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71.
72.
The allocation process and between-tree survival probabilities inDendroctonus frontalis infestations
Conclusion We have presented two transfer functions for allocating populations ofD. frontals adults in spots: a fixed probabilityTF and a time-temperature dependentTF. Both procedures produced essentially equivalent results when applied to actual population measurements taken from spots.
The time-temperatureTF was more realistic than the constant probabilityTF, but introduced an added source of variation into the transfer. Temperature was demonstrated to have a significant effect
on adult longevity. The time-temperature dependentTF provides a means of incorporating this important variable. TheF1 andF2 values obtained from this time-temperature dependentTF were also judged to be superior to the values obtained from the constant probabilityTF. Survival of reemerged and emerged beetles were shown to be cyclic and compensatory.
Texas Agricultural Experiment Station Paper No. TA 15523. 相似文献
73.
Jiří Foit 《Agricultural and Forest Entomology》2010,12(2):133-141
- 1 The community composition of early‐arriving saproxylic beetles on 80 standing and recently deceased Scots pine trees (Pinus sylvestris L.) was examined.
- 2 In total, 34 species of saproxylic beetles were found, comprising at least four well‐defined groups of species identified by correspondence analysis.
- 3 Bark thickness, trunk/branch diameter and height above ground significantly affected community composition, with bark thickness being the most important factor.
- 4 Overall, 13.7% of the variance in species composition was explained by section of the tree that was sampled, a variable that encompasses the three aforementioned parameters.
74.
Integration of visual and olfactory cues of hosts and non-hosts by three bark beetles (Coleoptera: Scolytidae) 总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3
Abstract. 1. There has been a long-standing pre-occupation with how phytophagous insects use olfactory cues to discriminate hosts from non-hosts. Foragers, however, should use whatever cues are accurate and easily assessed, including visual cues.
2. It was hypothesised that three bark beetles, the mountain pine beetle (MPB), Dendroctonus ponderosae Hopkins, the Douglas-fir beetle (DFB), D. pseudotsugae Hopkins, and the western balsam bark beetle (WBBB), Dryocoetes confusus Swaine, integrate visual and olfactory information to avoid non-host angiosperms (e.g. paper birch, trembling aspen), that differ in visual and semiochemical profile from their respective host conifers (lodgepole pine, Douglas-fir, interior fir), and tested this hypothesis in a series of field trapping experiments.
3. All three species avoided attractant-baited, white (non-host simulating) multiple-funnel traps, and preferred attractant-baited black (host-simulating) traps. In experiments combining white, non-host traps with non-host angiosperm volatiles, bark beetles were repelled by these stimuli in an additive or redundant manner, confirming that these species could integrate visual and olfactory information to avoid non-host angiosperms while flying.
4. When antiaggregation pheromones were released from white traps, the DFB and MPB were repelled in an additive-redundant manner, suggesting that beetles can integrate diverse and potentially anomalous stimuli.
5. The MPB demonstrated the most consistent visual preferences, suggesting that it may be more of a 'visual specialist' than the DFB or WBBB, for which visual responses may be more contingent on olfactory inputs. 相似文献
2. It was hypothesised that three bark beetles, the mountain pine beetle (MPB), Dendroctonus ponderosae Hopkins, the Douglas-fir beetle (DFB), D. pseudotsugae Hopkins, and the western balsam bark beetle (WBBB), Dryocoetes confusus Swaine, integrate visual and olfactory information to avoid non-host angiosperms (e.g. paper birch, trembling aspen), that differ in visual and semiochemical profile from their respective host conifers (lodgepole pine, Douglas-fir, interior fir), and tested this hypothesis in a series of field trapping experiments.
3. All three species avoided attractant-baited, white (non-host simulating) multiple-funnel traps, and preferred attractant-baited black (host-simulating) traps. In experiments combining white, non-host traps with non-host angiosperm volatiles, bark beetles were repelled by these stimuli in an additive or redundant manner, confirming that these species could integrate visual and olfactory information to avoid non-host angiosperms while flying.
4. When antiaggregation pheromones were released from white traps, the DFB and MPB were repelled in an additive-redundant manner, suggesting that beetles can integrate diverse and potentially anomalous stimuli.
