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1.
2.
Abstract

Sampling techniques for eggs, larvae, and pupae of the currant clearwing, Synanthedon tipuliformis (Clerck), attacking blackcurrant were developed, and their precision was evaluated. Reliable population estimates for the egg and early larval stages (standard error < 10%) were obtained by sampling one cane with at least two age groups of wood from the north and south halves of seven bushes in nine blocks. Similar precision was obtained for post-winter larvae from samples comprising three canes from each half of the bushes, but using this sampling scheme a lower precision (S.E.?25–30%) had to be accepted for overwintering mortality factors. The pupal population was estimated from the numbers of live larvae at the end of the post-winter feeding stage, and cross-checked from the number of emergence holes in the 1-year-old wood taken for egg sampling the following year. This procedure gave estimates of similar reliability to those for the egg and larval stages.  相似文献   

3.
Adults of the woodwasp Tremex longicollis Konow (Hymenoptera: Siricidae) oviposit in the wood of dying Celtis sinensis trees using their ovipositors, and adults of the parasitoid Megarhyssa jezoensis (Matsumura) (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae) deposit eggs into the woodwasp larvae that live in the wood, also using their long ovipositors. Many T. longicollis ovipositors, both with and without abdominal segments, and a M. jezoensis ovipositor were found stuck in C. sinensis wood at two parks in Osaka Prefecture, central Japan. Field observations showed that ovipositing woodwasps and parasitoids were attacked by predators during the daytime, and their ovipositors were left behind in the wood. Woodwasps and their parasitoids, which have long ovipositors, may be vulnerable to predation during oviposition.  相似文献   

4.
The larva and pupa of Achyrolimonia basispina (Alex.) are described for the first time. New data on the morphology of the larva and pupa of A. decemmaculata (Loew) are discussed, and the morphological characteristics of the genus are defined more exactly. The larvae of these species develop in the dead wood of deciduous trees and in the old carpophores of wood fungi.  相似文献   

5.
  • 1 Wood‐boring larvae in the families Cerambycidae and Buprestidae are often found in high densities in burned trees after wildland fires. They play an important role in tree decomposition, often reducing the value of salvageable timber, and represent an important avian food source.
  • 2 Three forest areas that experienced wildfires 1–3 years previously were surveyed during the summer of 2004. Ponderosa pine trees with green, scorched and consumed needles were examined for wood borer occurrence. Within each of the three needle damage categories, the mean wood borer incidence was similar between different age fires. Trees with scorched or consumed needles had significantly more wood borers than trees with green needles.
  • 3 Larvae collected from under tree bark were identified to family; when possible, cerambycids were identified further to Acanthocinus spp., Monochamus sp., Rhagium inquisitor (L.) and Stictoleptura canadensis (LeConte), and buprestids were identified to Chalcophora spp. and Chrysobothris sp.
  • 4 Classification tree models showed that the estimated probability of tree infestation by wood borers varied among needle damage categories. For trees with green needles, tree injury variables of high bole char height and phloem discolouration were important predictive variables. In trees where needles were consumed, tree size variables of diameter at breast height and tree height were important predictive variables.
  • 5 More than half the dead trees examined were infested with wood borers, indicating that infestation of fire‐killed ponderosa pine may represent an important food source for species such as woodpeckers and a potential problem for the utilization of infested trees.
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6.
T. Petr 《Hydrobiologia》1970,36(3-4):373-398
Summary The species composition of periphytic macroinvertebrates on and in flooded trees differs at different localities on the Volta Lake. The main differences concern chironomid and trichopteran larvae. The reasons for this lie in the different exposure of trees to wave action, in the availability of soft wood and bark as a substrate, and in the distance of trees off-shore. All these factors determine the intensity of growth of the periphytic algae. The growth of the periphytic fauna will also be influenced by the density of phytoplankton on which it feeds. Other factors, such as oxygen concentration and the turbidity of the water, are also likely to affect the productivity of the whole community.The abundance of Povilla nymphs, the most common organism in trees, seems to depend on the type of the substrate. The bark of trees is exploited more than the wood, and trees with harder wood are less attacked than those with soft wood. Macroscopically, the male nymphs can be distinguished from female nymphs from a length of 6.0 mm, and they start to emerge when 9.0 mm long. Females emerge from 14.0 mm length. Nymphs tend to be heavier in dense populations. The difference in the weight of nymphs may be due to differences in availability of food.Nymphs of Povilla were found to feed both on solitary and attached periphytic algae, together with detritus and planktonic algae. Because of the great abundance of Povilla the nymphs of this species are of great importance in the conversion of algae into animal protein, being themselves heavily exploited by fish.No lunar periodicity, such as occurs on Lake Victoria, was found, and Povilla in the Volta Lake seems to emerge continuously.  相似文献   

