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Differences in the fruit maturation stages at which oviposition occurs among insect seed predators feeding on the fruits of five dipterocarp tree species
Authors:Asano Iku  Takao Itioka  Usun Shimizu‐Kaya  Keiko Kishimoto‐Yamada  Paulus Meleng
Institution:1. Graduate School of Human and Environmental Studies, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan;2. Faculty of Life and Environmental Science, Shimane University, Matsue, Japan;3. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan;4. Center for Toki and Ecological Restoration, Niigata University, Sado, Japan;5. Research Development and Innovation Division, Forest Department Sarawak, Kuching, Malaysia
Abstract:The seeds of dipterocarp trees are the main food resources for many species of weevils, bark beetles and small moths; however, for most seed‐eating insects on dipterocarp tropical trees, seed utilization patterns remain poorly investigated. This study aimed to determine the fruit maturation stages at which eggs are laid by different insect seed predators feeding on the seeds or fruits of the following five dipterocarp species: Dipterocarpus globosus, Dryobalanops aromatica, Shorea beccariana, S. acuta and S. curtisii, which reproduced during the same period. We investigated the occurrence frequencies of the insect seed predators at various growth stages by collecting both unfallen and fallen fruit on several occasions during the period of seed/fruit maturation in a tropical rainforest in Borneo from September to December 2013. Weevils and bark beetles were the dominant insect seed predators of the five tree species. One or two weevil species of Alcidodes, Damnux and/or Nanophyes preyed on the seeds of each of the five tree species, and one bark beetle species, Coccotrypes gedeanus, preyed on the seeds of all five tree species. Many larvae, pupae and adults of each weevil species were found in pre‐dispersal (unfallen) fruit, whereas bark beetles at various growth stages were found in post‐dispersal (fallen) fruit. These results suggested that, among the dominant insect seed predators of the five dipterocarp species, weevil species oviposit on pre‐dispersal fruit and begin their larval growth before seed dispersal, whereas the oviposition and larval development of bark beetle species occurs in post‐dispersal fruit.
Keywords:Curculionidae  general flowering  interspecific interactions  Nanophyidae  resource utilization  Scolytidae  Southeast Asian tropical rainforests
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