5. The MPB demonstrated the most consistent visual preferences, suggesting that it may be more of a 'visual specialist' than the DFB or WBBB, for which visual responses may be more contingent on olfactory inputs. 相似文献
75.
Abstract
- 1 It is widely known that many bark and wood‐boring beetle species use nonresistant coarse woody debris (CWD) created by disturbances; however, the ability of these secondary species to cause mortality in healthy trees following a build‐up of their populations remains unclear. We characterized the pattern of colonization by Ips pini (Say) following a major ice storm that created large amounts of CWD varying in resistance to colonization (i.e. ranging from snapped tops with no resistance to heavily damaged trees with intact root systems). A major question was how the beetles responded to the different types of storm‐damaged material and whether healthy undamaged trees were colonized and killed following increases in beetle populations.
- 2 Six red pine, Pinus resinosa Ait., plantations in eastern Ontario were monitored from 1998 to 2001 inclusive: three with high storm damage (approximately 120 m3/ha CWD) and three with minimal damage (approximately 20 m3/ha CWD). Transects (200 × 2 m) were sampled yearly in each plantation to assess the type and amount of damaged pine brood material colonized by the pine engraver beetle, I. pini.
- 3 Beetles preferentially infested the most nonresistant material available each year (i.e. all snapped tops in year 1, all standing snags, up‐rooted trees and many bent trees by year 2, but still less than 50% of trees blown over but with intact root systems by year 3). By years 3 and 4, the majority (approximately 75%) of severely damaged trees (with > 50% crown loss) died prior to beetle colonization.
- 4 The size of the beetle population tracked the abundance of available woody material from year‐to‐year within a plantation; populations were very large in the first 2 years, and declined significantly in the last 2 years.
- 5 Healthy standing red pines were apparently resistant to colonization by the beetles, despite the significant build‐up in their populations. Hence, the results of the present study suggest that native bark beetle populations will not cause further tree mortality following such a disturbance in this region.
76.
《Journal of Asia》2020,23(2):380-384
Acoustic signals are an essential part of the multi-modal systems of conspecific communication among insects. The patterns of abiotic factors effects on their communication parameters are of great interest for prognostic purposes in current climatic instability and for practical application in order to manage their populations.The aim of this study was to reveal the dependence of the parameters of acoustic signals produced by bark beetle Polygraphus proximus, an aggressive alien stem pest on the environmental temperature. Male stridulatory signals were recorded in seven temperature settings (5–35 °C), and changes in their temporal parameters were evaluated under laboratory conditions.The obtained results allowed us to reveal the pattern of temperature dependence of signals produced by P. proximus. More than half of the insects were found to actively stridulate at 5 °C. Raising temperature caused an increment in chirp rate that continued to increase up to 30 °C. Further temperature increase led to suppression of signaling in most of the tested males. The obtained results showed a number of patterns of temperature effect on the parameters of acoustic signals which might be universal for representatives of different bark beetles genera with various stridulatory apparatus types. 相似文献
77.
78.
- 1 Sirex noctilio is a woodwasp native to Eurasia and Northern Africa and has recently been found infesting pines in eastern North America. Its pest status in this new range is not yet known, although it is an important pest in other areas where it has been introduced. Pinus spp. in North America are hosts to several native and alien species of subcortical insects. Interactions between the woodwasp and these species may influence its distribution or the characteristics of its life history, thus affecting its population dynamics over time.
- 2 Sixty S. noctilio‐infested Pinus spp. were felled in Ontario, Canada, and all phloem‐feeding and woodboring insects were collected and identified from each 1‐m section of the tree.
- 3 Sirex noctilio was in a tree alone 10% of the time but commonly shared the tree with subcortical beetles, such as Tomicus piniperda, Pissodes nemorensis, Ips grandicollis, Gnathotrichus materiarius and Monochamus carolinensis. The woodwasp was distributed throughout the tree stem and this distribution overlapped with that of the beetles.
- 4 Fewer but larger S. noctilio males emerged from trees with beetles compared with those without, although there was no statistical difference in females.
- 5 These findings suggest that co‐habiting beetles could negatively affect S. noctilio population dynamics over time. The potential mechanisms for this interaction are discussed.
79.
80.