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Results 601 to 630 of 2340:

Weed seed choice by carabid beetles (Coleoptera: Carabidae): Linking field measurements with laboratory diet assessments

Sandrine PETIT, Aline BOURSAULT, David A. BOHAN

Eur. J. Entomol. 111 (5): 615-620, 2014 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2014.086

Carabid beetles could potentially provide a number of ecosystem services in arable fields, including the regulation of weeds by eating seeds. Spatio-temporal variability in the incidence of predation combined with a limited understanding of the interactions between carabids and seed predation, currently limits our ability to assess the effectiveness of this service. We carried out a long-term field study of carabid communities and the incidence of predation of the seeds of 5 species of weeds and laboratory cafeteria choice-tests to quantify the preferences of the most abundant species of seed-eating carabid for the seeds of 10 species of weeds. The field study revealed important temporal variation both in carabid activity-density and seed predation, with the seed of Viola arvensis and Capsella bursa-pastoris being particularly preferred by the carabids. The laboratory cafeteria tests confirmed the predation preferences measured in the field, in showing strong preferences by both Pterostichus melanarius and Pseudoophonus rufipes for the seed of V. arvensis. The percentage predation of the seed of V. arvensis was associated with the activity-density of carabids, while that of the seed of C. bursa-pastoris was not. Integrating laboratory-measured daily consumption rates, per carabid taxa, into models improved the ability to predict the intensity of predation of the seed of V. arvensis based on the composition of carabid communities.

A two-variable approach used to distinguish between aphids (Hemiptera: Aphididae) that were reared on different varieties of cotton

Yong-Sheng ZHANG, Fang OUYANG, Zhe-Ming YUAN, Jing CAO, Feng GE

Eur. J. Entomol. 112 (3): 426-431, 2015 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2015.057

Identifying the plants aphids have fed on can increase our understanding of their roles in food webs, and help in improving management and implementation control strategies in agricultural systems. Field sampling and laboratory experiments were carried out to determine the stable isotope ratios of carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15 N) in three different varieties of cotton and the aphids (Aphis gossypii) that fed on these varieties. The results were used to test the hypothesis that stable isotope signatures of aphids that have fed on different varieties of cotton differ. Two-dimensional plots of stable isotope signatures for aphids and the cotton varieties they fed on displayed a non-overlapping pattern, indicating that stable isotope signatures of the three cotton varieties and the aphids that fed on them differed. The results indicate that stable isotope analysis can potentially be used to identify aphids that have fed on different varieties of cotton. When the stable isotope signatures of diets clearly differ then it is highly likely the consumers will be distinguishable.

Female sex pheromone gland of the boxwood leafminer, Monarthropalpus buxi (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae): Morphological and behavioural evidence

Paola RIOLO, Sara RUSCHIONI, Roxana L. MINUZ, Roberto ROMANI, Nunzio ISIDORO

Eur. J. Entomol. 111 (1): 75-81, 2014 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2014.009

Morphological studies were carried out to determine whether females of the boxwood leafminer, Monarthropalpus buxi (Laboulbene) (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) have a pheromone gland, its position and ultra-structure. In addition, the reproductive behaviour of this gall midge was studied in the laboratory in a wind-tunnel. The source of the sex pheromone was identified as the epidermis of the inter-segmental membrane between the 8th and 9th abdominal segments of females. The epidermis there was hypertrophied and consisted of a unicellular layer of secretory cells with ultra-structural features that include a well developed smooth endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi complexes that are typical of pheromone-producing glands. At adult emergence the sex ratio was 1 : 1. The virgin females extruded their ovipositor and moved it slowly (visible using a video-camera at high magnification), which was followed by mating. The females were monogamous, while the males usually mated several times with different females. Wind-tunnel bioassays using virgin females, ovipositor-ectomised virgins and mated females provided further evidence that virgin females produce a sex pheromone.

The Tachyusa coarctata species group revisited: Phylogenetic relationships and a new species (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Aleocharinae)

Grzegorz PA¦NIK

Eur. J. Entomol. 107 (4): 621-629, 2010 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2010.071

The Tachyusa coarctata species group is revised. The species group is defined on the basis of the distinctly asperate punctation on elytra, the dense punctation on tergites III-V with interstices between punctures 1.5-2.0 times their diameter, and the dense, subrecumbent pubescence on the abdomen. The T. coarctata species group is composed of twenty three species restricted in occurrence to the Holarctic and Africa, including one new species described from Iran: Tachyusa frischi sp.n. A revised key to the species in this group is provided. An analysis of the phylogeny of the Tachyusa coarctata species group based on cladistic methods is presented and the phylogenetic relationships among species are discussed.

Efficacy of semiochemical-baited traps for detection of longhorn beetles (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) in the Russian Far East

Jon D. SWEENEY, Peter J. SILK, Vasily GREBENNIKOV

Eur. J. Entomol. 111 (3): 397-406, 2014 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2014.049

The efficacy of various combinations of pheromones and plant volatile lures for detection of longhorn beetles (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) in traps was tested in field bioassays in a mixed coniferous-deciduous forest near Vladivostok in the Russian Far East in 2009 and 2010. Traps detected 30 species (490 specimens) in 2009 and 23 species (182 specimens) in 2010. Overall, 38 longhorn beetle species were detected, with 15 species common to both years. Species composition differed among lure treatments, but the number of species detected with any single lure did not vary significantly among lures (12-16 species per lure in 2009; 3-10 species per lure in 2010). Type of lure significantly affected mean catch per trap of five species in 2009 and 2010. For these same species, lure type also significantly affected the efficacy of detection, i.e., the proportion of traps that captured at least one specimen of a given species. The combination of racemic E-fuscumol and spruce blend (a blend of five monoterpenes) positively affected mean catch of Tetropium castaneum (L.). Racemic 3-hydroxyhexan-2-one (K6), alone or combined with ethanol, increased mean catch of Anaglyptus colobotheoides Bates. The combination of K6 and ethanol increased mean catch of Phymatodes testaceus (L.), and the combination of racemic 3-hydroxyoctan-2-one and ethanol increased mean catch of Molorchus minor (L.). Use of longhorn beetle pheromone lures in trapping surveys increases the mean catch and probability of detecting certain species of Cerambycidae, including those that may be exotic and potentially invasive. Sample-based rarefaction indicated that eight traps per site were insufficient to detect all of the longhorn species potentially attracted by any individual lure treatment, i.e., species accumulation curves failed to reach an asymptote in most cases.

