Abstract

ABSTRACT Plants with glandular trichomes have been shown to attract specialist, mutualistic predatory insects. Despite recent advances in understanding the plant component in this association, few sticky plant specialist insects are well documented and their adaptations to the sticky plant environment are understudied. We here describe and illustrate, for the first time, aspects of the natural history and morphology of a small clade of predatory hemipteran insects, the Bactrodinae (Reduviidae). Our study suggests that these insects are exclusively associated with plant species with glandular trichomes. The relationship is not specific as one species of Bactrodes Stål may be associated with multiple species, genera or even families of plants. We document a unique clamp-like structure formed by one of the pretarsal claws and opposing tarsal spine-like setae that enables Bactrodinae to grasp trichomes and walk on leaves densely covered with trichomes. We further present observations of Bactrodes species scavenging on insects entrapped on leaves. Bactrodinae also oviposit on their host plants, and females engage in behaviours that we interpret as maternal egg guarding, a life history strategy that is rare in predatory true bugs. We speculate that instead of or in addition to decreasing egg predation or egg parasitism, female egg guarding may be a response to the limited availability of sticky plants and a strategy against cannibalism.

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