scholarly journals Spring emergence of Canadian Delia radicum and synchronization with its natural enemy, Aleochara bilineata

2010 ◽  
Vol 142 (3) ◽  
pp. 234-249 ◽  
Author(s):  
L.D. Andreassen ◽  
U. Kuhlmann ◽  
J.W. Whistlecraft ◽  
J.J. Soroka ◽  
P.G. Mason ◽  
...  

AbstractTo characterize time of spring emergence following post-diapause development, Delia radicum (L.) (Diptera: Anthomyiidae) from Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and southwestern Ontario were collected in fall, maintained over winter at 1 °C, then transferred to higher constant temperatures until adult emergence. At each location there were “early” and “late” phenotypes. Truncated normal models of temperature dependency of development rate were fitted for each phenotype from each location. We provide the first evidence of geographic variation in the criteria separating these phenotypes. Separation criteria and models for early and late phenotypes at the two prairie locations, approximately 700 km apart, were indistinguishable, but differed from those for Ontario. Prairie phenotypes developed more slowly than Ontario phenotypes, and more prairie individuals were of the late phenotype. Poor synchronization of spring emergence could impair predation of D. radicum eggs by adult Aleochara bilineata Gyllenhal (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae). Aleochara bilineata from Manitoba were reared and development rates modelled as for D. radicum. Models of development rates for the two species, when combined with simulated soil temperatures for two prairie locations, suggest that emergence of adult A. bilineata is well synchronized with availability of D. radicum eggs in prairie canola.

1981 ◽  
Vol 71 (4) ◽  
pp. 583-590 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. J. Burn ◽  
T. H. Coaker

AbstractPsila rosae (F.) overwinters in Britain in both the larval and pupal stages. Overwintering pupae formed in October and November at soil temperatures of between 10 and 16°C entered diapause. A period of similar temperature in the laboratory during the prepupal stage also caused pupae to enter diapause. Overwintering larvae continued to feed and gain weight; they pupated in early spring at soil temperatures of 2–8°C but did not enter diapause. The sensitivity to diapause-inducing conditions decreased between November and March, associated with changes in developmental temperatures and pupal weight. The differential effects of temperature on larval, pupal and diapause development together serve to synchronise adult emergence from the overwintering population. The mechanisms which allow overwintering by a variable proportion of larvae and pupae also provide the opportunity for the development of a third generation of adult flies in October and November.


1991 ◽  
Vol 39 (2) ◽  
pp. 191 ◽  
Author(s):  
JG Hamilton ◽  
MP Zalucki

C. plebejana were reared from egg to adult at a range of constant temperatures. At 10-degrees-C no immature stages survived. Development rates increased over the temperature range 14-34-degrees-C; these were simulated with a non-linear model. Females emerged before males. Fecundity decreased with increased rearing temperature as a direct result of reduced adult female weight. At 34-degrees-C development rate and survival were reduced and all eggs laid were infertile. Optimum temperature for population increase was 28-degrees-C. Validation of a non-linear model for development rate shows that the species of host-plant affects mean development rates of tipworm. Although 5.3 tipworm generations are possible on cotton annually, only one occurs; reasons for this are suggested.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas H. Q. Powell ◽  
Andrew Nguyen ◽  
Qinwen Xia ◽  
Jeffrey L. Feder ◽  
Gregory J. Ragland ◽  
...  

AbstractFor insect species in temperate environments, seasonal timing is often governed by the regulation of diapause, a complex developmental program that allows insects to weather unfavorable conditions and synchronize their lifecycles with available resources. Diapause consists of a series of phases that govern initiation, maintenance, and termination of this developmental pathway. The evolution of insect seasonal timing depends in part on how these phases of diapause development and post-diapause development interact to affect variation in phenology. Here, we dissect the physiological basis of a recently evolved phenological shift in Rhagoletis pomonella (Diptera: Tephritidae), a model system for ecological divergence. A recently derived population of R. pomonella shifted from specializing on native hawthorn fruit to earlier fruiting introduced apples, resulting in a 3-4 week shift in adult emergence timing. We tracked metabolic rates of individual flies across post-winter development to test which phases of development may act either independently or in combination to contribute to this recently evolved divergence in timing. Apple and hawthorn flies differed in a number of facets of their post-winter developmental trajectories. However, divergent adaptation in adult emergence phenology in these flies was due almost entirely to the end of the pupal diapause maintenance phase, with post-diapause development having a very small effect. The relatively simple underpinnings of variation in adult emergence phenology suggest that further adaptation to seasonal change in these flies for this trait might be largely due to the timing of diapause termination unhindered by strong covariance among different components of post-diapause development.Data accessibilityAll data (in the form of tables of all metabolic rate measurements for all individual flies in the study) will be available on DRYAD when the manuscript is published.