7.
《Plant Ecology & Diversity》2013,6(3-4):365-375
Background: Temperature directly affects xylogenesis at high-elevation treelines. The low-temperature limitation of meristematic processes is thus key to understand treeline formation.

Aims: We aimed to experimentally test in situ the direct low-temperature effect on wood tissue formation at the alpine treeline.

Methods: We applied controlled Peltier-mediated cooling and warming (±3 K) to branch segments in Pinus uncinata at the treeline in the Swiss Alps. In addition, we studied xylogenesis in untreated trees during the growing season by sequential micro-coring.

Results: Micro-cores indicated that the cambial zone was fully developed by the time the cooling and warming treatment started, shortly after snowmelt. Presumably, because of this, experimental cooling of branches did not significantly reduce the number of cells produced per season. Warming extended the formation of early wood into the late season, and thus reduced the fraction of late wood.

Conclusions: We conclude that temperatures very early in the season determine the width of the cambial zone which, in turn, strongly controls the number of tracheids produced during the remaining growing season. Temperatures later in the season mainly determine the early wood to late wood ratio. These data provide an empirical basis for the mechanistic understanding of tree growth at the treeline in response to temperature.  相似文献   

8.
SUMMARY.
  • 1 This study documents the life history of the xylophagous elmid beetle, Lara avara, and estimates its contribution to wood degradation in Oregon streams. The life cycle was found to be 4 to 6 or more years long, with all but 2–3 months of that spent in the larval stage.
  • 2 Larvae grow through seven instars, taking about 1 year for instars 1–3, and from 3 to 5 or more years for instars 4–7.
  • 3 Last-instar larvae leave the water to pupate. Adults live approximately 3 weeks and occur from May to August. The eggs are deposited on submerged wood.
  • 4 Larvae probably obtain their nutrition by absorbing substances liberated into decaying wood by microbial activity. They do not produce their own cellulase, nor do they have a symbiotic gut flora similar to that of xylophagous cranefly (Tipulidae) larvae.
  • 5 Faecal production by L. avara larvae averaged 13% dry body wt d-1. This yields an estimate of faecal production of 1.6 g m-2 y-1 in Oregon Coast Range streams (about 0.3% y-1 of wood standing crop).
  相似文献   

9.
Identifying habitat or nesting microhabitat variables associated with high levels of nest success is important to understand nest site preferences and bird–habitat relationships. Little is known about cavity availability and nest site requirements of cavity nesters in southern hemisphere temperate forests, although nest site limitation is suggested. Here we ask which characteristics are selected by the Austral parakeet (Enicognathus ferrugineus) for nesting in Araucaria araucana–Nothofagus pumilio forest in Argentine Patagonia. We compared nest plot and tree characteristics with unused plots and trees among areas of different A. araucana–N. pumilio density. We also examine whether nest plot and tree use and selection, and the associated consequences for fitness of Austral parakeets are spatially related to forest composition. Austral parakeets showed selectivity for nests at different spatial scales, consistently choosing isolated live and large trees with particular nest features in a non‐random way from available cavities. Mixed A. araucana–N. pumilio forests are ideal habitat for the Austral parakeets of northern Patagonia, offering numerous potential cavities, mainly in N. pumilio. We argue that Austral parakeet reproduction and fitness is currently very unlikely to be limited by cavity availability, although this situation may be rapidly changing. Natural and human disturbances are modifying south temperate forests with even‐aged mid‐successional stands replacing old growth forests. Cavity nesting species use and need old growth forests, due to the abundance of cavities in large trees and the abundance of larvae in old wood. Neither of the latter resources is sufficiently abundant in mid‐successional forests, increasing the vulnerability and threatening the survival of the Austral.  相似文献   

