Morphogenesis of stem gall tissues induced by larvae of two cecidomyiid species (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) on Suaeda monoica (Chenopodiaceae)

2002 ◽  
Vol 80 (11) ◽  
pp. 1141-1150 ◽  
Author(s):  
Netta Dorchin ◽  
Amnon Freidberg ◽  
Roni Aloni

Izeniola obesula Dorchin and Stefaniola defoliata Dorchin (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae: Lasiopterini) are monophagous gall midges each inducing a unique kind of gall on stems of the salt marsh plant Suaeda monoica Gmelin (Chenopodiaceae). The morphogenesis of these two types of galls was studied in relation to the life history of the midges as observed both in the field and the laboratory. Izeniola obesula larvae penetrate the pith parenchyma through the growing shoot apex, causing intensive cell proliferation and inducing differentiation of novel vascular tissues and a sclerenchyma sheath around their chambers. Vascular differentiation in this gall originates from the larval chamber, a phenomenon attributed to local stimulation by the larva. It is suggested that the sclerenchyma layer in these galls is also induced by insect activity. Stefaniola defoliata larvae penetrate the stem laterally and reside inside the primary phloem, causing proliferation of phloem parenchyma, and are later encapsulated by secondary xylem tissue. Both galls are associated with a symbiotic fungus that grows along the inner walls of the larval chambers. The possible hormonal mechanisms controlling morphogenesis of the galls are discussed.Key words: gall morphogenesis, phytohormones, sclerenchyma, vascular differentiation.

HortScience ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 31 (5) ◽  
pp. 750a-750 ◽  
Author(s):  
Herbert D. Stiles ◽  
Paul J. Semtner

Larvae of Contarinia agrimoniae Felt, a gall midge, were discovered during 1986 in blossoms of blackberry cultivars and wild-growing plants that had a history of poor fruit set and `nubbin' formation (Stiles, Semtner, and Reed, 1996). Other species damage blackberries in Europe, but the only North American recognition of Rubus flower bud infestation was with Dasineura rubiflorae Felt during 1886 (Gagne, 1989). During 1995 we found larvae of a Dasineura spp. in damaged buds at two, widely separated, commercial, North Carolina, blackberry sites. It is not known if the latter insects are different from the species that was collected during 1886. Midge larvae probably overwinter in soil under affected plants so we sprayed diazinon on the soil surface before bloom to kill larvae or interfere with pupation and reduce crop injuries. Infested `Shawnee' and `Cheyenne' buds were ≈100% more numerous among controls than diazinon-treated plots. Numbers of larvae varied among infested buds; 83 were observed in one bud from a nontreated `Cheyenne' plot.


Zootaxa ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 2152 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
NETTA DORCHIN ◽  
MILES V. MCEVOY ◽  
TODD A. DOWLING ◽  
WARREN G. ABRAHAMSON ◽  
JOSEPH G. MOORE

Goldenrods (Solidago and Euthamia species) are common herbs in the eastern United States that support a large and diverse community of highly specific gall-inducing insects. The majority of these insects are gall midges, of which 16 described species are bud, leaf, stem, rhizome, or flower-head gallers belonging to the large genus Rhopalomyia Rübsaamen. The present work is a taxonomic revision of the goldenrod-associated Rhopalomyia species, which includes a key to the identification of species based on their galls and host plants and descriptions of diagnostic characters for all species. Rhopalomyia lanceolata Felt is designated as a new synonym for R. lobata Felt, and R. albipennis Felt and R. carolina Felt are designated as new synonyms for R. solidaginis Loew. Neotypes are designated for R. hirtipes Osten Sacken and R. solidaginis, and two new species are described—R. gina Dorchin n.sp. and R. guttata Dorchin n.sp. Descriptions include illustrations of galls, male and female morphological characters, and the first description of pupae, where available. New or additional detailed information is also provided on gall structure, phenology, and life history of the gall midges.


2004 ◽  
Vol 20 (6) ◽  
pp. 701-704 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alain Dejean ◽  
Angélique Quilichini ◽  
Jacques H. C. Delabie ◽  
Jérôme Orivel ◽  
Bruno Corbara ◽  
...  

Variation in the ant species associated with myrmecophytes (plants that provide their associated ants with nesting space, and sometimes with a complete diet) has been noted at both the regional and local levels, with plant distribution generally wider than that of the ants (Fonseca & Ganade 1996). This is the case for Cordia nodosa Lamark (Boraginaceae, subfamily Ehretioideae) whose most frequent associate ant species in Peru are Allomerus demararae (Wheeler) and Azteca spp. (Yu & Pierce 1998), while Azteca sp.1 and Allomerus octoarticulatus are the most frequent in Amazonian Brazil and French Guiana, respectively (Fowler 1993, Solano et al. 2003). Cordia nodosa plants are understorey treelets mostly less than 2 m tall, but taller individuals can be found. Their domatia are swollen, hollow stem nodes that form as the growing shoot tip invaginates through a subapical pore that then closes over when the domatium is mature (Yu 2001). So, plant-ants must reopen the chamber where the pore used to be, thus forming a kind of prostoma.


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