Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-06T02:29:04.485Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

STATUS OF AGENIASPIS FUSCICOLLIS (HYMENOPTERA: ENCRYTIDAE), AN INTRODUCED PARASITOID OF THE APPLE ERMINE MOTH (LEPIDOPTERA: YPONOMEUTIDAE)1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

J.E. Cossentine*
Affiliation:
Pacific Agri-Food Research Centre, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Summerland, British Columbia, Canada V0H 1Z0
U. Kuhlmann
Affiliation:
CAB1 Bioscience Centre, 1 rue des Grillons, CH-2800 Delémont, Switzerland
*
2 Author to whom all corresponding should be addressed (E-mail: [email protected]).

Extract

The apple ermine moth, Yponomeuta malinellus Zeller, is a univoltine pest species that defoliates apple, Malus domestics (Borkh) (Rosaceae), in the temperate region of the Palaearctic. First instars overwinter within a communal hibernaculum beneath the covering of the egg batch (Kock 1998). In spring, larvae emerge to initially mine apple leaves and subsequently feed externally within a communal tent (Menken et al. 1992). During heavy infestations, the communal tents may envelop the entire apple tree, resulting in total defoliation (Parker and Schmidt 1985). There have been several accidental introductions and subsequent eradications of the apple ermine moth in eastern North America (Hewitt 1917; Parker and Schmidt 1985) but, by 1989, the pest was found in the Fraser River Valley in British Columbia, in Whatcom county, Washington, and in northwestern Oregon (Antonelli 1991; Unruh et al. 1993).

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 2000

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.)

Footnotes

1

Contribution No. 2047 of the Pacific Agri-Food Research Centre (Summerland).

References

Affolter, F., Carl, K.P. 1986. The natural enemies of the apple ermine moth Yponomeuta malinellus in Europe: a literature review. Delémont, Switzerland: CAB International Institute of Biological ControlGoogle Scholar
Antonelli, A.L. 1991. Apple ermine moth. Extension bulletin No. EB 1526, Cooperative Extension, College of Agriculture and Home Economics, Washington State UniversityGoogle Scholar
Blackman, R.L. 1965. A review of the literature on Ageniaspis fuscicollis (Dalm.). Delémont, Switzerland: CAB International Institute of Biological ControlGoogle Scholar
Hewitt, G. 1917. The discovery of European ermine moth (Yponomeuta) on nursery stock imported into Canada. Agricultural Gazette of Canada 4: 552–4Google Scholar
Junnikkala, E. 1960. Life history and insect enemies of Hyponomeuta malinellus Zell. (Lep. Hyponomeutidae) in Finland. Annales Zoologici Societatis Zoologicae-Botanicae Fennicae “Vanomo” 21: 344Google Scholar
Kock, B. 1998. Eischalen und hibernaculum der apfelgespinstmotte (Yponomeuta malinellus) und ihre bedeutungen fuer den schutz gegen parasitoids. M.Sc. thesis, Department of Ecology, University of Kiel, GermanyGoogle Scholar
Kuhlmann, U., Carl, K.P., Mills, N.J. 1998 a. Quantifying the impact of insect predators and parasitoids on populations of the apple ermine moth Yponomeuta malinellus (Lepidoptera: Yponomeutidae) in Europe. Bulletin of Entomological Research 88: 165–75CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kuhlmann, U., Babendreier, D., Hoffmeister, T.S., Mills, N.J. 1998 b. Impact and oviposition behavior of Ageniaspis fuscicollis (Hymenoptera: Encrytidae), a polyembryonic parasitoid of the apple ermine moth, Yponomeuta malinellus (Lepidoptera: Yponomeutidae). Bulletin of Entomological Research 88: 617–25CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Menken, S.B.J., Herrebout, W.M., Wiebes, J.T. 1992. Small ermine moths (Yponomeuta): their host relations and evolution. Annual Review of Entomology 37: 4166CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parker, D.J., Schmidt, A.C. 1985. Apple ermine moth, Yponomeuta malinellus. Report for Agriculture Agri-Food Canada, Plant Health DivisionGoogle Scholar
Sarazin, M.J. 19922000. Insect liberations in Canada. Electronic resource. Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Smith, R. 1990. Biological control of the apple ermine moth in southwestern British Columbia. Report prepared for the British Columbia Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food and Agriculture and Agri-food CanadaGoogle Scholar
Unruh, T.R., Congdon, B.D., Lagasa, E. 1993. Yponomeuta malinellus Zeller (Lepidoptera: Yponomeutidae), a new immigrant pest of apples in the northwest: phenology and distribution expansion, with notes on efficacy of natural enemies. Pan-Pacific Entomologist 69(1): 5770Google Scholar