Ryuichi Matsuda, G. A. Kerkut ed.. 2013. Morphology and Evolution of the Insect Abdomen: With Special Reference to Developmental Patterns and Their Bearings upon Systematics Elsevier, Pp.544. ISBN1483187519, 9781483187518
André M. de Roos, Lennart Persson. 2013. Population and Community Ecology of Ontogenetic Development Princeton University Press,Pp.552. ISBN1400845610, 9781400845613
P. P. G. Bateson, Peter H. Klopfer. 2012. Ontogeny Springer Science & Business Media,Pp.520. ISBN1461575788, 9781461575788
Marco Pina, Nathalie Gontier. 2014. The Evolution of Social Communication in Primates: A Multidisciplinary Approach Springer, Pp. 326. ISBN3319026690, 9783319026695
Michael E. Pereira, Lynn A. Fairbanks. 2002. Juvenile Primates: Life History, Development and Behavior, with a New Foreword University of Chicago Press,Pp.428. ISBN0226656225, 9780226656229
While I won't throw a specific set of citations at you, I can only imagine that this sort of scenario is common among marine invertebrates with planktonic larvae. The zoea of crustaceans, the trochophore of annelids, molluscs and nemerteans, and pleuteus of echinoderms are all larval forms of organisms that are predatory when mature. However, these planktonic stages are small, largely at the whim of environment, and common prey for a large variety of organisms.