First report on a multiple sex chromosome system (X1X2X30) and population variations in the frequency of ring bivalents in Pyrrhocoridae (Hemiptera: Heteroptera)

Harbhajan KAUR, Kalchana GABA

Eur. J. Entomol. 112 (3): 419-425, 2015 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2015.063

The family Pyrrhocoridae (Hemiptera: Heteroptera) is characterized by a modal diploid chromosome number of 16 (♂) ranging from 12 to 33 and simple (X0), multiple (X1X20) and neo-sex chromosome systems (neoX-neoY). Out of about 340 known species, only 22 species belonging to 7 genera have to date been cytogenetically analysed. In the present study, the chromosome complement and meiotic details of one species, Odontopus nigricornis Stål has been revised, whilst that of another species, Antilochus russus Stål has been cytogenetically analyzed for the first time. The diploid chromosome complement of O. nigricornis is 2n (♂) = 25 = 22A + X1X2X30; the first time this particular multiple sex chromosome system has been reported in the Pyrrhocoridae. Three sex chromosomes mostly remain intimately associated during male meiosis and their number was confirmed at diplotene and anaphase II, where they dissociate slightly to become distinct. Meiosis is post-reductional for sex chromosomes. However, unlike other pyrrhocorids with multiple X chromosomes, the X1, X2 and X3 lie outside the autosomal ring on the metaphase plate during both divisions. The male diploid chromosome complement of A. russus was found to be 2n = 27 = 26A + X0. Apart from the typical meiotic features of heteropterans, the latter species shows inter- and intra-population variations in frequency of ring bivalents.

Azalea sawfly Nematus lipovskyi (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae), a new invasive species in Europe

Jan MACEK, Petr ©ÍPEK

Eur. J. Entomol. 112 (1): 180-186, 2015 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2015.018

A new non-native species of sawfly Nematus lipovskyi Smith, 1974, previously known only in the USA, has heavily infested the ornamental azalea plant, Rhododendron molle, in the Czech Republic since at least 2010. The data on this species in the USA is briefly summarized. The larva and hitherto unknown male are newly described and illustrated. The life cycle is described based on field observations and the rearing of larvae collected in Charles University Botanic Garden in Prague. The host plants are listed and include the first record of a European species of azalea (Rhododendron luteum). The current distribution of Nematus lipovskyi in the Czech Republic based on the results of a preliminary monitoring project carried out by Charles University in Prague and the State Phytosanitary Administration is presented. The pathways of its introduction and spread, potential phytosanitary measures and its effect on the environment are briefly discussed.

Increase in dark morphs and decrease in size during a range extension of Cheilomenes sexmaculata (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae)

Yasuko KAWAKAMI, Kazuo YAMAZAKI, Kazunori OHASHI

Eur. J. Entomol. 112 (2): 289-294, 2015 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2015.029

The ladybird beetle Cheilomenes sexmaculata (Fabricius) is widely distributed throughout the intermediate latitudinal and equatorial regions. It exhibits elytral colour polymorphism with a geographical cline showing increased prevalence of melanic morphs with increasing latitude. Over the past 100 years, this species has extended its distribution towards higher latitudes in Japan because of climatic warming. In this study, long-term changes in the frequency of different morphs and adult body size of this species during this range extension were analyzed based on a survey of specimens in collections. First, we examined specimens collected from areas that were colonized (34-36°N) during the period of range extension (1949-1989) and when it ceased (1990-2005). Chronologically, both the proportions of melanic morphs increased and body size decreased significantly. Next, specimens were examined from newly colonized regions and the former range of distribution (32-34°N); these specimens were collected during period when range extension had ceased. In newly colonized regions, the frequency of melanic morphs was higher and the body size was smaller than in the former range of distribution. These two findings indicate that the smaller, melanic morphs may have undergone a positive-selection driven range extension to higher latitudes.

Fine fluorescent powder marking study of dispersal in the spruce bark beetle, Ips typographus (Coleoptera: Scolytidae)

Petr DOLE®AL, Jan OKROUHLÍK, Markéta DAVÍDKOVÁ

Eur. J. Entomol. 113: 1-8, 2016 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2016.001

A novel method was used to study dispersal in the spruce bark beetle, Ips typographus (L.), under epidemic conditions (rapidly increasing population density) in the ©umava National Park. Infested spruce logs were coated with a fine fluorescent powder and the passively marked emerging beetles were captured in pheromone baited traps located at various distances from these logs. The number of marked beetles captured decreased exponentially with increasing distance from the release point. The sex ratio of the bark beetles was more female biased the further they were recaptured from the logs, being 57% and 60% at distances of up to 50 and 100 m, respectively. The maximum distance flown by a marked beetle recorded in this experiment was 1094 m. A model fitted to the data on dispersal indicates that 10% of the spruce bark beetles dispersed over distances of 55 m and 4 m in spring (overwintered parental generation) and summer (first filial generation), respectively. Differences between spring and summer swarming are briefly discussed.

