Rg. Smith, Wax glands, wax production and the functional significance of wax use in three aphid species (Homoptera : Aphididae), J NAT HIST, 33(4), 1999, pp. 513-530
The structural details of wax glands and the physical form of the secreted
wax is described for the apterae of three aphid species-beech woolly aphid,
spruce root aphid and woolly apple aphid. The glands are composed of great
ly enlarged epidermal cells underlying a modified cuticle that forms distin
ctive wax gland plates. Secreted wax in the form of threads passes out of t
he cuticle as filaments, the arrangement of these filaments in the cuticle
above each epidermal cell gives rise to the distinctive wax skein found in
each species-hollow, solid or honeycombed. It is suggested that the primary
role of the secreted wax is to prevent the aphids becoming contaminated by
their own secreted honeydew and that of other members of the colony. Other
secondary roles considered include: individual microclimate isolation; pro
tection from fungi, parasites and predators; waterproofing and frost protec
tion.