SmugMug > keywords > homoptera > Alfalfa aphid giving birth to living young.  You can see the red eye, antennae, and legs folded against the body.  Aphids, and some other insects, can produce offspring from unfertilized eggs, a process called parthenogenesis.  The eggs develop and hatch within the mother.  At birth, eggs are already developing in the offspring for the next generation.  This type of quick reproduction allows the aphid population to explode in number and rapidly exploit available resources.
SmugMug > keywords > homoptera > Formicine ants are often dependent on honeydew-producing insects.  Here, Lepisiota sp. workers tend to scale insects in a South African forest.

St. Lucia, KZN, South Africa
SmugMug > keywords > homoptera > Cicadellid Leafhopper
Raleigh, North Carolina, USA
SmugMug > keywords > homoptera > Cicadellid Leafhopper
Raleigh, North Carolina, USA
SmugMug > keywords > homoptera > Parasitized pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum (Homoptera: Aphididae) on an alfalfa leaf.  The body is abnormally large and discolored because of the wasp parasitoid developing inside.  The integument of the aphid "mummy" is paper thin and movement of the wasp can be seen inside.  When the wasp has completed development, it will chew a hole in the abdomen of the aphid and crawl out.  Wasps of this type are important biological control agents.  Note, in the upper left part of the image, the mottled leaf surfaces, caused by twospotted spider mites feeding on the leaf.  The round, light-yellow objects are mite eggs, which will hatch in a day or two.
SmugMug > keywords > homoptera > A treehopper, Ceresa tauriniformis (Homoptera: Membracidae)
SmugMug > keywords > homoptera > Cast skin or exuvia from a leafhopper,  Paraulacizes irrorata (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae) on the underside of a leaf. Note the piercing mouthparts embedded into the leaf's main vein, which anchors the insect and allows the next stage to more easily shed it's old skin
SmugMug > keywords > homoptera > Leafhopper (Homoptera: Cicadellidae)
SmugMug > keywords > homoptera > Pupae of silverleaf whitefly, Bemesia argentifolii (Homotpera: Aleyrodidae)  on cotton leaf.  The red spots are eyes
Alfalfa aphid giving birth to living young. You can see the red eye, antennae, and legs folded against the body. Aphids, and some other insects, can produce offspring from unfertilized eggs, a process called parthenogenesis. The eggs develop and hatch within the mother. At birth, eggs are already developing in the offspring for the next generation. This type of quick reproduction allows the aphid population to explode in number and rapidly exploit available resources.
 > Alfalfa aphid giving birth to living young.  You can see the red eye, antennae, and legs folded against the body.  Aphids, and some other insects, can produce offspring from unfertilized eggs, a process called parthenogenesis.  The eggs develop and hatch within the mother.  At birth, eggs are already developing in the offspring for the next generation.  This type of quick reproduction allows the aphid population to explode in number and rapidly exploit available resources.
Alfalfa aphid giving birth to living young. You can see the red eye, antennae, and legs folded against the body. Aphids, and some other insects, can produce offspring from unfertilized eggs, a process called parthenogenesis. The eggs develop and hatch within the mother. At birth, eggs are already developing in the offspring for the next generation. This type of quick reproduction allows the aphid population to explode in number and rapidly exploit available resources.
Photo by: fisherwr2 • see photo in gallery

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