfish, and cockroaches. Females of most species never emerge from the host after entering its body, finally dying inside it.
Stylops [1] 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.
Myrmecolacidae is an insect family of the order Strepsiptera. There are four genera and about 98 species in this family. There are four genera and about 98 species in this family. Like all strepsipterans, they have a parasitic mode of development with males parasitizing ants while the females develop inside Orthoptera.
Xenos is a genus of insects belonging to the family Xenidae. [1] The word derives from the Greek word for strange. [2] A species of the genus is Xenos vesparum, first described by Pietro Rossi in 1793.
Halictoxenos borealis is a species of the order Strepsiptera of flying insects, that parasitize sweat bees (Lasioglossum). [2]Nakase and Kato (2021) [3] found that the parasitised bees (Lasioglossum apristum) changed their behaviour and visit flowers not to forage but to release the first-instar larvae of their parasite Halictoxenos borealis.
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