共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 0 毫秒
1.
A technique for conducting bioassays of Entomophthora sphaerosperma on sixth-instar larvae of the spruce budworm, Choristoneura fumiferana, was developed. Four assays were conducted by showering conidia on 10 larvae for each of 10 to 20 doses per assay. Dose was estimated by averaging estimates of the concentration of spores falling on water agar dishes before and after insect exposure. Maximum-likelihood probit analysis indicated significant regressions between log dose and probit mortality for all four assays. LC50 values ranged from 11.21 to 18.77 spores/mm2 with a weighted mean of 16.13 spores/mm2. Slope estimates ranged from 0.92 to 1.87 with a weighted mean of 1.13. These low slope values may have been indicative of a highly variable test insect population, but also suggested a nontoxic infection process by the pathogen. 相似文献
2.
The production of oral exudate by larval eastern and western spruce budworms,Choristoneura fumiferana (Clem.) andChoristoneura occidentalis Free., respectively, was investigated in the laboratory. All larvae except those entering into a molt exhibited aggressive behavior and produced exudate in response to handling or intraspecific encounters. Larvae could be induced to produce exudate up to four times over 2–3 min and produced an average of 1.92±0.04 µl (X ± SE) per induction. Larvae on foliage spent much of their time maintaining their silken feeding tunnel, including spinning and combing silk and removing frass. Exposure to conspecific oral exudate deposited inside the tunnel, or released by agitated larvae inside the tunnel, increased the proportion of larvae that dispersed away from the tunnels and, apparently, increased the larval sensitivity to disturbances. The behavior induced by the oral exudate indicates that it acts as an epideictic (spacing) pheromone. 相似文献
3.
4.
1 Predictions from the Phylogenetic Constraints Hypothesis were tested for the first time in an eruptive forest Lepidopteran species, the western spruce budworm. 2 In previous work, we established that western spruce budworm females exhibit oviposition preferences with regard to tree age, tree vigour and host species. However, there was no evidence to support a link between oviposition preference and larval performance, which supports the Phylogenetic Constraints Hypothesis. 3 Our preference data led us to test whether female budworms use oviposition strategies to select the sites where they lay their egg masses. Our experiments were designed to make direct comparisons between latent and eruptive insect herbivores with respect to two oviposition behaviours: egg retention and avoidance of conspecifics. This type of research has not previously been conducted on any eruptive forest Lepidopteran. 4 Female budworms retained eggs instead of laying them on less preferred hosts in two of three experiments, but the percentage of eggs they retained was significantly less compared to latent insect herbivores. 5 In addition, female budworms actively avoided oviposition in areas with the highest density of conspecific egg masses, but they laid egg masses in all the other locations provided. This contrasts with the pattern seen in latent insect herbivores, which consistently avoid laying their eggs near any sites already used by conspecifics. 6 Our research indicates that there are extreme differences between latent and eruptive insect herbivores with respect to egg retention and avoidance of conspecifics, thus supporting the Phylogenetic Constraints Hypothesis. 相似文献
5.
Radial increment cores from Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) and blue spruce (Picea pungens), defoliated by western spruce budworm (Choristoneura occidentalis), were analyzed by means of dendrochronological methods and compared with cores from undefoliated ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) and lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta) growing on the same sites in the Front Range, Colorado. Extensive deforestation during the gold and silver booms in the second part of the nineteenth century led to dense and almost pure stands of shadetolerant budworm host species. By using the skeleton plot method, the number of trees with clear growth reductions is obtained, thus representing an exact record of forest insect attacks. The analysis of abrupt growth reductions revealed at least nine outbreaks of western spruce budworm between 1720 and 1986, the majority occurring in the nineteenth century. The outbreaks were graphically compared with periods of attack in New Mexico and Colorado which were detected by other scientists employing tree-ring measurement techniques. No increase in the frequency of severe outbreaks during the twentieth century was observed, yet there is some evidence that the most recent outbreak might be the most severe ever recorded. Open Douglas-fir stands on higher sites were more susceptible to heavy budworm attack than dense stands on lower sites. Blue spruce was less frequently and less severely attacked than Douglas-fir. The spatial pattern of historical outbreaks generally was very patchy. 相似文献
6.
7.
Fourth-instar larvae of the eastern spruce bud-worm Choristoneura fumiferanaClem. (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) were shown in two-choice feeding tests to respond differently to epicuticular waxes from different white spruce and balsam fir trees. Larvae also showed different preferences for various wax fractions obtained by separation on silicic acid.Deceased. 相似文献
8.