10.
ABSTRACT.
  • 1 Within a seed orchard in southern England, beech trees (Fagus sylvatica L.) belonging to three clones were artificially infested by introducing beech scale larvae (Cryptococcus fagisuga Lind. Homoptera: Coccidae) into small cages attached to the bark.
  • 2 Some larvae developed to fecund adults on trees of two susceptible clones but all failed to develop on a third, resistant clone.
  • 3 Within susceptible clones, survival of larvae on individual trees was positively related to their degree of natural infestation.
  • 4 Larvae deriving from several separate trees differed significantly in their ability to survive when inoculated onto trees of susceptible clones.
  • 5 Five forest trees which acted as both donors of larvae and as hosts for artificial inoculation were each inoculated with larvae from all five trees.
  • 6 There was significant variation in survival of inoculated larvae both between the host trees and between sources of larvae on each host.
  • 7 Survival of larvae reinoculated onto their original host was significantly higher than that of larvae originating from other trees.
  • 8 Fecundity of adults on the forest trees was positively correlated with the probability of inoculated larvae surviving to the adult stage.
  相似文献   

11.
Summary

Leaf-shape comparisons were made between individual trees in a mixed wood containing B. pendula and B. pubescens, and two relatively pure stands. Data sets were subjected to analysis of variance, principal components and discriminant analyses in order to study within-tree variation, variation within each species and the relationships between them. Within-tree variation was found to be much less than that between trees and principal component analysis provided a separation of the material into species groups and indicated extensive variation within them. The employment of a discriminant function sharpened the separation of the pure woods and pointed to the occurrence of possible hybrids and back-crossed individuals within the mixed wood. The findings indicate that gene flow probably proceeds from the diploid to the tetraploid level.  相似文献   

12.
The saprophagous larva of the endangered hoverfly, Hammerschmidtia ferruginea (Fallén, 1817) (Diptera, Syrphidae) develops in wet, decaying sap under the bark of dead trees and branches of aspen, Populus tremula L. (Saliaceae). However this breeding site is transient: wet decay builds up patchily over 1.5–2 years of the tree or branch dying and lasts for a further 1–3 years before the bark falls off. Between 1990 and 2006, H. ferruginea swung through a cycle of abundance when the number of localities where it was detected dropped from 13 to 5 and back to 8. Fluctuations in amounts of dead wood caused by winds and storms probably explain this population swing. When there are few dead trees and branches, H. ferruginea breeds in sap flows on live P. tremula trees and populations are maintained but at low levels. To prevent local extinctions during periods when fallen wood is scarce, breeding habitat can be supplemented by felling trees and branches. Fallen wood with wet decaying sap is also important as an assembly site for mate selection. Adult food plants include flowers of bird cherry Prunus padus, rowan Sorbus aucuparia and hawthorn Crategus monogyna. Adults were recorded dispersing up to 1 km but are probably able to move further than this.  相似文献   

13.

In a study at Appleby Research Orchard, Nelson, examination of the fruit from mature ‘Delicious’ apple trees sprayed with ryania over 5 years showed that less than 10% of 5th‐instar larvae of the codling moth (Laspeyresia pomonella) seeking cocooning sites originated from fruit on the ground. In 1972 and 1973 the survival of such larvae was studied by tagging with cobalt‐58 and releasing them beneath mature trees. In both years about 25 % of the tagged larvae returned to the tree to spin cocoons. Larvae released on bare ground 0–1 m from the tree trunks were more successful than those released in the sward 1–2 m away. Once on the trees, most larvae spun cocoons beneath exfoliating bark on the lower parts of the leaders and the trunk. Fifty‐two percent of the cocoons located were formed on the ground, and overwintering mortality of these was estimated to be near 100%. The pre‐cocooning mortality of larvae released on the ground was similar to that of larvae released on the trees in the same year. It was concluded that larvae from windfalls could be ignored in estimating 5th‐instar larval mortality of codling moth on ‘Delicious’ trees. On the cultivars ‘Dunn's Favourite’ and ‘Cox's Orange Pippin’, however, the higher percentage of larvae in windfalls made their inclusion in mortality estimates essential.  相似文献   