Preference of two populations of Propylea quatuordecimpunctata (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) for Aphis fabae and Aphis gossypii (Homoptera: Aphididae)

Maryam KESHAVARZ, Marjan SEIEDY, Hossein ALLAHYARI

Eur. J. Entomol. 112 (3): 560-563, 2015 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2015.065

Prey preference of natural enemies is an important parameter used in studies on their efficiency. Feeding preferences of individuals from two populations of Propylea quatuordecimpunctata (L.) (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) for the essential prey items, Aphis fabae Scopoli, 1763 and Aphis gossypii Glover, 1877 (Homoptera: Aphididae) were evaluated in the laboratory using Manly's β preference index (β). For the predator preference experiment, equal numbers of A. fabae and A. gossypii were offered to the predator. The experiment was conducted on a broad bean leaf disc with 20 replicates. After 24 h, the unconsumed aphids were counted. Individuals of P. quatuordecimpunctata from both populations consumed more A. gossypii [Karaj population (mean ± SE): 28.15 ± 1.04 and Sari population 34.35 ± 0.51] than A. fabae (Karaj population: 17.95 ± 0.64 and Sari population: 17.7 ± 1.01). The values of Manly's β preference index (β) for A. gossypii were 0.73 ± 0.01 and 0.77 ± 0.01 for the Karaj and Sari populations, respectively and for A. fabae were 0.26 ± 0.01 and 0.22 ± 0.01 for the Karaj and Sari populations, respectively. Comparison of the preference indices using a t-test revealed significant differences between the prey preferences of those from the Sari population (t = 22.53, df = 38, P < 0.0001) and the Karaj population (t = 26, df = 38, P < 0.0001). These results reveal that P. quatuordecimpunctata from the two populations prefer A. gossypii over A. fabae.

Specialized feeding of Euconnus pubicollis (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Scydmaeninae) on oribatid mites: Prey preferences and hunting behaviour

Pawe³ JA£OSZYÑSKI, Ziemowit OLSZANOWSKI

Eur. J. Entomol. 110 (2): 339-353, 2013 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2013.047

Prey preferences and feeding-related behaviour of a Central European species of Scydmaeninae, Euconnus pubicollis, were studied under laboratory conditions. Results of prey choice experiments involving 50 species of mites belonging to 24 families of Oribatida and one family of Uropodina demonstrated that beetles feed mostly on ptyctimous Phthiracaridae (over 90% of prey) and only occasionally on Achipteriidae, Chamobatidae, Steganacaridae, Oribatellidae, Ceratozetidae, Euphthiracaridae and Galumnidae. The average number of mites consumed per beetle per day was 0.27 ± 0.07, and the entire feeding process took 2.15-33.7 h and showed a clear linear relationship with prey body length. Observations revealed a previously unknown mechanism for capturing prey in Scydmaeninae in which a droplet of liquid that exudes from the mouth onto the dorsal surface of the predator's mouthparts adheres to the mite's cuticle. Morphological adaptations associated with this strategy include the flattened distal parts of the maxillae, whereas the mandibles play a minor role in capturing prey. Mechanisms for overcoming the prey's defences depended on the body form of the mite. When attacking oribatids that adopt the ptychoid defence (encapsulation) Euconnus opened the prodorsum and pressed the anal and genital plates deeply into the idiosoma, whereas it fed on all other mites by entering their bodies through small gnathosomal or/and genital openings, after breaking off mouthparts or/and genital plates. The preferential feeding of a specialized and locally abundant ant-like stone beetle on one family of Oribatida, documented here for the first time, has implications for the population dynamics of the prey and raises questions about predator-prey co-evolution and costs of an unusually prolonged period spent feeding when at risk from competition and attack by larger predators, typical of the habitats where Scydmaeninae occur.

Pollen types collected by Tetragonisca angustula (Hymenoptera: Apidae) in dry vegetation in Northeastern Brazil

Jaílson Santos De NOVAIS, Maria Lúcia ABSY, Francisco De Assis Ribeiro Dos SANTOS

Eur. J. Entomol. 111 (1): 25-34, 2014 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2014.004

Knowing the floral origin of the pollen collected by native bees in Neotropical ecosystems enables us to understand the dynamics of the interdependent relationships between the insects and the native flora. The objectives of this study were to: (i) investigate the spectrum of plant species from which pollen is collected by Tetragonisca angustula in caatinga (dry vegetation) areas in the semiarid region of Northeastern Brazil; (ii) identify pollen types that could be used as regional geographical markers and (iii) determine the pollen niche breadth and the pattern of use of floral resources by this stingless bee. In total, 23 samples of the pollen stored by T. angustula were collected monthly and subjected to acetolysis. Of the 45 pollen types identified that of Prosopis juliflora (Fabaceae) and Solanum (Solanaceae) were the most frequently represented in the samples and 19 were collected by the bees at both study sites. Species characteristic of caatinga, such as Poincianella pyramidalis (Tulasne) L.P. Queiroz and Senna macranthera (de Candolle ex Colladon) H.S. Irwin & Barneby, were among the pollen identified and they were used as indicators of the geographical origin of the samples. The average values of the pollen niche breadth (H') and equitability (J') indicate that T. angustula is a generalist and homogeneous forager of the floral resources in caatinga.

