Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Green Lacewing Eggs

Chrysoperla rufilabris

Description:

Green lacewing (scientifically known as Chrysoperla rufilabris) is widely used in various situations to control many different pests. Many species of adult lacewings do not kill pest insects, they actually subsist on foods such as nectar, pollen and honeydew. It’s their predacious offspring that get the job done. If you’re looking for effective aphid control, green lacewing larva should help do the trick. The adult lacewing lays her eggs on foliage where each egg is attached to the top of a hair-like filament. After a few days the eggs hatch and a tiny predatory larva emerges ready to eat some aphid pests. Lacewing larvae are tiny when emerging from the egg, but grow to 3/8 of an inch long. They’re known as aphid lions since they voraciously attack aphids by seizing them with large, sucking jaws and inject a paralyzing venom. The hollow jaws then draw out the body fluids of the pest, killing it. Of all available commercial predators, this lacewing is the most voracious and has the greatest versatility for aphid control in field crops, orchards, and greenhouses.

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

2 Comments

Cris
Cris 8 years ago

Thank you rbumrbum !

rbumrbum
rbumrbum 8 years ago

It's a type of Lacewing egg, if you look up the Lacewing species in your area I'm sure you will identify it.

Cris
Spotted by
Cris

São Caetano do Sul, SP, Brazil

Spotted on Jan 23, 2016
Submitted on Jan 23, 2016

Related Spottings

Green Lacewing(egg) Common green lacewing Groene Gaasvlieg (Chrysoperla sp.) Green lacewing

Nearby Spottings

Esponjinha Rosa Claudina Crescent Moth Chrysalis Lansdorf's Crescent

Reference

Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team