Abstract
1. The larvae of Mantispa uhleri Banks (Neuroptera: Mantispidae) board spiders to await the production of an egg sac containing their obligate developmental food. While aboard the spider, larvae maintain themselves by feeding on spider blood. This parasitic behaviour was investigated by allowing larvae to board sixth instar Lycosa rabida Walckenaer (Araneae: Lycosidae). Larval parasitism has a direct and indirect effect on the developmental physiology of the spider.2. The direct effect, equal in both spider sexes, is an increase in development time and a decrease in adult size.3. The indirect effect on development time and adult size is brought about by the loss of an instar in female spiders only. Parasitized females were mature at nine or ten instars; control females at ten or eleven. Male instar number was not affected; both control and parasitized males were mature at nine or ten instars.4. The net result is that parasitized female spiders are even smaller than would be predicted from the direct effect alone, but actually mature faster than control females. In males there is only the direct effect. The adaptive significance of this sexually dimorphic response is discussed.