Karyotype evolution in progress: A new diploid number in Belostoma candidulum (Heteroptera: Belostomatidae) from Argentina leading to new insights into its ecology and evolution

Mónica G. CHIRINO, María J. BRESSA

Eur. J. Entomol. 111 (2): 165-174, 2014 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2014.027

A novel chromosome complement (2n = 14 = 12 + XY/XX; male/female sex chromosomes), male meiosis behaviour, heterochromatin characterization, and frequency and distribution of chiasmata are described for the first time in specimens from a natural population of the giant water bug, Belostoma candidulum Montandon, 1903 (Heteroptera: Belostomatidae) from Argentina. To date, specimens of B. candidulum have been reported by other authors in a sample from a natural population from Brazil. Our results demonstrate that Argentinean and Brazilian populations have different diploid numbers and chromosomal features. During male meiosis, autosomal bivalents generally show a single chiasma, behave as telokinetic chromosomes (i.e. kinetic activity is restricted to terminal regions), and divide reductionally at anaphase I; in contrast, the sex chromosomes are achiasmatic, behave as univalents and segregate equationally at anaphase I. Among autosomal bivalents of B. candidulum, one is remarkably larger and may present one or two terminal chiasmata, showing rod, V-shaped and ring configurations. Here we propose a new mode of segregation for ring bivalents, since it is not essential that one of the chiasmata is released during anaphase I because alternative sites for microtubule attachment become functional for the normal chromosome segregation to the poles. Heterochromatin content is very scarce in specimens from Argentinean B. candidulum populations, revealing C-positive interstitial and terminal dots in three pairs of autosomes and C-blocks at both ends of X chromosome, whereas the Y chromosome is mainly C-positive. One of the C-positive bands from X and Y chromosomes is DAPI-dull/CMA-bright, which could represent the nucleolus organizing region (NOR) detected by fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH). The location of the NORs in both sex chromosomes allowed us to use them as a cytological marker to describe their behaviour during meiosis. Despite the fact that specimens from the Argentinean and Brazilian populations have been classified as a single species due to their morphological similarity, our results suggest that both populations are chromosomal races or even morphologically-identical cryptic species. The results obtained support the hypothesis that karyotype of B. candidulum originated through autosomal fusions and the fusion of the X and Y chromosomes with the ancestral NOR-autosomal pair. Lastly, the genus Belostoma represents an excellent model for assessing the main mechanisms involved in the karyotype evolution in organisms with holokinetic chromosomes, from which inferences may be made concerning its broader ecology and evolution.

Do egg parasitoids increase the tendency of Lestes sponsa (Odonata: Lestidae) to oviposit underwater?

Filip HARABI©, Ale¹ DOLNÝ, Jana HELEBRANDOVÁ, Tereza RUSKOVÁ

Eur. J. Entomol. 112 (1): 63-68, 2015 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2015.017

The selection of oviposition sites by insects can significantly affect egg mortality. Spreadwing damselflies (Odonata: Lestidae) predominantly lay their eggs in parts of plants growing above the surface of water and only occasionally also those parts growing underwater. Factors affecting the choice of oviposition site and decision to lay underwater are still poorly understood. We examined whether localities with different risk of egg parasitism, different oviposition strategies (above or below the water surface) and the depth at which the eggs were laid, affected the total number of eggs laid, the proportion parasitized and egg mortality. In general, a significantly higher proportion of the eggs laid above the surface of water were parasitized but spreadwing damselflies showed significant preference for laying eggs underwater at both of the sites studied. This preference, however, had a different effect on the overall mortality of eggs at the two sites studied. Hence underwater oviposition by damselflies may be seen as a conditional anti-predator strategy, occurring only if the benefits exceed potential risks. Underwater oviposition may provide additional benefits other than protection against egg parasitism.

Destruction of peritrophic membrane and its effect on biological characteristics and activity of digestive enzymes in larvae of the Indian meal moth, Plodia interpunctella (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae)

Seyede MINOO SAJJADIAN, Vahid HOSSEININAVEH

Eur. J. Entomol. 112 (2): 245-250, 2015 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2015.046

The mid gut in insects is usually lined with a peritrophic membrane (PM), which protects it from microbial infections and physical contact with ingested food. Calcofluor is an optical brightener that has strong chitin-binding properties, which disrupt the chitin-protein structure of PM. In this study, we investigated the effects of calcofluor on the structure of the PM, activity of some common digestive enzymes and biological characteristics of the Indian meal moth, Plodia interpunctella (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae). Twenty hours after feeding on a calcofluor-containing diet, the PM was completely eliminated. We recorded significant effects of calcofluor on the activity of digestive enzymes in the mid and hindguts of larvae. In both these regions of the gut, in particular, there were significant increases in the activity of α-amylase, α-galactosidase and trypsin. The activities of α-glucosidase and β-glucosidase in the midgut of treated larvae were lower than in the control, but were significantly higher in the hindgut of treated larvae. The larvae that fed on on calcofluor for 20 h, took longer to complete their larval and pupal stages, were lighter in weight and fewer reached maturity and laid fewer eggs. Results of this and previous studies highlight the crucial role of PM in enzyme recycling and digestion. PM disruption may negatively affect insect development on the one hand, by decreasing the efficiency of food digestion and, on the other, by increasing the costs associated with an increased enzyme demand and disrupted enzyme recycling mechanism.

Potential pollinator of Vanda falcata (Orchidaceae): Theretra (Lepidoptera: Sphingidae) hawkmoths are visitors of long spurred orchid

Kenji SUETSUGU, Koji TANAKA, Yudai OKUYAMA, Tomohisa YUKAWA

Eur. J. Entomol. 112 (2): 393-397, 2015 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2015.031

Vanda falcata is a species of orchid native to China, Korea and Japan. While it is arguably one of the most celebrated orchids in Japan there is no information on its pollinators. Although most species of the subtribe Aeridinae, to which V. falcata belongs, have a short spur, V. falcata has a long spur. The results of the current study provide strong evidence that V. falcata is pollinated by long-tongued hawkmoths (Theretra spp.), which indicates that the evolution of long spurs in V. falcata could be an adaptation to pollination by long-tongued moths.

