“…This intriguing, genetically regulated process leads to the formation of eight morphologically and functionally distinct subpopulations of cells that, after termination of yolk accumulation, participate in the formation of regionally specialized egg coverings (internal vitelline envelope and external chorion) termed collectively the eggshell. Diversification of the follicular cells has been also described in several other holometabolous and hemimetabolous insects, including non‐ Drosophila dipterans (gnats, snipe flies, and horse flies), lepidopterans (butterflies), neuropterans (lacewings), hymenopterans (parasitic wasps and wasps), mecopterans (scorpionflies), hemipterans (true bugs), mallophagans (bird‐lice), and plecopterans (stoneflies), for example, Tworzydlo, Jablonska, Kisiel, and Bilinski (), Jaglarz, Krzeminski, and Bilinski (), Jaglarz, Kubrakiewicz, and Bilinski (), Mazurkiewicz and Kubrakiewicz (), Garbiec and Kubrakiewicz (), and Mazurkiewicz‐Kania, Simiczyjew, and Jedrzejowska (). As a rule, the complexity of the eggshell of a given species depends on the number of the subpopulations of the follicular cells.…”