2003年阿洛伽Tegrodera aloga Skinner成虫摄食及行为记录(鞘翅目:蛾科)

IF 0.6 4区 农林科学 Q4 ENTOMOLOGY Pan-Pacific Entomologist Pub Date : 2023-03-24 DOI:10.3956/2022-99.1.81
Ethan R. Wright, E. Makings, M. Andrew Johnston
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The first reported pestiferous event in Arizona was in 1914, where “they were observed to attack the foliage of young fruit trees in addition to alfalfa” (Morrill 1914:33, reported there under the older concept of T. erosa). Again, in 1930, the beetles were noted to have defoliated unspecified vegetable crops after migrating from the surrounding desert into agricultural fields (Lebert 1931:60, reported under the name T. latecincta). Tegrodera aloga was further reported to feed on alfalfa from museum specimen labels from southeastern California and central Arizona as well as from sugar beet crops (Pinto 1975a:49). Most recently, a number of reports emerged in 2015 of T. aloga being found in organic packaged greens, specifically packaged lettuce, spinach, and salad in both Canada and the United States (Anonymous 2015, Northrup 2015). Many Nearctic species within the family of Meloidae are known to be parasites of solitary ground dwelling bees (Erickson et al. 1976). 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引用次数: 0

摘要

物种,T.aloga Skinner,1903(图1-2),T.erosa LeConte,1851和T.latecincta Horn,1891,发现于美国西南部和毗邻墨西哥西北部。这三个物种在地理上大多是分开的,但亲缘关系非常密切,只有通过可变的成虫特征的组合才能相互区分(Pinto 1975a)。T.aloga的分布范围主要在亚利桑那州中部至南部,在亚利桑那州西部、加利福尼亚州东南部和墨西哥索诺拉州有零星记录。我们在这里总结了该物种已知的农业影响、行为和生物学,并报告了新的植物喂养记录和我们观察到的笔记。Tegrodera aloga偶尔会引起农业问题。亚利桑那州第一次报告的鼠疫事件发生在1914年,当时“除了苜蓿外,还观察到它们攻击年轻果树的叶子”(Morrill 1914:33,在那里报道的是T.erosa的古老概念)。同样,在1930年,人们注意到这些甲虫从周围的沙漠迁移到农田后,对未指明的蔬菜作物进行了落叶处理(Lebert 1931:60,以T.latecincta的名字报道)。据进一步报道,Tegrodera aloga以加利福尼亚州东南部和亚利桑那州中部博物馆标本标签上的苜蓿以及甜菜作物为食(Pinto 1975a:49)。最近,2015年出现了许多报告,称在加拿大和美国的有机包装蔬菜中,特别是包装生菜、菠菜和沙拉中发现了T.aloga(Anonymous 2015,Northrup 2015)。已知甜瓜科中的许多近北物种是独居地面蜜蜂的寄生虫(Erickson等人,1976)。虽然尚未发表在野外的直接观察结果,但人们认为阿氏泰格罗德拉是蜜蜂巢穴的寄生虫。Triungulin(一龄)和第一期幼虫是从圈养的成虫中饲养的,但随后的缩窄期幼虫没有成功饲养到化蛹(Erickson&Werner 1974)。Erickson(1973)描述了三爪虫幼虫。Erickson&Werner(1974)报道,三爪虫灵龄期仅持续2-3天,然后蜕皮进入占据2-5龄的第一幼虫期。在后一阶段,幼虫以蜜蜂产生的花粉球为食。Erickson&Werner(1974)将几种蜜蜂的幼虫作为食物提供给卤虫幼虫,但没有一种被吃掉。这可能表明T.aloga只以地面筑巢蜜蜂的花粉球为食,但未能将幼虫一直培育到成年阶段,也可能表明需要其他特定的食物来源。Erickson&Werner(1974)从他们的研究中得出结论,食用蜜蜂幼虫对T.aloga的发育并不重要,至少在喂食期是如此,但饲养室内的水分水平和食物成分非常重要。Tegrodera内的物种在蜜瓜中有着独特的求偶行为,这与它们的形态有关,雄性和雌性面对面,雄性开始用自己的触角抚摸雌性的触角,同时移动她的触角
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Notes on adult feeding and behavior of Tegrodera aloga Skinner, 1903 (Coleoptera: Meloidae)
species, T. aloga Skinner, 1903 (Figs. 1–2), T. erosa LeConte, 1851 and T. latecincta Horn, 1891, which are found in the southwestern United States and adjoining northwestern Mexico. These three species are mostly geographically separate but are very closely related and distinguished from one another only by a combination of variable adult traits (Pinto 1975a). The range of T. aloga is primarily central to southern Arizona, with scattered records in western Arizona, extreme southeastern California and Sonora, Mexico. We here summarize the known agricultural impacts, behavior, and biology of this species and report new plant feeding records and notes from our observations. Tegrodera aloga causes occasional agricultural problems. The first reported pestiferous event in Arizona was in 1914, where “they were observed to attack the foliage of young fruit trees in addition to alfalfa” (Morrill 1914:33, reported there under the older concept of T. erosa). Again, in 1930, the beetles were noted to have defoliated unspecified vegetable crops after migrating from the surrounding desert into agricultural fields (Lebert 1931:60, reported under the name T. latecincta). Tegrodera aloga was further reported to feed on alfalfa from museum specimen labels from southeastern California and central Arizona as well as from sugar beet crops (Pinto 1975a:49). Most recently, a number of reports emerged in 2015 of T. aloga being found in organic packaged greens, specifically packaged lettuce, spinach, and salad in both Canada and the United States (Anonymous 2015, Northrup 2015). Many Nearctic species within the family of Meloidae are known to be parasites of solitary ground dwelling bees (Erickson et al. 1976). Tegrodera aloga is presumed to be such a parasite of bee nests, though no direct observations in the wild have yet been published. Triungulin (first-instar) and first-grub phase larvae have been reared from captive adults, but the subsequent coarctate larval stage was not successfully reared to pupation (Erickson & Werner 1974). The triungulin larva was described by Erickson (1973). Erickson & Werner (1974) reported that the triungulin instar lasts only 2–3 days before it molts into the first-grub phase which occupies instars 2–5. During this latter phase, the larvae fed on pollen balls created by bees. Erickson & Werner (1974) offered larvae of several bee species as food to T. aloga larvae, but none were consumed. This may indicate that T. aloga feeds only on pollen ball stores of ground nesting bees, but the failure to rear larvae all the way through to the adult stage may alternatively indicate that some other specific food source is required. Erickson & Werner (1974) concluded from their study that consuming bee larvae was not critical to the development of T. aloga, at least during the feeding instars, but moisture level within the rearing chambers and composition of the food mattered greatly. Species within Tegrodera have a unique courtship behavior among meloids, associated with their morphology, where the male and female face one another and the male begins stroking the female’s antennae with his own while moving her antennae in Scientific Note
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来源期刊
Pan-Pacific Entomologist
Pan-Pacific Entomologist 生物-昆虫学
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
20.00%
发文量
47
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Pan-Pacific Entomologist (ISSN 0031-0603) is published quarterly (January, April, July and October) by the Pacific Coast Entomological Society, in cooperation with the California Academy of Sciences. The journal serves as a refereed publication outlet and accepts manuscripts on all aspects of the biosystematics of insects and closely related arthropods, especially articles dealing with their taxonomy, biology, behavior, ecology, life history, biogeography and distribution. Membership in the Pacific Coast Entomological Society includes subscription to The Pan-Pacific Entomologist, and Society Proceedings typically appear in the October issue of each volume.
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