Antlions can be fairly small to very large
neuropterans, with wingspans ranging from . The African genus
Palpares contains some of the largest examples.
Acanthaclisis occitanica is the largest European species, with an wingspan, and most North American species approach this size. Also, the pattern of wing venation differs, and compared to damselflies, the adults are very feeble fliers and are normally found fluttering about at night in search of a mate. Adult antlions are typically
nocturnal, and rarely seen by day. The antlion
larva has a robust
fusiform body, a very plump abdomen, and a thorax bearing three pairs of walking legs. The
prothorax forms a slender mobile "neck" for the large, square, flattened head, which bears an enormous pair of sickle-like jaws with several sharp, hollow projections. The jaws are formed by the
maxillae and mandibles; the mandibles each contain a deep groove over which the maxilla fits neatly, forming an enclosed canal for injecting
venom to immobilise the victim, and
enzymes to digest its soft parts. The larva is clad in forward-pointing bristles which help it to anchor itself and exert greater traction, enabling it to subdue prey considerably larger than itself. Antlion larvae are unusual among insects in lacking an
anus. All the
metabolic waste generated during the larval stage is stored; some is used to spin the silk for the
cocoon and the rest is eventually voided as
meconium at the end of its
pupal stage. File:Doodlebug doodles.jpg|Doodlebug (antlion) doodles and pit traps in the Grand Canyon File:Antlion (Myrmecaelurus trigrammus) Macedonia.jpg|Adult of
Myrmecaelurus trigammus File:Common Antlion Myrmeleon immaculatus mature nymph.jpg|Larva of
Myrmeleon immaculatus File:Antlion mandible with a visible maxilla for injecting venom.jpg|The bottom side of larval mandible with a visible maxilla for injecting venom ==Distribution==