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Culex larva showing details of external structure

Culex larva showing details of external structure.png Culicoides guttipennis -  mouth parts of adultThumbnailsPharyngeal syringe or salivary pump of Fulgora maculataCulicoides guttipennis -  mouth parts of adultThumbnailsPharyngeal syringe or salivary pump of Fulgora maculataCulicoides guttipennis -  mouth parts of adultThumbnailsPharyngeal syringe or salivary pump of Fulgora maculataCulicoides guttipennis -  mouth parts of adultThumbnailsPharyngeal syringe or salivary pump of Fulgora maculata
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The larvæ are elongate, with the head and thorax sharply distinct. The larval antennæ are prominent, consisting of a single cylindrical and sometimes curved segment. The outer third is often narrower and bears at its base a fan-shaped tuft of hairs, the arrangement and abundance of which is of systematic importance. About the mouth are the so-called rotary mouth brushes, dense masses of long hairs borne by the labrum and having the function of sweeping food into the mouth. The form and arrangement of thoracic, abdominal, and anal tufts of hair vary in different species and present characteristics of value. On either side of the eighth abdominal segment is a patch of scales varying greatly in arrangement and number and of much value in separating species. Respiration is by means of tracheæ which open at the apex of the so-called anal siphon, when it is present. In addition, there are also one or two pairs of tracheal gills which vary much in appearance in different species. On the ventral side of the anal siphon is a double row of flattened, toothed spines whose number and shape are likewise of some value in separating species. They constitute the comb or pecten.

Author
Handbook of Medical Entomology
By William Albert Riley and Oskar Augustus Johanssen
Published in 1915
Available from gutenberg.org
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334*545
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