Megaphragma is a genus of wasp in the family Trichogrammatidae. It contains some of the smallest known insects, Megaphragma caribea (170 μm) and Megaphragma mymaripenne (200 μm), which are roughly the same size as some unicellular protozoans.[1][2]

Megaphragma
Megaphragma mymaripenne
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Suborder:
Superfamily:
Family:
Genus:
Megaphragma

Type species
Megaphragma mymaripenne
Timberlake, 1924
Species

See text

Synonyms

Sethosiella Kryger, 1932
Paramegaphragma Lin, 1992

External Morphology

edit

The body is very compact, and its length can range from 0.16 to 0.3 mm. The mesosoma is rather high and is mostly shorter than the metasoma, and the prothorax is very short. The scutellum is shorter than the mid lobe of the mesoscutum, and has a pair of setae. The metathorax is slightly shorter than the propodeum. The propodeal spiracle is in an oval groove and near the internal margin with 2 very small setae. The legs are robust and have striate sculpture on the coxae.[2]

edit

The head is hypognathous and rounded, being slightly flattened in the longitudinal direction antero-posteriorly, and with a slightly concave posterior surface. The head capsule has only 1 barely noticeable post-occipital ridge, and several folds near the base of the antennae, and other sutures are absent. The hypostome and clypeus aren't distinguishable from each other and hypostomal bridge is missing. The keyhole-shaped occipital foramen is small, and the tentorium has anterior and posterior arms, with the dorsal arms reduced in size. The tentorial bridge is present, but the laminatentoria are absent. The occipital area has many folds that reduce the skull's size from pupae to adults.[3]

Eyes

edit

Its compound eyes are lateral and consist of roughly 30 ommatidia and have 3 ocelli.[3]

Antennae

edit

The antennae are inserted at mid-level of the orbital line and are approximately 150 μm long. It has a short radicle, and the scape is usually elongate and slightly curved. The subcylindrical pedicel, small anellus and a single cylindrical funicular segment may be present or absent. The clava may consist of 1 to 3 segments. The antennal formula is 1 (scape),1 (pedicel), (1) (anellus), 1 (funicle), 2 (clava) or 1,1,(1),1,1 or 1,1,(1),0,3. Therefore, the antennae are 4 or 5 segmented, since the anellus isn't an antennomere. Multiporous placoid sensilla are absent in claval segment 1.[2][3]

Mouth

edit

The mouth consists of a labrum, well-developed mandibles, maxillae and labium. The labrum is weakly developed, and is represented by a small, triangular, membranous plate. The mandible consists of two small teeth and has an undulate (wavy) medial margin. It has spines on its internal surface and the mola are missing. The maxillae are combined with the labium by a membranous septum into a labiomaxillary structure. The maxillae consist of a small, triangular cardo, broad fusiform stipes, largely fused endite lobes, and palp. The maxillary palp is very small and consists of only one segment. The labium consists of an almost triangular prementum, which has single-segmented, vestigial palps on the lateral margin, and membranous ligula on the apex. The galea has large setae and spines on it, and the lacinia is recognizable as a brush of setae.[2][3]

Mesosoma

edit

Prothorax

edit

The prothorax is narrow, and consists of a semicircular pronotum and propectus. It is formed by the sternite and pleurite of the thorax. The anterior part of the propectus bears paired cervical processes, which the head articulates to. The profurca is Y-shaped and has flattened arms. The pleurite bears a well-developed propleural arm.[3]

Mesothorax

edit

The mesothorax is larger than the other metasomal segments. The mesonotum consists of 2 parts which are divided by the scuto-scutellar suture. The anterior part is divided into the mesoscutum and scapulae by longitudinal parapsidal striae, while the posterior side is divided into the axillae and scutellum. The lateral part is divided into the episternum and epimeron by a slight ridge. The prepectus is inbetween the prothorax and mesothorax, along with a pair of annular, uniforous spiracles. The mesofurca is V-shaped, and its lateral arms are well-developed. The posterior margin of mesonotum forms the mesophargma, which is very long and almost reaches the tip of the metasoma.[3]

Metathorax

edit

The metathorax consists of only a narrow and circular metanotum, since the other sclerites are fused with the first abdominal segment, forming the propodeum. The propodeum bears a pair of spiracles, and is separated by a slight suture from the metepisterna. The epimera is also fused with the propodeum. The pleural apodeme is well-developed and is shaped like a longitudinal ridge with its top flattened. The metafurca are missing.[3]

Wings

edit

The wings are narrow and have strongly depleted venation. The blade has a fringe of long setae on its perimeter.[3]

The forewing is very narrow compared to the other Trichogrammatidae, and is 5.3 to 10 times as long as the maximum discal width. There are three veins that are present in the forewing, the submarginal, marginal and stigmal veins. The veins are usually fused into an arch at the anterior wing margin, which is formed from the fusion of the subcosta and radius. The submarginal vein is short, and the costa cell and parastigma are not distinct. The marginal vein is very long, with one short seta at the base, and 1 or 2 central setae, which may be of very different lengths. The stigmal vein is very short, with 1 or 2 short setae on the stigma. The disc is either glabrous or has a few setae in 1 or 2 rows.[2][3]

