Historical incidence of Perthida leafminer species (Lepidoptera) in southwest Western Australia based on herbarium specimens

Citation
I. Abbott et al., Historical incidence of Perthida leafminer species (Lepidoptera) in southwest Western Australia based on herbarium specimens, AUST J ECOL, 24(2), 1999, pp. 144-150
Citations number
24
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology
Journal title
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY
ISSN journal
0307692X → ACNP
Volume
24
Issue
2
Year of publication
1999
Pages
144 - 150
Database
ISI
SICI code
0307-692X(199904)24:2<144:HIOPLS>2.0.ZU;2-X
Abstract
Examination of more than 500 herbarium specimens of Eucalyptus marginata an d E. rudis for the presence of two species of leafminers, Perthida spp., in dicated that these native insect species were very rare in southwest Wester n Australia until first recorded in metropolitan Perth in 1878 and 1897, re spectively, when west coast populations of both leafminer species evidently increased dramatically. The first record from the south coast dates from 1 901 near Albany. Evidence of leafminer populations on E. marginata remote f rom coastal settlements was not recorded until 1917, near Cranbrook. The fi rst record in jarrah forest was in 1967, some 10 years after outbreaks of t he pest insect are known to have occurred in the forest. The Perthida leafm iner species on E. rudis was first recorded from inland areas in 1904 and a ppears to have increased more rapidly in abundance than the species found o n E. marginata. These early geographical and species differences in inciden ce are: discussed in terms of changing disturbance patterns, which have not been simultaneous across southwest Western Australia.