OVIPOSZTION, TEMPORAL DISTRIBUTION, AND POTENTIAL IMPACT OF STROBILOMYIA-LARICIS MICHELSEN AND STROBILOMYIA-VIARIA (HUCKETT) (DIPTERA, ANTHOMYIIDAE) ON EASTERN LARCH, LARIX LARICINA (DUROI) KOCH,K

Citation
M. Mcclure et al., OVIPOSZTION, TEMPORAL DISTRIBUTION, AND POTENTIAL IMPACT OF STROBILOMYIA-LARICIS MICHELSEN AND STROBILOMYIA-VIARIA (HUCKETT) (DIPTERA, ANTHOMYIIDAE) ON EASTERN LARCH, LARIX LARICINA (DUROI) KOCH,K, Canadian Entomologist, 128(1), 1996, pp. 67-78
Citations number
18
Categorie Soggetti
Entomology
Journal title
ISSN journal
0008347X
Volume
128
Issue
1
Year of publication
1996
Pages
67 - 78
Database
ISI
SICI code
0008-347X(1996)128:1<67:OTDAPI>2.0.ZU;2-W
Abstract
A 2-year field study was carried out to locate and identify eggs, dete rmine the temporal distributions of eggs and larvae, and assess the im pact of Strobilomyia laricis and S. viaria on Larix laricina. Eggs of S. laricis were beige with a patterned surface and usually laid one pe r cone in the bud scales at the base of the cone. Eggs of S. viaria ia were white and smooth and usually laid one per cone between the ovuli ferous scales of the cone. Strobilomyia laricis oviposited from mid- t o late May and S. viaria from late May to mid-June, each species initi ating oviposition at a different stage of cone phenology. Peak egg den sities of S. laricis were 25 and 65% higher than those of S. viaria in 1990 and 1991, respectively. Larvae of both species completed develop ment at the same time, from mid-June to early July. The mean number of scales eaten per cone did not differ between species; one larva damag ed a mean of 8.4 scales per cone in 1990 and 10.7 scales per cone in 1 991. As the number of scales per cone increased, the mean number of sc ales eaten increased and the mean percentage of scales eaten decreased . Cone crops were light in both years. In 1990, the only year we were able to differentiate cone maggot larvae, 44% of cones were damaged by S. laricis and only 16% by S. viaria. Together, S. laricis and S. via ria damaged 60 and 67% of the cones and destroyed 38 and 50% of the po tential seed crop in 1990 and 1998, respectively.