Megacerus discoidus, a potential biological control agent of hedge bindweed in southwestern Virginia

<i>Megacerus discoidus</i> (Say)(Coleoptera: Bruchidae), a native North American seedfeeder, has 4 larval instars and one generation a year. Overwintering occurred in the 4th instar. Larvae fed on 40-50% of the seed content before diapause and the rest of the seed in the following spring...

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Main Author: Wang, Ren
Other Authors: Entomology
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2014
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/49958
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-499582021-01-08T05:42:51Z Megacerus discoidus, a potential biological control agent of hedge bindweed in southwestern Virginia Wang, Ren Entomology LD5655.V856 1985.W362 Bindweeds -- Biological control -- Virginia Bruchidae -- Development Bruchidae -- Ecology <i>Megacerus discoidus</i> (Say)(Coleoptera: Bruchidae), a native North American seedfeeder, has 4 larval instars and one generation a year. Overwintering occurred in the 4th instar. Larvae fed on 40-50% of the seed content before diapause and the rest of the seed in the following spring. When more than one larvae attacked a seed, only one adult emerged because of cannibalism, which was most common among 2nd and 3rd instars. Adults oviposited mainly under the bracts of host seedpods. The life cycle of the beetle was well synchronized with the host phenology. When diapause of the insect was experimentally terminated under 20°C and 28°C, there was increased mortality and prolonged adult emergence. No adult emergence occurred when infested seeds were maintained in the dark under 10°C for 200 days. However, mortality of the larvae was significantly increased. Humidity and soil coverage of host seeds had no significant impact on the beetle mortality during diapause under field conditions. Of 19 plant species tested, only hedge bindweed and wild sweet potato, <i>Ipomoea pandurata</i>, supported larval development to adults. Oviposition occurred only on seedpods of hedge bindweed and heavenly blue morningglory, <i>Ipomoea tricolor</i>. The latter did not support larval development. An infestation rate of 5 <i>M. discoidus</i> eggs per seedpod of hedge bindweed in the field cages was achieved by releasing the adults at a relatively high adult/plant ratio (1.2 pairs/plant) plus inoculation of eggs on all seedpods in the cages. This resulted in a high rate (ca. 70%) of seed infestation, but did not destroy all of the seeds in the field cages. Release of lower number of adults led to lower seed infestation. Seed consumption did not cause any change in reproduction and vegetative growth of hedge bindweed. I consider the use of <i>M. discoidus</i> to be safe but it must be combined with other stress factors to achieve effective control. Ph. D. incomplete_metadata 2014-08-13T14:38:53Z 2014-08-13T14:38:53Z 1985 Dissertation Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/49958 OCLC# 13193735 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ix, 94 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V856 1985.W362
Bindweeds -- Biological control -- Virginia
Bruchidae -- Development
Bruchidae -- Ecology
spellingShingle LD5655.V856 1985.W362
Bindweeds -- Biological control -- Virginia
Bruchidae -- Development
Bruchidae -- Ecology
Wang, Ren
Megacerus discoidus, a potential biological control agent of hedge bindweed in southwestern Virginia
description <i>Megacerus discoidus</i> (Say)(Coleoptera: Bruchidae), a native North American seedfeeder, has 4 larval instars and one generation a year. Overwintering occurred in the 4th instar. Larvae fed on 40-50% of the seed content before diapause and the rest of the seed in the following spring. When more than one larvae attacked a seed, only one adult emerged because of cannibalism, which was most common among 2nd and 3rd instars. Adults oviposited mainly under the bracts of host seedpods. The life cycle of the beetle was well synchronized with the host phenology. When diapause of the insect was experimentally terminated under 20°C and 28°C, there was increased mortality and prolonged adult emergence. No adult emergence occurred when infested seeds were maintained in the dark under 10°C for 200 days. However, mortality of the larvae was significantly increased. Humidity and soil coverage of host seeds had no significant impact on the beetle mortality during diapause under field conditions. Of 19 plant species tested, only hedge bindweed and wild sweet potato, <i>Ipomoea pandurata</i>, supported larval development to adults. Oviposition occurred only on seedpods of hedge bindweed and heavenly blue morningglory, <i>Ipomoea tricolor</i>. The latter did not support larval development. An infestation rate of 5 <i>M. discoidus</i> eggs per seedpod of hedge bindweed in the field cages was achieved by releasing the adults at a relatively high adult/plant ratio (1.2 pairs/plant) plus inoculation of eggs on all seedpods in the cages. This resulted in a high rate (ca. 70%) of seed infestation, but did not destroy all of the seeds in the field cages. Release of lower number of adults led to lower seed infestation. Seed consumption did not cause any change in reproduction and vegetative growth of hedge bindweed. I consider the use of <i>M. discoidus</i> to be safe but it must be combined with other stress factors to achieve effective control. === Ph. D. === incomplete_metadata
author2 Entomology
author_facet Entomology
Wang, Ren
author Wang, Ren
author_sort Wang, Ren
title Megacerus discoidus, a potential biological control agent of hedge bindweed in southwestern Virginia
title_short Megacerus discoidus, a potential biological control agent of hedge bindweed in southwestern Virginia
title_full Megacerus discoidus, a potential biological control agent of hedge bindweed in southwestern Virginia
title_fullStr Megacerus discoidus, a potential biological control agent of hedge bindweed in southwestern Virginia
title_full_unstemmed Megacerus discoidus, a potential biological control agent of hedge bindweed in southwestern Virginia
title_sort megacerus discoidus, a potential biological control agent of hedge bindweed in southwestern virginia
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/49958
work_keys_str_mv AT wangren megacerusdiscoidusapotentialbiologicalcontrolagentofhedgebindweedinsouthwesternvirginia
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