14.
The impact of natural coccinellid larvalpredation on the balsam twig aphid was evaluated bysystematically removing coccinellid egg masses in a6–8 year-old balsam fir (Abies balsamea)Christmas tree plantation in southwesternQuebec. Among coccinellid species hunting on firfoliage during development of Mindarus abietinusfundatrices in May, the indigenous Anatis mali was by far the most abundant and themain one to oviposit on trees. Comparison of trees onwhich coccinellid larval predation was excluded withcontrol trees showed that A. mali had a markedimpact both during and after the phase of rapid M. abietinus population growth that followedfundatrix maturation. On trees where coccinellidlarvae were allowed, aphid colonies became inactive(i.e. no live aphids in the colony) about two weeksearlier than on controls. A strong dampening effect onaphid density was also observed in those colonies thatremained active until the end of the aphid life cycle.Predation on aphid colonies reduced sexualsproduction, as the density of M. abietinusoverwintering eggs per shoot subsequently was reducedby 32%. Predation by coccinellid larvae occurred toolate to prevent needle damage to current year shoots,which affects the aesthetic value of Christmas trees.However, current year shoots measured in the mid-crownof trees late in the season were 19% longer on treeswhere aphid predation by coccinellid larvae wasallowed, compared with trees where they were excluded.Rearing all larval stages of A. mali on 4thinstar and adult sexuparae of M. abietinusindicated an average consumption of 269 aphids tocomplete larval development and pupate, which wasequivalent to at least seven colonies of M.abietinus at maximum aphid density at theexperimental site. Anatis mali is an importantnatural control factor of balsam twig aphid inChristmas tree plantations, hence its activity shouldbe protected and possibly stimulated by favourablepest management practices.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The twolined chestnut borer, Agrilus bilineatus (Weber) (Coleoptera: Buprestidae), attacks oaks (Quercus spp.) that have been weakened by prior environmental or biotic stress. Our earlier work showed that trees with relatively low winter starch reserves are more likely to be attacked by A. bilineatus the following summer. We hypothesized that such trees may have less energy available for defense (Callus formation and allelo-chemical synthesis) in tissues wounded by borer larvae. However, wounding experiments showed little or no relationship between winter or summer carbohydrate reserves, callus formation, radial growth, or concentrations of tannins and phenolics in wounded or nonwounded phloem tissues. Trees with relatively low winter carbohydrate reserves were again found to be attractive to adult A. bilineatus, although not all low starch trees were attacked or successfully colonized by borers. There was a trend for carpenterworm larvae, Prinoxystus robiniae (Lepidoptera: Cossidae), a generalist bark and wood borer, to be more successful in establishing galleries on low starch trees. Carpenterworms gained significantly more weight when fed phloem from trees attractive to A. bilineatus. Oaks that attracted large numbers of A. bilineatus or that were successfully colonized by the borer produced significantly less callus than did non-attacked trees when experimentally wounded at about the time of Agrilus egg hatch. Callus formation may limit the establishment of small larvae that feed slowly in the cambial region. These results indicate that current theory regarding relationships between increased tree stress and decreased allocation of energy reserves to radial growth and defense against phloem borers may be an oversimplification. We suggest that tree growth and the defensive response of phloem tissues may be limited more by the rate of carbohydrate utilization or by changes in source-sink relationships than by storage levels. Callus formation and synthesis of allelochemicals in wounded phloem may be under the same control as cambial activation, which is mediated by plant growth regulators and can be influenced by environmental conditions.  相似文献   

