“…Although their preferred meal is blood from vertebrate hosts, unfed triatomine nymphs are often seen feeding on engorged triatomines, from which they can ingest hemolymph (a process called hemolymphagy [RuasNeto et al 2001]) or intestinal contents (a process called cleptohematophagy [Sandoval et al 2000]). Hemolymphagy and/or cleptohematophagy were previously described for several triatomine species, including Triatoma sordida (Torres 1915), Panstrongylus megistus (Abalos and Wygodzinsky 1951), Rhodnius prolixus, Triatoma phyllosoma, Triatoma pallidipennis, Triatoma recurva (ϭTriatoma longipes), Triatoma quasayana (Ryckman 1951), Triatoma klugi (Emmanuelle-Machado et al 2002), Triatoma infestans, Triatoma protracta, Triatoma maculata (Brumpt 1914, Torres 1915, Ryckman 1951, Phillips 1960, Belminus herreri (Sandoval et al 2000(Sandoval et al , 2004, and Belminus ferroae (Sandoval et al 2010). Moreover, young nymphs of Eratyrus mucronatus seem to feed preferentially on invertebrates (Miles et al 1981).…”