2017 ◽  
Vol 53 (No. 4) ◽  
pp. 226-231 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liu Junhe ◽  
Yan Yan ◽  
Yu Mingfu ◽  
Parajulee Megha N ◽  
Shi Peijian ◽  
...  

Temperature has a significant influence on development rates of insects and mites. Many parametric models were built to describe the temperature-dependent development rates. However, these models provided different shapes of the curves of development rate versus temperature. For different datasets, investigators have to spend much time on considering which the parametric model is the best for describing the temperature-dependent development rates. In the present study, we encourage investigators to use an important non-parametric model, the loess method, which belongs to local regression methods. The loesS method is used to fit some published data on the development rate of aphids to check the goodness-of-fit. We find that the loess method is very flexible for fitting the given datasets. Thus, we consider that the loess method can be used to describe the effect of temperature on the development rate of insects or mites.


1962 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 311-335 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. H. Proctor

Diparopsis watersi (Roths.) is the principal pest of cotton in the Abyan Delta, West Aden Protectorate, an almost rainless area where the crop is sown in August–September on floodland watered by seasonal streams rising on the Yemen plateau. From December onwards, a large proportion of the pupae formed exhibit a facultative diapause, and adults emerging from these are responsible for infesting the following season's crop, the size of the initial population in which depends upon the extent to which this moth flight is intercepted by cotton in a suitable stage for breeding. When initial populations are low, most of the crop is set before the population has greatly increased by short-cycle breeding, shedding of flower buds and young bolls following attack by D. watersi is slight in relation to natural shedding, and little crop loss is attributable to this boll-worm. When a large part of the moth flight is intercepted, initial populations are high, heavy shedding is caused, and varying degrees of loss ranging up to virtual crop failure can result.Investigations show that, when land is watered, emergence from diapause pupae is almost completed within six weeks; it is thought that watering reduces soil temperature below the high level that appears to inhibit diapause development throughout the summer. The resulting moth flight is largely spent before flower buds become available and the initial population in the crop is low. When land that was under cotton the previous year is not watered, soil temperatures remain high, and this is thought to account for a delay in emergence until temperatures fall, giving rise to a moth flight extending from November to January. Much of this is intercepted by cotton in a condition suitable for breeding by D. watersi, the initial population is high and heavy losses can result. The annual variation in the volume of the floods results in corresponding fluctuations in cotton acreage, a varying proportion of the previous year's cotton land remaining unwatered. The histories of the four cotton crops 1958–59 to 1960–61 indicate the extent to which infestation of the crop depends on this factor. In a year of poor floods following a large acreage in the previous year, infestations tend to be severe, and, conversely, a large crop following a smaller one the year before is normally lightly attacked. Failure to observe a close season may also promote heavy infestation, since it results in the provision of a food supply for the offspring of the main emergence from diapause pupae, which otherwise would not survive.Endrin has proved very effective in the control of D. watersi, and Sevin also shows promise, but several applications over the two months following the first flower buds are necessary and it is doubtful whether these could be economic. A close season is essential, and the effects of its violation have been seen in recent years. The available flood water should be used more economically, using a system of area rotation of crops whereby cotton would be followed by another crop and that in turn by a dry fallow. The spring floods, which normally run to waste, could thus be utilised, and this would reduce the incidence of unwatered cotton land.


1976 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 260-265 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maurice J. Tauber ◽  
Catherine A. Tauber

Chrysopa downesi, a conifer-inhabiting unicyclic insect species, shares many features in its seasonal cycle with some well-studied single-brooded birds: a quantitative response to winter daylengths, reproduction in early spring, a summer 'photorefractory' phase, and a short-day requirement for termination of this phase. Under natural conditions, C. downesi has an aestival–autumnal–hibernal reproductive diapause that is primarily controlled by photoperiod. The short-day requirement for diapause termination is fulfilled in October. Subsequently, during winter, the rate of diapause development is directly related to the actual duration of daylength, and diapause ends between March 1 and March 21. Oviposition begins in mid-April. The rate of egg and larval development is primarily regulated by temperature; the lower thermal threshold for development (t) is 11 °C, and K value (heat-degree days) for the period from egg to adult emergence is 378 day °C.The late ending of C. downesi's diapause, its relatively high t value, and its aestival diapause separate temporally the reproductive periods of this species and its sympatric sibling species, Chrysopa carnea. The asynchronous seasonal cycles of C. downesi and C. carnea form a major barrier to hybridization between natural populations of the two species in the northeastern United States.