16.
1. Entomopathogenic nematodes (EPN) are currently being used as introduced biological control agents against the larvae of the native European forestry pest Hylobius abietis L. which develop under the bark of stumps and roots of newly dead conifer trees. 2. The potential for resource competition between gregarious ectoparasitoid Bracon hylobii Ratz and EPN by recording oviposition and related behaviours of B. hylobii females on EPN‐infected H. abietis larvae was investigated. Wasps did not parasitise EPN‐infected host larvae that were dead when presented, but naÏve and experienced wasps parasitised live EPN‐infected hosts. NaÏve wasps parasitised live EPN‐infected hosts significantly less frequently than healthy hosts only when the infected larvae were close to death (i.e. died during 24‐h trial). Parasitism by experienced wasps was unaffected by host infection. 3. Wasp probing and oviposition were positively associated with the amount of host movement. Preventing H. abietis larvae from chewing on bark significantly reduced parasitism by naÏve, but not experienced wasps. 4. The number of eggs per clutch was not affected by bark chewing or EPN‐infection of H. abietis larvae. 5. NaÏve and experienced B. hylobii parasitised two abnormal hosts (larvae of coleopteran Rhagium bifasciatum Fabricius and lepidopteran Galleria mellonella L.), both of which moved and chewed on bark during trials. 6. It was concluded that B. hylobii can use vibrational cues generated by host movement and feeding to locate hosts at short range and accepts unsuitable (EPN‐infected or abnormal) hosts as long as these create such cues. The implications for competition between B. hylobii and EPN and possible ways of minimising it when applying EPN are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Local enhancement is an underexplored social learning mechanism that is often observed in organisms that live in groups. This mechanism occurs when individuals are attracted to areas where conspecifics have previously been, but which are not present when the animal actually moves into the area. We tested for local enhancement in wood frog tadpoles (Lithobates sylvatica) and spotted salamander larvae (Ambystoma maculatum) in three experiments that exposed individuals to one side of a test chamber which was empty and another that contained a group of three conspecifics. Side preference of the focal individual was recorded once the conspecifics were removed. Tadpoles showed a clear preference for moving to areas where a group of tadpoles had previously been located. Conversely, this preference was not observed in salamander larvae. In addition, salamander larvae took significantly more time to initially choose a side. These results indicate that tadpoles exhibit local enhancement, whereas aquatic salamander larvae do not. This difference in social learning could be largely due to differences in aquatic ecology between tadpoles and salamander larvae.  相似文献   

19.
  • 1 The emerald ash borer Agrilus planipennis (Coleoptera: Buprestidae) (EAB), an invasive wood‐boring beetle, has recently caused significant losses of native ash (Fraxinus spp.) trees in North America. Movement of wood products has facilitated EAB spread, and heat sanitation of wooden materials according to International Standards for Phytosanitary Measures No. 15 (ISPM 15) is used to prevent this.
  • 2 In the present study, we assessed the thermal conditions experienced during a typical heat‐treatment at a facility using protocols for pallet wood treatment under policy PI‐07, as implemented in Canada. The basal high temperature tolerance of EAB larvae and pupae was determined, and the observed heating rates were used to investigate whether the heat shock response and expression of heat shock proteins occurred in fourth‐instar larvae.
  • 3 The temperature regime during heat treatment greatly exceeded the ISPM 15 requirements of 56 °C for 30 min. Emerald ash borer larvae were highly tolerant of elevated temperatures, with some instars surviving exposure to 53 °C without any heat pre‐treatments. High temperature survival was increased by either slow warming or pre‐exposure to elevated temperatures and a recovery regime that was accompanied by up‐regulated hsp70 expression under some of these conditions.
  • 4 Because EAB is highly heat tolerant and exhibits a fully functional heat shock response, we conclude that greater survival than measured in vitro is possible under industry treatment conditions (with the larvae still embedded in the wood). We propose that the phenotypic plasticity of EAB may lead to high temperature tolerance very close to conditions experienced in an ISPM 15 standard treatment.
  相似文献   

20.
Anoplophora glabripennis (Motschulsky) (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Lamiini) is an invasive wood‐boring beetle with an unusually broad host range and a proven ability to increase its host range as it colonizes new areas and encounters new tree species. The beetle is native to eastern Asia and has become an invasive pest in North America and Europe, stimulating interest in delineating host and non‐host tree species more clearly. When offered a choice among four species of living trees in a greenhouse, adult A. glabripennis fed more on golden‐rain tree (Koelreuteria paniculata Laxmann) and river birch (Betula nigra L.) than on London planetree (Platanus × acerifolia (Aiton) Willdenow) or callery pear (Pyrus calleryana Decaisne). Oviposition rate was highest in golden‐rain tree, but larval mortality was also high and larval growth was slowest in this tree species. Oviposition rate was lowest in callery pear, and larvae failed to survive in this tree species, whether they eclosed from eggs laid in the trees or were manually inserted into the trees. Adult beetles feeding on callery pear had a reduced longevity and females feeding only on callery pear failed to develop any eggs. The resistance of golden‐rain tree against the larvae appears to operate primarily through the physical mechanism of abundant sap flow. The resistance of callery pear against both larvae and adults appears to operate through the chemical composition of the tree, which may include compounds that are toxic or which otherwise interfere with normal growth and development of the beetle. Unlike river birch or London planetree, both golden‐rain tree and callery pear are present in the native range of A. glabripennis and may therefore have developed resistance to the beetle by virtue of exposure to attack during their evolutionary history.  相似文献   

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