First chromosomal study of Mantophasmatodea: Karyotype of Karoophasma biedouwense (Austrophasmatidae)

Dorota LACHOWSKA-CIERLIK, Anna MARYAÑSKA-NADACHOWSKA, Valentina KUZNETSOVA, Mike PICKER

Eur. J. Entomol. 112 (4): 599-605, 2015 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2015.093

We have investigated for the first time the chromosomes of Karoophasma biedouwense, a species belonging to the Mantophasmatodea, a recently discovered order of carnivorous insects. Our study has revealed that males of this species display testes with numerous seminal tubes (follicles), as in other Polyneoptera, and short tubular seminal vesicles embedded in a utricular gland. The karyotype consists of 2n = 12A + X monocentric and biarmed, meta/submetacentric chromosomes (fundamental number of arms: FN = 26) with blocks of heterochromatin around centromeres. The autosomes are classified into two size groups, one represented by a single, very large pair of autosomes, the other by five smaller pairs which constitute a continuous series gradually decreasing in size. Among "monocentric" orders of Polyneoptera, K. biedouwense shares its low chromosome number, 2n = 13, as also found with some Orthoptera (Acridoidea, Grylloidea, Gryllacridoidea). Male meiosis is of the classical pre-reductional type and the X(0) sex determination system is probably an ancestral state. Use of FISH along with an 18S rDNA probe revealed multiple ribosomal clusters, which most likely represent an apomorphic condition. We identified the ancestral insect telomeric sequence (TTAGG)n in the terminal areas of the chromosomes. Currently available data on the polyneopteran orders putatively related to Mantophasmatodea showed a wide variability of cytogenetic characteristics within and between them. The only character allowing some tentative inference to be made on the ancestry of K. biedouwense is its low chromosome number, the karyotypic pattern so far unreported for the Polyneoptera except in certain Orthoptera.

Preference and performance of the larvae of Lymantria dispar (Lepidoptera: Lymantriidae) on three species of European oaks

Slobodan MILANOVIÆ, Jelica LAZAREVIÆ, Zorica POPOVIÆ, Zoran MILETIÆ, Miroslav KOSTIÆ, Zlatan RADULOVIÆ, Dragan KARAD®IÆ, Ana VULETA

Eur. J. Entomol. 111 (3): 371-378, 2014 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2014.039

The gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar (L.) (Lepidoptera: Lymantriidae), causes enormous damage to broadleaved forests in the northern hemisphere where it frequently defoliates large areas of forest. Since outbreaks begin in oak forests, its most suitable habitat, we determined the preference and performance of gypsy moth larvae when reared on three species of native oaks: sessile oak, Quercus petraea (Matt.) Liebl.; Turkey oak, Q. cerris L.; and Hungarian oak, Q. frainetto (Ten.). Leaf expansion and selected physical and chemical characteristics of the oak leaves were also measured. The shortest development time and highest relative consumption (RCR), growth rate (RGR), assimilation efficiency (AD), efficiency of conversion of ingested food (ECI) and digested food into larval biomass (ECD) values were recorded when larvae were fed on Turkey oak. Two-choice tests revealed that Turkey oak is the preferred host plant. It had the highest total soluble protein and leaf nitrogen content, lowest C/N ratio and its phenology was well synchronized with the hatching of the larvae. The worst performance and lowest preference index were recorded when fed on Hungarian oak, the leaves of which had the lowest protein and nitrogen content, while in terms of the values for preference and performance the larvae fed on sessile oak were intermediate. Our results indicate that forests with Turkey oak are highly likely to be defoliated by gypsy moth larvae and therefore should be regularly monitored.

Variation in the shape of the wings and taxonomy of Eurasian populations of the Calopteryx splendens complex (Odonata: Calopterygidae)

Saber SADEGHI, Henri J. DUMONT

Eur. J. Entomol. 111 (4): 575-583, 2014 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2014.073

We used geometric morphometrics to determine variation in the morphology of the forewings of individuals in 20 populations of Calopteryx splendens s.l. in Eurasia and related these to the circum-specific taxonomy of this taxon. We found differences in shape, with the largest and smallest centroid size of the wings in adjacent northern (orientalis) and western (intermedia) populations in Iran, respectively, so isolation and relationship are not necessarily determined by distance, but often associated with the stream basin inhabited. The variation in wing shape, however, was much greater. with Populations at the eastern edge of the range (Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan and East Kazakhstan) uniquely different. Oddly, no taxonomic name is associated with them, although they may be among the oldest representatives of the splendens complex. The European and Asian populations are in two separate clades. One of these includes insects with no to a medium-sized wing spot, which does not reach the tip of the wing (waterstoni-group), while the other includes insects with very broad wing spots, or, when short, it extends to the very tip of the wings and most females are androchrome (ancilla or intermedia group). Turkmenistan and northern Iranian population form a separate line inside this clade, which we equate with Calopteryx orientalis. South Albanian and Greek populations are in a separate branch corresponding to ssp. balcanica; two populations from Ireland and Italy form a branch that has no equivalent in traditional taxonomy, while Calopteryx xanthostoma was not identified by its wing shape. Understanding this multitude of phenotypes and the enormous amount of variation within certain populations but not in others becomes easy if one assumes there were two probable late Pleistocene waves of migration, the first of insects lacking spots that migrated east and westwards from the South Black Sea basin, the second, perhaps from the west Caspian, composed of heavily spotted insects with androchromic females. The hybridization between these two waves resulted in the current plethora of colour forms and accounts for why similar phenotypes may turn up independently in widely distant locations.

