Strepsiptera


Bahiaxenidae
Bohartillidae
Callipharixenidae
Corioxenidae
Cretostylopidae
Elenchidae
Halictophagidae
Mengeidae
Mengenillidae
Myrmecolacidae
Phthanoxenidae
Protoxenidae
Stylopidae

The Strepsiptera are 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. The early-stage larvae do emerge because they must find an unoccupied living host, and the short-lived males must emerge to seek a receptive female in her host.[1] They are believed to be most closely related to beetles, from which they diverged 300–350 million years ago, but do not appear in the fossil record until the Mid-Cretaceous around 100 million years ago.[2]

The order is not well known to non-specialists, and the nearest they have to a common name is stylops.[3] The name of the order translates to "twisted wing"', giving rise to other common names used for the order, twisted-wing insects and twisted-winged parasites.[4]

Males of the Strepsiptera have wings, legs, eyes, and antennae, though their mouthparts cannot be used for feeding. Many have mouthparts modified into sensory structures. To the uninitiated the males superficially look like flies. Adult males are very short-lived, usually surviving less than five hours, and do not feed. Females, in all families except the Mengenillidae, are not known to leave their hosts and are neotenic in form, lacking wings, legs, and eyes. Virgin females release a pheromone which the males use to locate them.

In the Stylopidia, the female's anterior region protrudes out of the host body and the male mates by rupturing the female's brood canal opening, which lies between the head and prothorax. Sperm passes through the opening in a process termed hypodermic insemination.[1] The offspring consume their mother from the inside in a process known as hemocelous viviparity. Each female then produces many thousands of planidium larvae that emerge from the brood opening on the head, which protrudes outside the host body. These larvae have legs and actively search out new hosts. Their legs are partly vestigial in that they lack a trochanter, the leg segment that forms the articulation between the basal coxa and the femur).[5]

Strepsiptera of various species have been documented to attack hosts in many orders, including members of the orders Zygentoma, Orthoptera, Blattodea, Mantodea, Heteroptera, Hymenoptera, and Diptera. In the strepsipteran family Myrmecolacidae, the males parasitize ants, while the females parasitize Orthoptera.[1]


Traumatic insemination of an endoparasitic female in Stylops ovinae
Mengenilla moldrzyki (Mengenilidae)
A wasp (Odynerus spinipes) with a small portion of a strepsipteran's body protruding from its abdomen
Stylops melittae male
Stem-group strepsipteran Heterobathmilla kakopoios in Burmese amber
Andrena vaga male bee, with Stylops melittae mating on its abdomen