9.
Anita Pedersen John Dedes Debbie Gauthier Kees van Frankenhuyzen 《Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata》1997,83(3):253-262
Exposing larvae of the spruce budworm, Choristoneura fumiferana (Clemens), to sublethal ( 50% lethal dose) levels of Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki at various stages of their development significantly increased development time to the pupal stage and reduced pupal size and number of eggs laid per female, but did not affect the proportion of embryonated eggs. The changes in larval development time, pupal weight and fecundity depended on the larval stage that was treated. Exposure of fourth instars delayed larval development and reduced only male pupal weights with no effects on fecundity. Exposure of sixth instars delayed larval development to a lesser extent than exposure of fourth instars but had a pronounced effect on weight of both male and female pupae. The effect on pupal weight was sex dependent, as males tended to be more affected than females. The reduction in male pupal weight did not appear to influence fecundity, because the effect of exposure was explained by the change in female pupal weight. Effects on larval growth and pupal weight were proportional to the dose that was ingested during exposure, and were observed at doses as low as one-tenth of the LD50. Ingestion of an LD50 caused a 29 or 45% delay in development of, respectively, female or male larvae when exposed as fourth instars and a 30% reduction in female pupal weight when larvae were exposed as sixth instars. 相似文献
10.
ABSTRACT The lateral styloconic sensillum on the galea of the eastern spruce budworm larva Choristoneura fumiferana Clem. (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) contains a cell which responds to sucrose. The electro-physiologial threshold for response is below 0.5 mM sucrose. The Kb for the response is 1.5 mM, and the Vmax is 200 impulses/s. The physiological data are interpreted with respect to the sucrose-stimulated feeding behaviour of the larva. 相似文献
11.
Entomophthora egressa protoplasts either exposed to or not exposed to trypsin were not attacked by either trypsinized or non-trypsinized larval spruce budworm granulocytes. Granulocytes adhered to protoplasts exposed to papain, and this adhesion could be prevented by papainizing the hemocytes. Differences were observed in the responses of two E. egressa isolates when exposed to papain or to the papain-control solutions. Exposure of hemocytes to trypsin did not reduce either the number of Absidia repens sporangiospores per granulocyte or the percentage of granulocytes with spores, whereas, exposure to papain did. The role of surface proteins, particularly glycoproteins, in hemocyte-fungal cell interactions is briefly discussed. 相似文献
12.
Female fourth- and sixth-instar larvae, Choristoneura fumiferana, were tested individually for the response of the sugar cell on the lateral styloconic sensillum to 25 mM/l concentrations of 12 carbohydrates. The spruce budworm showed an age-related change in responsiveness of the sugar cell. The order of stimulating effectiveness for fourth-instars was melibiose > sucrose > raffinose.These storage di- and trisaccharides are present in the host plant at the beginning of budbreak. Sixth-instars responded to sucrose > fructose> m-inositol. These findings are in accordance with those of a previous behavioural study on feeding preferences of sixth-instars. The response for both melibiose and raffinose does not change from fourth- to sixth-instars; however, it does for sucrose, fructose and m- inositol. 相似文献
13.
Eldon S. Eveleigh Christopher J. Lucarotti Peter C. McCarthy Benoit Morin Tomo Royama Anthony W. Thomas 《Agricultural and Forest Entomology》2007,9(4):247-258
1 Nosema fumiferanae infections in populations of both sexes of spruce budworm Choristoneura fumiferana moths, collected live above the forest canopy (canopy moths), within the tree crown (crown moths) and in drop trays (dead moths), were examined over a 5‐year period in New Brunswick, Canada. 2 The incidence of infection and of moderate–heavy infections in canopy and crown moths of both sexes increased concomitantly with moth eclosion, indicating that N. fumiferanae retards larval/pupal development, with infected moths, particularly those having higher disease loads, emerging later in the season. 3 Infection rates differed among canopy, crown, and dead female, but not male, moths. Canopy (i.e. emigrating) females had a lower incidence of infection, lower incidence of moderate–heavy infections, and had longer forewings and higher dry weights, than crown females. These results suggest that N. fumiferanae infections negatively affect aspects of female, but not male, flight performance. Regardless of infection, forewing length and dry weight of both canopy and crown females declined over the moth flight period, but infected females in both moth types were smaller than their uninfected counterparts. Forewing lengths and dry weights of moderately–heavily infected females were most severely affected. 4 Despite high annual infection rates in parents, only a small percentage of offspring (second‐instar larvae) that established feeding sites each spring were infected, indicating that high rates of horizontal transmission occurred annually throughout the larval period. 5 The present study indicates that whether N. fumiferanae infections are a debilitating sublethal factor in spruce budworm populations depends more on the disease load than on the overall incidence of infection. The potential importance of N. fumiferanae infections on various fitness parameters related to host dispersal is discussed. 相似文献
14.