Faunal patterns in tenebrionids (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae) on the Tuscan Islands: The dominance of paleogeography over Recent geography

Simone FATTORINI

Eur. J. Entomol. 106 (3): 415-423, 2009 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2009.053

The tenebrionid fauna of the Tuscan Islands (Central Italy) is well known and is an ideal system for studying the role of current and historical factors in determining the biogeographical patterns in a complex archipelago. Cluster analyses, species-area relationships and Mantel tests were used to investigate the influence of current geography and Pleistocene connections with the mainland on the structure of insular communities. Current biogeographical similarity patterns fit both Pleistocene and Recent geography, but marked effects of Pleistocene geography appeared when the influence of Recent geography was removed. Thus, in contrast to more mobile insects, such as butterflies and chrysidids, tenebrionid colonization is likely to have occurred via land-bridges when the islands were connected to the mainland in the Pleistocene. The relict distributions of organisms with poor mobility should be of great concern to conservationists, because depletion of island populations cannot be balanced by new immigrations from mainland populations. The continued influence of man on the Tuscan Islands has adversely affected the natural environment, however, man made habitats may also be colonized and exploited by tenebrionids.

Spatial ecology of Hydropsyche incognita (Trichoptera: Hydropsychidae) in the Carpathians

Mãlina PÎRVU, Claudia ZAHARIA, Alina SATMARI, Lucian PÂRVULESCU

Eur. J. Entomol. 112 (1): 106-113, 2015 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2015.006

Caddisflies are often used in studies on freshwater ecosystem ecology because of their aquatic-dependent larvae. The present study addresses the ecological affinities of larvae of Hydropsyche incognita in terms of the pattern of distribution of this species in the Romanian Carpathians using a boosted regression trees (BRT) model. A population cluster located in the western Romanian Carpathians was identified by the spatial analysis. The statistical model revealed that this species prefers a neutral to low-alkaline pH, high levels of dissolved oxygen, low conductivity, fast flowing water, moderate sized rivers at an altitude below 600 m a.s.l. and low concentrations of organic pollutants. An eastward decrease in the frequency of H. incognita populations was recorded along rivers in the Carpathians. The predictions derived from the BRT model on sites outside the population cluster suggest that many locations in the central and eastern Romanian Carpathians are suitable for H. incognita. However, this species was found at only a few of these locations. In contrast, some populations in this area were found in habitats predicted as unsuitable. There are several possible explanations of this, one of which is random dispersion of the species by flying adults.

The lock-and-key mechanisms of the internal genitalia of the Noctuidae (Lepidoptera): How are they selected for?

Kauri MIKKOLA

Eur. J. Entomol. 105 (1): 13-25, 2008 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2008.002

In the Noctuidae, the owlet moths, the internal genitalia, i.e. the aedeagus and vesica (penis) in the males, and the bursa copulatrix in the females, together form a lock-and-key mechanism (LKM). The species-specific structures have their counterparts in the opposite sex. The internal LKM constitutes a specific reproductive isolation mechanism (lock-and-key hypothesis), which seem to be the rule in the ditrysian Lepidoptera, and also occurs in the Carabidae (Coleoptera) and some other insects. In contrast, the external genitalia rarely have species-specific counterparts in the sexes. Several results indicate the presence of LKMs: In the Noctuidae, (1) heterospecific differences in the male vesica may prevent sperm transfer or lead to mechanical failure during copulation, (2) the more complicated the specific genitalia structures, the more aberrations may occur even in conspecific copulations, and (3) in many species pairs and groups, and in one large genus, Apamea, the structures in the opposite sexes show a strictly specific correspondence, but, (4) when there is precopulatory isolation due to differences in pheromone production or perception, the internal genitalia may be identical. Conversely, in the Colias butterflies (Pieridae), (5) frequent heterospecific hybridization is associated with the similarity of the internal genitalia. The LKMs seem to protect genomes against alien genes, supposedly selected for because of the lower fitness of specimens with an imprecise LKM and/or inferiority of hybrids. In the literature, the diversity of the noctuid genitalia has been ascribed to sexual selection, because the females were classified as polyandrous. Most species produce the main part of their eggs monandrously, and remate, if at all, in their old age, and are thus successively monandrous and polyandrous. The allopatric divergence in the structure of the internal genitalia of 39 Holarctic pairs of sister species of Noctuidae is suggested to be due to genetic drift. The insecure function of the female pheromones and external genitalia of males are illustrated with the aid of original photographs.

Accumulation and effects of cyanobacterial microcystins and anatoxin-a on benthic larvae of Chironomus spp. (Diptera: Chironomidae)

Magdalena TOPOROWSKA, Barbara PAWLIK-SKOWROÑSKA, Renata KALINOWSKA

Eur. J. Entomol. 111 (1): 83-90, 2014 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2014.010

