Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-8bhkd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-19T04:04:13.976Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Biology and host specificity of two aphids Dactynotus chondrillae (Nevsk.) and Chondrillobium blattnyi (Pintera) (Hemiptera) living on Chondrilla juncea

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

L. A. Caresche
Affiliation:
C.S.I.R.O. Biological Control Unit, 335 Avenue Abbé Paul Parguel, 34000 Montpellier, France
S. Hasan
Affiliation:
C.S.I.R.O. Biological Control Unit, 335 Avenue Abbé Paul Parguel, 34000 Montpellier, France
A. J. Wapshere
Affiliation:
C.S.I.R.O. Biological Control Unit, 335 Avenue Abbé Paul Parguel, 34000 Montpellier, France

Abstract

The biology and host specificity of Dactynotus chondrillae (Nevsk.) and Chondrillobium blattnyi (Pintera) living on the weed Chondrilla juncea (Compositae, Cichoriaceae) have been studied in the Mediterranean region as part of the biological control programme against this weed for Australia. Both are recorded from south-eastern Russia to the western Mediterranean region. The two species are monoecious. D. chondrillae has a facultative sexual reproductive phase every year but Chondrillobium blattnyi reproduces indefinitely by parthenogenesis in the Mediterranean region. D. chondrillae feeds mostly on young shoots, has population peaks in the spring and in the autumn, and can damage Chondrilla in the field. Chondrillobium blattnyi is a leaf feeder capable of seriously injuring the rosettes, but it never occurs in large enough populations in nature to be damaging. To demonstrate specificity, both aphids were tested against various Cichoriaceae and other Compositae and also against 61 cultivated plant species belonging to 20 families. The two aphids were shown to be specific to the genus Chondrilla. In the laboratory D. chondrillae was less host restricted than the other aphid and it reproduced on Sonchus asper and Taraxacum officinale. Comparative testing with strains of the two aphids from various sources against various forms of C. juncea showed that each strain was adapted to the form of C. juncea occurring in its own geographic area. The southern French strain of these aphids was ill-adapted to the main Australian form of C. juncea, but a strain of D. chondrillae originating from the Italian Adriatic coast heavily infested this form. D. chondrillae was not considered to be specific enough to permit its introduction into Australia and the introduction of Chondrillobium blattnyi has been delayed until it can be shown that it cannot transmit virus diseases that affect lettuce.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1974

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bonnemaison, L. (1961). Les ennemis animaux des plantes cultivées et des forêts. 1.—599 pp. Paris, Éiditions Sep.Google Scholar
Börner, C. (1952). Europae Centralis Aphides. Die Blattläuse Mitteleuropas.—Mitt. thüring. bot. Ges. Beiheft 3, 7483.Google Scholar
Bozhko, M. P. (1961). New genus and species of Aphidoidea (Homoptera) from Southern Ukraina, Moldavia and Ciscaucasia.—Trudy vses. ént. Obshch 48, 537. [In Russian.]Google Scholar
Caresche, L. A. (1970). The biological control of skeleton weed, Chondrilla juncea L. Entomological aspects. In Simmonds, F. J.(Ed.) Proceedings of the 1st International Symposium on Biological Control of Weeds.Delémont,1969. Misc. Publ. Commonw. Inst. Biol. Control.— no. 1, 510.Google Scholar
Caresche, L. A. (in press). The specificity and host specialisation of three insects and a mite living on Chondrilla juncea L. In Proceedings of the 2nd International Symposium on Biological Control of Weeds.Rome,1971. Commonw. Inst. Biol. Control.Google Scholar
Cornuet, P. (1960). Maladies à virus des plantes cultivées et méthodes de lutte.—440 pp. Paris, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique.Google Scholar
Eastop, V. F. & Tanasijević, N. (1968). Aphid records from Yugoslavia.—Ent. mon. Mag. 104, 5557.Google Scholar
Hille Ris Lambers, D. (1939). Contributions to a monograph of the Aphididae of Europe, II.—Temminckia 4). 1134.Google Scholar
Hille Ris Lambers, D. (1950). Hostplants and aphid classification.—Proc. 8th int. Congr. Ent. Stockholm, 141144.Google Scholar
Hull, V. & Groves, R. H. (1968). Rep. Biol. Control Chondrilla juncea. Bot. Invest. 1966–1968. Append. I. Variation in Chondrilla juncea in Australia. Canberra, CSIRO, Div. Plant. Ind.Google Scholar
Kennedy, J. S., Day, M. F. & Eastop, V. F. (1962). A conspectus of aphids as vectors of plant viruses.–114 pp. London, Commonwealth Institute of Entomology.Google Scholar
Leclant, F. (1968). Contribution à l'étude des Aphidoidea du Languedoc Méridional. Troisième Note.—Annls Soc. Hort. Hist. nat. Hérault 108, 138143.Google Scholar
Mosbacher, G. C. (1963). Über die Nahrungswahl bei Dactynotus Raf. (Aphididae). I. Die Wirtsspektren der Gruppe D. jaceae (L.) s. lat. und D. cichorii (Koch) s. lat.—Z. angew. Ent. 51, 377428.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nevskii, V. P. (1929). The aphids of Central Asia. Uzbekist. opyt. Sta. Zaschch. Rast. no. 16, 424 pp.Google Scholar
Pintera, A. (1959). Faunistic contribution to the knowledge of Bulgarian aphids (Horn., Aphid.).—Čos. čsl Spol. ent. 56, 6980.Google Scholar
Shaposhnkov, G. K. (1964). Suborder Aphidinea. In Beĭ-Bienko, G. Ya.(Ed.) Keys to the insects of the European part of the USSR. Vol. I. Apterygota, Palaeoptera and Hemimetabola.—pp. 489616. Moscow, Zool. Inst. Akad. Nauk SSSR. [In Russian.]Google Scholar
Stebbins, G. L. (1953). A new classification of the tribe Cichorieae, family Compositae.—Madroño 12, 6581.Google Scholar
Tuatay, N. & Remaudière, G. (1964). Première contribution au catalogue des Aphididae (Horn.) de la Turquie.—Revue Path. vég. Ent. agric. Fr. 43, 243278.Google Scholar
Van Emden, H. F. (1972). Aphids as phytochemists. In Harborne, J. B.(Ed.) Phytochemical ecology.—2643. London, Academic Press.Google Scholar
Wapshere, A. J. (1970). The assessment of biological control potential of the organisms attacking Chondrilla juncea L. In Simmonds, F. J.(Ed.) Proceedings of the 1st International Symposium on Biological Control of Weeds.Delémont,1969.— Misc. Publ. Commonw. Inst. Biol. Control no. 1, 8189.Google Scholar
Wapshere, A. J. (in press). Recent work on the assessment of the biological control potential of Chondrilla juncea organisms. In Proceedings of the 2nd International Symposium on Biological Control of Weeds.Rome,1971. Commonw. Inst. Biol. Control.Google Scholar