Author(s):  
Jian J Duan ◽  
Jonathan M Schmude ◽  
Kristi M Larson

Abstract The emerald ash borer (EAB), Agrilus planipennis Fairmaire (Coleoptera: Buprestidae), native to Northeast Asia, is the most destructive invasive ash (Fraxinus spp.) pest in the United States. In the present study, we evaluated the effect of exposure of diapausing mature fourth instars (J-shaped larvae, JL) of EAB to cool temperatures, either 1.7 or 12.8°C for 1–9 mo, on their post-chill development including adult emergence, longevity, and lifetime fecundity under standard rearing conditions (26 ± 0.5°C, 16:8 h L:D). In addition, we determined the effect of different stages of the larvae chilled at 12.8°C for 3 mo on the subsequent post-chill development to EAB adults. Findings from the study revealed that a period (≥2 mo) of chill at 12.8°C is required for the termination of the EAB diapause. However, chill treatment of the larvae at the near zero temperature (1.7°C) does not result in the post-diapause larval development to adults, regardless of the chill time (1–9 mo). In addition, our results showed that chill treatment of immature young larvae (L1–L4 prior to JL) results in little production of EAB adults, indicating that EAB diapause predominantly as JL. Findings of this study may be useful to laboratory rearing of EAB from eggs through continuous generations and help us understand the pest’s voltinism resulting from the diapause and post-diapause development under different climatic conditions.


2005 ◽  
Vol 137 (2) ◽  
pp. 182-187 ◽  
Author(s):  
K.S. Hemachandra ◽  
N.J. Holliday ◽  
J. Klimaszewski ◽  
P.G. Mason ◽  
U. Kuhlmann

AbstractAleochara bipustulata (L., 1761) (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae) is a Palearctic species and a natural enemy of the cabbage root maggot, Delia radicum (L., 1758) (Diptera: Anthomyiidae). It has been identified as a candidate for introduction to Canada for classical biological control of D. radicum. Recent taxonomic studies assert that A. bipustulata is absent from the Nearctic; however, there are numerous publications reporting the presence of the species in North America. We examined voucher material relating to these publications and additional museum specimens labeled as A. bipustulata. In addition, we reared Aleochara spp. from D. radicum puparia collected in the Canadian prairie provinces. Specimens that, based on external anatomy, could be A. bipustulata were definitively identified using characters of the genitalia. All of the 141 museum specimens labeled A. bipustulata were found to be Aleochara verna Say, 1836. A total of 811 individuals of Aleochara spp. were reared from D. radicum puparia; of these, 690 were Aleochara bilineata Gyllenhal, 1810, 121 were A. verna, and none were A. bipustulata. We have found no evidence that A. bipustulata occurs in North America.


2017 ◽  
Vol 110 (6) ◽  
pp. 2443-2451
Author(s):  
Chang-Gyu Park ◽  
Bo Yoon Seo ◽  
Jin Kyo Jung ◽  
Hwang-Yong Kim ◽  
Si-Woo Lee ◽  
...  

1978 ◽  
Vol 110 (2) ◽  
pp. 183-191 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert P. Bodnaryk

AbstractOnly soil temperatures below −7°C are likely to cause significant pupal mortality of M. configurata in the field, and only if exposure periods are sufficiently prolonged. At −17°C, a temperature not uncommonly encountered in the soil at 10 cm during the prairie winter, near total mortality occurred within 1 week in laboratory tests and significant mortality (20–30%) occurred within 1 day. The survival time at −12°C was considerably longer, and 50% mortality occurred after about 6 weeks of exposure. Pupal mortality caused by cold might thus vary from 0 to 100% depending on local climatic and field conditions and therefore is an essential component of a survival model for the species.Exposure to cold accelerates diapause development by as much as four orders of magnitude for the lowest temperature tested (−17°C). However, the acceleration of diapause development by sub-zero temperatures appears to be of limited phenological significance, since in western Canada the pupae spend at least 40 weeks in the soil and can easily complete diapause development within this time at 0° to 5°C. Further evidence for a major reorganization of the endocrine system of M. configurata pupae during stage 2 of diapause development is presented.


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