User Contributed Dictionary
- Plural of aphid
Extensive Definition
- "Aphid" is also the NATO reporting name for the Soviet/Russian Molniya R-60 air-to-air missile.
Aphids, also known as plant lice, are small
plant-feeding insects,
members of the superfamily Aphidoidea. About 4,000 species of
aphids are known, presently classified in 10 families, though
historically there were many fewer, with most species included in
the family Aphididae. Around
250 species are serious pests for agriculture and forestry as well as an
annoyance for gardeners. They vary in size
from 1-10 mm
long.
Important natural enemies include the predatory
lady
beetles (Coleoptera:
Coccinellidae),
hoverfly
larvae (Diptera: Syrphidae), and
lacewings (Neuroptera:
Chrysopidae),
and entomopathogenic
fungi like Lecanicillium lecanii and the Entomophthorales.
Aphids are distributed world-wide, but are most
common in temperate
zones. It is possible for aphids to migrate great distances
(mainly through passive dispersal riding on winds) depending on the
weather patterns; for example, the lettuce aphid spread from
New
Zealand to Tasmania. They
have also been spread by human transportation of infested plant
materials.
Taxonomy
Aphids are in the superfamily Aphidoidea in the homopterous division of the order Hemiptera. Recent classification within the Hemiptera has reduced the old taxon "Homoptera" to two suborders: Sternorrhyncha (aphids, whiteflies, scales, psyllids...) and Auchenorrhyncha (cicadas, leafhoppers, treehoppers, planthoppers...) with the suborder Heteroptera containing a large group of insects known as the "true bugs". More recent reclassifications have resulted in a substantial rearrangement of the constituent families with the Aphidoidea, with some old families reduced to subfamily rank (e.g., Eriosomatidae), and numerous old subfamilies elevated to family rank.Anatomy
Aphids contain sucking mouthparts called stylets. They have soft bodies; long, thin legs; two-jointed, two-clawed tarsi; and usually a pair of cornicles, abdominal tubes through which droplets of defensive fluid are exuded. Aphids have two compound eyes and two ocular tubercles made up of three lenses, each of which is located behind and above the compound eyes. When host plant quality becomes poor or is crowded, female aphids will produce winged offspring that can disperse to other food sources.Diet
Many, but far from all, aphids are monophagous (i.e. feeding only on 1 species of plant). Others, like Myzus persicae feed on hundreds of plant species across many families.Similarly to related families, aphids passively
feed on sap of phloem vessels in plants. Once a
phloem vessel is punctured, the sap which is stored under high
pressure is forced into the food canal. As they feed, aphids often
transmit plant
viruses to their food plants. These viruses can sometimes kill
the plants.
Some species of ants "farm" aphids, protecting them
on the plant they eat, and eating the honeydew
that the aphids release from their anus; this is a mutualistic relationship.
Aphid honeydew is rich in carbohydrates, of which the aphids ingest
an excess, being phloem-feeders. Many aphids are host to endosymbiont bacteria, Buchnera,
which live in specialized cells called bacteriocytes inside the
aphid. These bacteria synthesize some essential amino acids
that are absent in the phloem that the aphids eat.
Reproduction
Aphids are known for having unusual reproductive adaptations in some species. Many aphids undergo cyclical parthenogenesis. In the spring and summer, only females are present in the population. Reproduction is typically parthenogenetic and viviparous. Females undergo a modified meiosis that results in eggs that are genetically identical to their mother (parthenogenetic). The embryos develop within the mothers ovarioles, and give live birth to 1st instar nymphs (viviparous). Aphids typically live from 20-40 days and thus undergo multiple parthenogenetic, viviparous generations each summer. In the fall, a change in photoperiod and temperature cause females to parthenogenetically produce sexual females and males. The males are genetically identical to their mothers except they have lost one sex chromosome. Sexual females and males mate and females lay eggs that will develop outside of the mother. Thus in the fall aphids undergo sexual, oviparous reproduction. The aphids will overwinter as eggs and hatch out as females in the following spring.Aphids have been known to have what is called
telescoping
generations. The parthenogenetic, viviparous female aphid will
have a daughter within her, who is already parthenogenetically
producing her own daughter at the same time. This leads to the
situation where the diet of a female aphid can have
inter-generational effects on the body size and birth rate of
aphids. In other words, what the aphid eats can directly change the
size and fertility of the aphid's daughters and granddaughters
(Nevo and Coll 2001, Jahn et al. 2005).