Abstract. 1. A lagged, density-dependent relationship between survival of early instars and host-tree condition is revealed during outbreaks of spruce budworm, Choristoneura fumiferana Clem. Persistent damage to hosts leads to deterioration of the stand.
2. Resource limitation affects survival during early-instar dispersal of spruce budworm. Impediments to distinguishing these events with estimates of survival were overcome with a simple model that describes the dispersal and survival processes. The model was used to analyse a recent 15-year population series from Black Sturgeon Lake and two historical datasets from Green River, in Canada.
3. Defoliation-induced damage to the trees resulted in increased losses of spring-emerging larvae that are dispersing in search of feeding sites. Losses were further exacerbated by biotic factors such as maternal fecundity, rates of infection by the pathogen, Nosema fumiferanae , and by weather-related effects on the foraging period.
4. Survival of early-stage budworm larvae in persistent outbreaks declined and the likelihood of other density-related factors such as rate of mortality from natural enemies increased. These results may reconcile outstanding differences in interpretation of the role of the forest resource in spruce budworm population dynamics and point to a common process linking the dynamics of other well-known budworm species. 相似文献
2. Resource limitation affects survival during early-instar dispersal of spruce budworm. Impediments to distinguishing these events with estimates of survival were overcome with a simple model that describes the dispersal and survival processes. The model was used to analyse a recent 15-year population series from Black Sturgeon Lake and two historical datasets from Green River, in Canada.
3. Defoliation-induced damage to the trees resulted in increased losses of spring-emerging larvae that are dispersing in search of feeding sites. Losses were further exacerbated by biotic factors such as maternal fecundity, rates of infection by the pathogen, Nosema fumiferanae , and by weather-related effects on the foraging period.
4. Survival of early-stage budworm larvae in persistent outbreaks declined and the likelihood of other density-related factors such as rate of mortality from natural enemies increased. These results may reconcile outstanding differences in interpretation of the role of the forest resource in spruce budworm population dynamics and point to a common process linking the dynamics of other well-known budworm species. 相似文献
15.
An electrophysiological approach was used to record the responses of maxillary styloconic sensilla of fourth- and sixth-instar larvae of the spruce budworm Choristoneura fumiferana to 14 amino acids. One cell in the lateral styloconic sensillum was identified as an amino acid-sensitive neuron. All of the amino acids tested, except l-proline and l-arginine, were detected by this cell. Arginine did not evoke a response from either the medial or lateral styloconic sensilla. Proline evoked responses from a cell in the medial styloconic sensillum. It is known from previous behavioural work that l-proline is a phagostimulant and l-valine inhibits feeding in Choristoneura; we thus further characterized the responses to these two amino acids. For both instars, l-proline was detected as low as 0.001 mmol/l and the maximal response was at 50 mmol/l. Stimulation of fourth- and sixth-instar larvae with l-valine showed that the maximum firing frequency was obtained at 1 mmol/l. Above and below this concentration, firing frequency decreases. Sensory responses to the amino acids stimuli did not correlate with known behavioral responses to similar stimuli. 相似文献
16.
17.
Abstract. 1. Stage-specific survival and recruitment of spruce budworm were measured by frequent sampling of foliage in four outbreak populations over a 15-year period in Ontario and Quebec, Canada.
2. Patterns of change in population density during the outbreak collapse phase were closely linked to changes in survival of the late immature stages, and were determined largely by the impact of natural enemies.
3. Host-plant feedback also contributed significantly to survival patterns throughout the outbreak: annual defoliation influenced survival of fourth and fifth instars and fecundity while cumulative defoliation influenced survival of the very early larval stages (first and second) via impacts on stand condition.
4. Inclusion of this host-plant feedback reveals spruce budworm population dynamics as a function of density-related trophic interactions that vary in their order and strength of influence over time. This view re-introduces the importance of forest interactions as a component of dynamics of the spruce budworm. 相似文献
2. Patterns of change in population density during the outbreak collapse phase were closely linked to changes in survival of the late immature stages, and were determined largely by the impact of natural enemies.
3. Host-plant feedback also contributed significantly to survival patterns throughout the outbreak: annual defoliation influenced survival of fourth and fifth instars and fecundity while cumulative defoliation influenced survival of the very early larval stages (first and second) via impacts on stand condition.
