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Alcidodes sedi (Col.: Curculionidae), a natural enemy of Bryophyllum delagoense (Crassulaceae) in South Africa and a possible candidate agent for the biological control of this weed in Australia
Authors:A.B.R. Witt   A.J. McConnachie  R. Stals
Affiliation:aQueensland Department of Natural Resources and Mines, South African Field Station, c/o ARC-Plant Protection Research Institute, P/Bag X134, Queenswood 0121, South Africa;bEcophysiological Studies Research Programme, School of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Wits 2050, South Africa;cSouth African National Collection of Insects, ARC-Plant Protection Research Institute, P/Bag X134, Queenswood 0121, South Africa
Abstract:The Madagascan endemic, Bryophyllum delagoense (Crassulaceae), is a major weed in Queensland, Australia. Despite having first been recorded in Australia in the 1940s, it is far more invasive there than on the African mainland where it was introduced more than 170 years ago. This may be due to a number of factors, one of which could be the occurrence of new natural enemy associations in southern Africa. Among the insects of crassulaceous plants that have extended their host ranges, a stem-boring weevil, Alcidodes sedi, was studied to elucidate its status as a natural enemy of B. delagoense in southern Africa and as a candidate biological control agent for introduction to Australia. Laboratory studies indicated that damage inflicted by adult and larval feeding caused significant reductions in stem length and number of leaves. Preliminary host-range trials revealed that A. sedi can complete its development on other species in the Crassulaceae, including most of the introduced Bryophyllum species and some Kalanchoe species native to South Africa. Despite the oligophagous nature of A. sedi and the fact that it can complete its development on a number of ornamental species in the Crassulaceae, it should be considered a potential biological control agent in Australia. All of the native Crassulaceae in Australia are in the genus Crassula, most of which are very small and therefore unlikely to support the development of a large weevil like A. sedi. However, additional host-range trials will have to be undertaken in Australia to determine whether the weevil can be considered safe for release.
Keywords:Bryophyllum delagoense   Crassulaceae   Biological control   Alcidodes sedi   Curculionidae   Host range
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