Larvae of Chironomidae are distributed world-wide and are very abundant in eutrophic water bodies affected by cyanobacterial blooms. However, there is little information on the effect of cyanobacteria and their metabolites on these aquatic organisms. Our studies revealed that benthic species of Chironomus inhabiting a hypertrophic lake where blooms of microcystin (MC) and/or anatoxin-a (ANTX)-producing filamentous Planktothrix agardhii, Dolichospermum spp. and Cuspidothrix issatschenkoi occur, fed on these cyanobacteria and accumulated cyanotoxins. Up to 3.2 µg MCs g-1 F.W. and up to 185 µg ANTX g-1 F.W. were detected. Of the four MC variants detected in the cyanobacterial biomass [Asp3, Dhb7]MC-RR and MC-LR prevailed, whereas in the larvae it was [Asp3, Dhb7]MC-RR and MC-LA. The effect of pure MC-LR and ANTX as well as crude extracts of MC-producing P. agardhii and ANTX-producing D. lemmermannii on lake and riverine larvae of Chironomus spp. was also compared. The assays revealed that pure cyanotoxins (concentrations: 0.83-3.32 mg L-1) were generally less toxic to riverine larvae than cyanobacterial extracts containing approximately 10-times less toxins. The survival of both the lake and riverine Chironomus larvae did not decrease when exposed to environmentally relevant concentrations of cyanotoxins (< 0.20 mg L-1). The larvae were also highly resistant to higher amounts (up to 0.35 mg ANTX L-1 and 0.42 mg MCs L-1) of extracellular toxins. In the natural environment, Chironomus larvae exposed to toxins contained in cyanobacterial prey, dissolved in water and/or bound to bottom sediments may be very important vectors of cyanotoxins to higher levels in aquatic food chains. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report on the accumulation of ANTX and effects of cyanotoxins on Chironomus larvae.

Comparison of the mating behaviour of a bush cricket in the laboratory and the field: Calling activity and mating frequency of a long-winged species, Phaneroptera falcata (Ensifera: Tettigoniidae)

Jörg SAMIETZ, Jens SCHUMACHER, Klaus REINHARDT

Eur. J. Entomol. 111 (2): 189-197, 2014 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2014.019

Bush crickets are a model group for testing hypotheses in sexual selection, but much of the information is based on laboratory observations on wingless or short-winged species, which may restrict their generality. Here we describe aspects of the mating behaviour of the long-winged European bush cricket Phaneroptera falcata (Poda, 1761). Both in the laboratory and the field, diel calling followed a normal, though slightly left-skewed distribution, peaking about three hours after sunset or lights-off. Under bright greenhouse conditions, when the light was suddenly switched off, calling occurred only after the onset of darkness. Decreasing light intensity may trigger the start of calling activity. In the field, calling decreased from midnight onwards, which may be related to a decrease in temperature. The sequence of events during copulation was identical in the laboratory and the field. However, in two of 14 copulations documented in the field, a pre-copulatory behaviour was observed that resembled the putative removal and ingestion of rival sperm. Previous suggestions that P. falcata (Poda) is monogamous are rejected on the basis of both laboratory and field results. In the laboratory males and females mated every 2.3 and 3.6 days, respectively. We introduce a simple way to calculate the average frequency of mating in the field, based on the observation that at any one time 3% of all the individuals are recorded mating and copulation lasts 15 min. We estimate that on average P. falcata (Poda) mates once per day. More generally, our results show it is important for evolutionary conclusions to measure behaviourial data in the field.

Differences between beetle communities colonizing cattle and horse dung

Rados³aw MROCZYÑSKI, Karol KOMOSIÑSKI

Eur. J. Entomol. 111 (3): 349-355, 2014 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2014.050

Piles of fresh cow and horse dung were placed in a pasture in Dziarny in north-east Poland. The differences between the beetle communities colonizing both types of dung at various stages of succession were analyzed. Beetles were sampled 2, 5, 10, 15, 20 and 25 days after placing the piles of dung in the pasture. A total of 5 343 individuals belonging to 125 species and 10 families were collected in 24 samples. None of the species of beetles collected colonized exclusively one type of dung. Several taxa showed a clear preference for cow or horse dung. Beetle succession proceeded faster in horse dung and there were significant differences in the dominant species recorded in the two types of dung. The reasons for the reported patterns are discussed.

Generalist-specialist continuum and life history traits of Central European butterflies (Lepidoptera) - are we missing a part of the picture?

Alena BARTONOVA, Jiri BENES, Martin KONVICKA

Eur. J. Entomol. 111 (4): 543-553, 2014 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2014.060

Abstract. Analyzing life history traits of butterfly communities and faunas frequently reveals a generalist-specialist continuum as the main gradient, where species using wide arrays of resources, with good dispersal ability and fast development are distinguished from those using specialised resources, having limited dispersal ability and developing slowly. To ascertain the validity of the generalist-specialist approach for an intermediately species-rich Central European fauna, we analyzed ten life history traits for 136 species of butterflies currently occurring in the Czech Republic, using principal correspondence analysis (PCA) and controlling for phylogeny. The main gradient extracted indeed revealed a generalist-specialist continuum, while the gradient perpendicular to the main axis distinguished between small-bodied polyvoltine species feeding on small herbaceous plants and large-bodied monovoltine species feeding on grasses or woody plants. We coin "constrained voltinism continuum" for the second gradient and argue that it reflects the effect of anti-herbivore strategies of larval host plants on butterfly development. The position of the butterflies in the PCA ordination mirrors the C-S-R (Competitors - Stress tolerators - Ruderals) strategies of their host plants. Butterflies that feed on C- and R-selected plants tend to be generalists, but differ in voltinism, whereas specialists tend to feed on S-selected plants. Regressing measures of current conservation status of individual species in the Czech Republic against the two extracted life history gradients yielded a significant but weak response for the generalist-specialist continuum and no response for the constrained voltinism continuum. The weak responses were due to a wide scatter of status measures among "mid generalists". The generalist-specialist continuum is hence a rather poor predictor of species conservation status. Species of high conservation concern are found either among specialists, or among mid generalists with low to intermediate values on the constrained voltinism axis.

