Meridic and oligidic diets suitable for the continuous culture of the aphid Myzus persicae were developed through modifications of a holidic diet. These included the addition of various amounts of crude nutrients and the replacement of defined nutrients by crude nutrients. The highest level of aphid growth (mean weights of 600 to 800 μg) was maintained (for 45 successive generations) on a meridic diet made by supplementing a holidic diet with 2.0% yeast extract (NBC). Continuous culture, at a level of growth (400 to 600 μg) comparable to that on the unsupplemented holidic diet (formulated with 34 defined nutrients), was supported by an oligidic diet containing only 10 weighed ingredients: 15 g sucrose, 2.5 g enzymatic casein hydrolysate (NBC), 2 g yeast extract, 123 mg MgSO 4·7H 2O, 100 mg ascorbic acid, 10 mg niacin, 5 mg Ca pantothenate, 2.5 mg pyridoxine, 2.5 mg thiamine, and appx. 1.5 gm K 2HPO 4·3H 2O (pH 6.8) per 100 ml of diet. Yeast extract at 2.0% provided adequate amounts of choline chloride, biotin, folic acid and inositol, but not of niacin, pantothenate, pyridoxine, and thiamine. Enzymatic casein hydrolyzate at 2.5% could replace the 20 defined amino acids of the holidic diet. Diets with both yeast extract and casein hydrolysate did not have to be supplemented with trace minerals (Cu, Fe, Mn and Zn). Yeast extract at 2.5% provided sufficient amounts of trace minerals, amino acids, and B-vitamins to sustain numerous successive generations, albeit at a low level of growth (200 to 300 μg). The simplicity and low cost of oligidic diets makes them attractive for aphid studies in which nutrition is not the primary consideration.