The hindwing is narrower than the forewing, and consists of only 1 vein. A discal fringe is absent in the front margin of the hindwing.[2][3]

Legs

edit

The legs are slender and ambulatorial, and consist of a coxa, two-segmented trochanter, femur, tibia and three-segmented tarsi. The apical tarsomere has 2 claws, and a well-developed arolium.[3]

Metasoma

edit

The metasoma and mesosoma are broadly joined, and the petiole is indistinct. The metasoma consist of six visible tergites, and the sternites are slight and unsclerotized.[3]

Sexual Dimorphism

edit

In males, the post-anellar antennomeres are shaped differently. Their genitalia are small, simple and tubular.[2]

Internal Morphology

edit

The head for the most part is filled by the brain and the subesophageal complex. A sizable portion of the metasoma is occupied by muscles, and a very large muscle fills up a lot of the mesosoma and metasoma. The reproductive system occupies a ton of the mesosoma too.[3]

Brain

edit

Despite being one of the smallest flying insects (~200um long),[4][5] Megaphragma accomplish many complex behaviors such as flying, egg-host detection and oviposition. This is all performed within the nervous system and specifically the brain. Due to advancements in volumetric electron microscopy, there are now multiple connectomes of the brain including one of the entire head.[6] The brain contains roughly 8,600 cells.[7] Interestingly, about 97% of head neurons in Megaphragma do not have a nucleus after metamorphosis is completed. This neural denucleation is thought to be an evolutionary adaptation to the size constraints of the organism.

Integument

edit

The integument consists of the cuticle, hypoderm and the basal membrane. The cuticle is 0.7 to 2.4 μm thick in M. Mymaripenne, with the thinnest integument being in the area between sclerites, and the thickest on the notal part of the mesosoma, and the posterior side of the head. The cuticle consists of an epicuticle and a procuticle which is homogenous. The hypoderm is made up of flattened cells which are up to 1.5 μm thick. Many hypodermal areas, especially in the head, have multiple electron transparent vacuoles.[3]

Digestive System

edit

The digestive system is very generalized, and is divided into 3 segments, the foregut, midgut and hindgut. The foregut and hindgut have a thin cuticular lining to them. The entire gut's length is slightly longer than the body, as it is looped in the metasoma. Salivary glands are missing.[3]

Distribution

edit

The Megaphragma have a cosmopolitan distribution.[2]

Diet

edit

All species parasitize thrip eggs, which is the primary reason for their small size. As such, they are potential biological control agents for thrips.[2]

Taxonomy

edit

The closest relatives to Megaphragma appear to be Prestwichia and Sinepalpigramma.[2]

Subtaxa

edit

Megaphragma consists of 32 species in 7 groups:[2]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Chapter 38: Smallest Adult | the University of Florida Book of Insect Records | Department of Entomology & Nematology | UF/IFAS". entnemdept.ufl.edu. Archived from the original on 20 May 2012. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Polaszek, A.; Fusu, L.; Viggiani, G.; Hall, A.; Hanson, P.; Polilov, A.A. (2022). "Revision of the World Species of Megaphragma Timberlake (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae)". Insects. 13 (6): 561. doi:10.3390/insects13060561. PMC 9225605. PMID 35735898.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Polilov, Alexey A. (2017-05-03). "Anatomy of adult Megaphragma (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae), one of the smallest insects, and new insight into insect miniaturization". PLOS ONE. 12 (5): e0175566. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0175566. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 5414980. PMID 28467417.
  4. ^ Polilov, Alexey A. (2015-01-07). "Small Is Beautiful: Features of the Smallest Insects and Limits to Miniaturization". Annual Review of Entomology. 60 (1): 103–121. doi:10.1146/annurev-ento-010814-020924. ISSN 0066-4170. PMID 25341106.
  5. ^ Polaszek, Andrew; Fusu, Lucian; Viggiani, Gennaro; Hall, Andie; Hanson, Paul; Polilov, Alexey A. (June 2022). "Revision of the World Species of Megaphragma Timberlake (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae)". Insects. 13 (6): 561. doi:10.3390/insects13060561. hdl:10141/623013. ISSN 2075-4450. PMID 35735898.
  6. ^ Chua, Nicholas J.; Makarova, Anastasia A.; Gunn, Pat; Villani, Sonia; Cohen, Ben; Thasin, Myisha; Wu, Jingpeng; Shefter, Deena; Pang, Song; Xu, C. Shan; Hess, Harald F.; Polilov, Alexey A.; Chklovskii, Dmitri B. (2023-11-06). "A complete reconstruction of the early visual system of an adult insect". Current Biology. 33 (21): 4611–4623.e4. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2023.09.021. ISSN 0960-9822. PMID 37774707.
  7. ^ Makarova, Anastasia A.; Veko, Egor N.; Polilov, Alexey A. (2022-09-01). "Metamorphosis and denucleation of the brain in the miniature wasp Megaphragma viggianii (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae)". Arthropod Structure & Development. 70: 101200. doi:10.1016/j.asd.2022.101200. ISSN 1467-8039. PMID 35961234.
edit