Old forest edges may promote the distribution of forest species in carabid assemblages (Coleoptera: Carabidae) in Croatian forests

Andreja BRIGIÆ, Marija STARÈEVIÆ, Boris HRA©OVEC, Zoltán ELEK

Eur. J. Entomol. 111 (5): 715-725, 2014 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2014.090

Boundaries between habitats are usually accompanied by transitions in the diversity and structural complexity of insect assemblages. Edge effects on carabid beetle assemblages across forest-meadow ecotones in Dinaric beech-fir forests were determined in the Gorski Kotar region of western Croatia. Carabid beetles were sampled using pitfall traps set along gradients extending 60 m from the forest edge into its interior and 60 m into the meadow. Embedded forest edges were greater than 100 years old and had a similar composition and structure of vegetation to that in the adjacent forest. A total of 20,526 individuals belonging to 66 carabid beetle species were recorded. Carabid assemblages in the ecotones were more similar to those in the forest interiors than those in the meadows. The classical edge effect hypothesis was not supported, since the ecotones were less diverse than the meadows, while the carabid assemblages of the forest interiors were the least diverse. Soil temperature, soil humidity and light intensity did not differ significantly between the ecotones and the forest interior. Therefore, embedded forest edges reduced the microclimate edge effect by providing stable microclimatic conditions for carabid assemblages similar to those in the forest interior. In addition, this enabled forest specialists and generalists to occur right up to the forest edge and maintain stable populations in the ecotone. On the other hand, ecotones acted as filters for certain forest generalist species and true barriers for most open-habitat species. This study confirmed that the structure and ages of the vegetation at edges may play a key role in determining the spatial pattern of carabid beetles across forest-meadow ecotones.

Effect of photoperiod on adult size and weight in Harmonia axyridis (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae)

Sergey Ya. REZNIK, Margarita Yu. DOLGOVSKAYA, Andrey N. OVCHINNIKOV

Eur. J. Entomol. 112 (4): 642-647, 2015 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2015.081

Short photoperiods often accelerate preimaginal development in insects that overwinter as adults and thus ensure the timely development of the diapausing stage. However, fast development usually results in small adults with few reserves whereas successful overwintering is dependent on sufficient reserves of nutrients. Thus, an insect faces two opposite challenges: increase adult weight or speed up pre-adult development. One solution to this "time-size trade-off" is fast development resulting in relatively light-weight but not too small adults, which are able to survive if there is an early onset to winter and have the possibility of further increasing their weight if conditions in autumn remain favourable for longer than usual. To test this hypothesis, we determined the effect of different photoperiods (day lengths of 12 and 18 h at 20°C) on the duration of preimaginal development, size of emerging adults and dynamics of adult weight in Harmonia axyridis. The larvae reared under short-day conditions tended to develop faster and invest resources in structural growth rather than in increasing weight: the daily rate of increase in size under a 12 h long photoperiod was greater than that under a 18 h long photoperiod, whereas the rate of gain in weight showed the opposite tendency. This resulted in a significant decrease in the weight /size ratio of emerging adults. However, their low initial nutritional status was partly compensated for by adult feeding: the relative gain in adult weight of "short-day individuals" was greater than that of the beetles that developed under long day conditions.

Modelling the effects of global warming on the ground beetle (Coleoptera: Carabidae) fauna of beech forests in Bavaria, Germany

Stefan MÜLLER-KROEHLING, Matthias C. JANTSCH, Hagen S. FISCHER, Anton FISCHER

Eur. J. Entomol. 111 (1): 35-49, 2014 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2014.005

We studied the effects of global warming and rising temperatures on the ground beetle fauna of Bavarian beech forests using the space for time approach at two geographical scales. The first was a Bavarian-wide gradient of 50 plots in beech forests and the second a regional gradient in the Bavarian Forest in the mountains in eastern Bavaria consisting of 48 plots, which also included subalpine spruce forests. For purposes of validation, we used backdrop data from 413 additional plots all across Bavaria from a wide range of forest habitats. We found five species that would be favoured and six species that would be disadvantaged by rising temperatures in beech forests. For another five species the conditions within the gradient studied reach both their minimum and their maximum temperatures. As a consequence of increasing temperatures there will be winners and losers in these forests and the species composition of ground beetle communities will change. Approximately the same number of species is likely to profit as will be affected negatively. However, when considering the "global responsibility species" for Germany, the balance is negative. Species may react differently in different habitats and at different regional scales, which must be taken into consideration when applying the results.

Diapause and post-diapause quiescence demonstrated in overwintering Harmonia axyridis (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) in northwestern Europe

C. Lidwien RAAK-VAN DEN BERG, Peter W. DE JONG, Lia HEMERIK, Joop C. VAN LENTEREN

Eur. J. Entomol. 110 (4): 585-591, 2013 | DOI: 10.14411/eje.2013.079

The Asian ladybird Harmonia axyridis (Pallas) (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) is regarded as an invasive species in many parts of the world. In a previous study we hypothesised that H. axyridis enters diapause at the end of October and then shifts to a quiescent state in December in northwestern Europe. In the present study we test this idea of a short, early period of diapause by sampling beetles from their hibernation sites immediately after their migratory flights in October, subsequently keeping them in outdoor cages, and then, after certain time-intervals, measuring the pre-oviposition time under optimal egg-laying laboratory conditions at 25°C. We did this at both short (12L) and long (16L) photoperiods, since a photoperiodic response is an indicator of true diapause, rather than quiescence. A significant, albeit small, difference in pre-oviposition period between the two photoperiods, which disappears in December, corroborates our earlier hypothesis that the ladybirds are in a state of diapause until mid-December. Compared with that of native ladybirds the diapause of H. axyridis generally is relatively short and weak; moreover, it appears to have become shorter over the last decade. This flexibility in diapausing behaviour may be an important factor that contributes to the invasive success of H. axyridis.

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