The following is the life cycle of the rose aphid
(Aphis
rosae), and may be regarded as typical of the family, though
exceptions occur in other species: Eggs produced in the autumn by
fertilized females remain on the plant through the winter and
hatching in the spring give rise to female individuals which may be
winged or wingless. From these, females are born
parthenogenetically: that is to say, without the intervention of
males, and by a process that has been compared to internal budding,
large numbers of young resembling their parents in every respect
except size are produced, which themselves reproduce their kind in
the same way. This process continues throughout the summer,
generation after generation being produced until the number of
descendants from a single individual of the spring-hatched brood
may amount to many thousands. In the autumn winged males appear;
union between the sexes takes place and the females lay the
fertilized eggs which are destined to carry the species through the
cold months of winter. If, however, the food-plant is grown in a
glasshouse or greenhouse where protection against cold is afforded,
the aphids may go on reproducing agamogenetically (asexually)
without cessation for many years.
The young may be born by the oviparous or
viviparous methods and either gamogenetically or agamogenetically,
and may develop into winged forms or remain wingless, and males
only appear in any number at the close of the season. Although the
factors which determine these phenomena are not clearly understood,
it is believed that the appearance of the males is connected with
the increasing cold of autumn and the growing scarcity of food, and
that the birth of winged females is similarly associated with
decrease in the quantity or vitiation of the quality of the
nourishment imbibed. Sometimes the winged females migrate from the
plant they were born on to start fresh colonies on others often of
quite a different kind. Thus the apple aphid
(Aphis mali), after producing many generations of apterous females
on its typical food-plant, gives rise to winged forms which fly
away and settle upon grass or corn-stalks.
Some species of cabbage aphids (like Brevicoryne
brassicae) reproduce rapidly during the summer. They are all
females, and can produce up to 41 generations of offspring. If none
of these died, a female would have more than one and a half billion
billion billion offspring (1.5 x 1027) by the end of the
season.
Evolution
Aphids probably first appeared around 280 million years ago, in the early Permian period. They probably fed on plants like Cordaitales or Cycadophyta. The oldest known aphid fossil is one of the species Triassoaphis cubitus from the Triassic. There were relatively few species of aphids at that time, and the number of species only considerably increased since the appearance of angiosperms 160 millions of years ago. This is due to the fact that angiosperms provide an occasion for aphids to become specialized. Organs like the cornicles did not appear until the Cretaceous.Gallery
References
- G. B. Buckton, British Aphides (Ray Soc. 1876-1883)
- Nevo, E., and M. Coll. 2001. Effect of nitrogen fertilization on Aphis gossypii (Homoptera: Aphididae): variation in size, color, and reproduction. J. Econ. Entomol. 94: 27-32.
- Jahn, GC, LP Almazan, and J Pacia. 2005. Effect of nitrogen fertilizer on the intrinsic rate of increase of the rusty plum aphid, Hysteroneura setariae (Thomas) (Homoptera: Aphididae) on rice (Oryza sativa L.). Environmental Entomology 34 (4): 938-943.http://docserver.esa.catchword.org/deliver/cw/pdf/esa/freepdfs/0046225x/v34n4s26.pdf
See also
aphids in Arabic: من
aphids in Danish: Bladlus
aphids in German: Blattläuse
aphids in Estonian: Lehetäilised
aphids in Spanish: Aphidoidea
aphids in Persian: شته
aphids in French: Aphidoidea
aphids in Korean: 진딧물
aphids in Ido: Afidio
aphids in Italian: Aphidoidea
aphids in Hebrew: כנימות עלים
aphids in Lithuanian: Amariniai
aphids in Dutch: Bladluizen
aphids in Japanese: アブラムシ
aphids in Norwegian: Bladlus
aphids in Polish: Mszyce
aphids in Portuguese: Afídio
aphids in Quechua: Yura usa
aphids in Russian: Тли
aphids in Slovenian: Listne uši
aphids in Finnish: Kirvat
aphids in Swedish: Bladlöss
aphids in Ukrainian: Тлі