4. Inclusion of this host-plant feedback reveals spruce budworm population dynamics as a function of density-related trophic interactions that vary in their order and strength of influence over time. This view re-introduces the importance of forest interactions as a component of dynamics of the spruce budworm. 相似文献
18.
1 Nectar provided by flowering plants has been suggested as an important factor enhancing parasitism rates of herbivorous insects. Artificial nectar has been shown to increase parasitoid longevity and fecundity in laboratory studies. 2 We studied the influence of understory nectar on parasitism of the spruce budworm Choristoneura fumiferana in a field experiment in which we either removed understory flowering herbs or sprayed a sucrose solution on the understory vegetation in 0.25 ha quadrats. 3 Cohorts of laboratory-reared second instars were transferred the field to evaluate parasitism in the quadrats. The larvae were harvested as fifth instars and reared for parasitoids. 4 Parasitoids of early instars caused greater mortality in the supplemental sucrose treatment than in the vegetation-removal treatment or the control. Parasitoids of older larvae did not respond to the treatments. Larger-scale treatments may be necessary to elicit a response by the larger parasitoids that attack older larvae. 相似文献
19.
Norman G. Reichenbach 《Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata》1985,38(1):57-63
Pathogenicity of nuclear polyhedrosis virus (NPV) to western spruce budworm larvae, Choristoneura occidentalis Freeman, increased as temperature increased. In constrast, at temperature extremes, mortality increased for a specified dose of malathion or diflubenzuron, while at the optimal temperatures (20–25°C), mortality decreased. Malathion was the fastest acting insecticide, followed by diflubenzuron and then NPV.Simulation results considered temperature dependent developmental rates of the larvae, energy consumption, time to achieve total mortality, and mortality at specified doses of insecticides. Low temperatures provided the greatest reduction in the amount of energy consumed by spruce budworm relative to the energy consumed when no treatment was applied. This was due to both the percent mortality and because total mortality was realized in the larval stage while at the higher temperatures, mortality was not fully realized until the pupal stage.
Résumé La température modifie la toxicité ou la pathogénie du virus de la polyhédrose nucléaire (NPV), du diflubenzuron, et du malathion consommés par Choristoneura occidentalis Freeman. La pathogénie du NPV augmente avec la température, si bien qu'il y a une relation linéaire entre mortalité et température. Pour le diflubenzuron et le malathion, la température est liée à la mortalité d'une façon gradiatique. Aux températures extrêmes, la mortalité augmente pour une dose donnée de malathion ou de diflubenzuron, tandis qu'aux températures optimales (20 à 25°C), la mortalité diminue. Des modèles multiples ont été utilisés pour évaluer les effets ci-dessus.Le moment de la mortalité finale observée et la mortalité cumulative ont été modifiés par la température, mais non par la dose d'insecticide. L'effet le plus rapide est obtenu avec le malathion, suivi par le diflubenzuron et enfin le NPV.Selon les résultats de simulation,—tenant compte des taux de développement larvaires à différentes températures, de la consommation d'énergie, du temps nécessaire pour obtenir la mortalité totale calculée et de la mortalité calculée, pour une dose donnée d'insecticide à une température particulière —, ce sont les basses températures qui réduisent le plus l'énergie consommée par la population par comparaison avec l'énergie consommée en l'absence de traitement. Ceci est dû au pourcentage de mortalité calculée et au fait que la mortalité est toujours obtenue au stade larvaire, tandis qu'aux températures plus élevées, la mortalité se poursuit jusqu'au stade nymphal.相似文献
20.
Vincent G. Nealis 《Agricultural and Forest Entomology》2012,14(4):340-347
- 1 Western spruce budworm Choristoneura occidentalis Free. (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) emerge in the spring before budburst and then face a rapidly deteriorating host quality each season.
- 2 Measures of fitness, survival and fecundity, were made on cohorts of final‐instar spruce budworms deployed on host trees at several times during the season in four field locations in coastal and interior British Columbia, Canada.
- 3 Survival and fecundity were strongly correlated throughout the season and varied as much as four‐fold from maxima at mid‐season to minima at the end of the season.
- 4 Fitness values overall were greatest in the coastal compared with interior locations. Among interior locations, fitness was greatest at the highest elevation and least at the lowest elevation. Both cohort and sample‐based estimates of survival of wild, final‐instar budworms were relatively high in these outbreak populations.
- 5 The influence of the phenological window and degree of synchrony with the host plant on herbivore abundance often depends on other processes affecting population rates of change.