THE FIRST RECORD OF AN OUTBREAK OF THE LARCH BUD MOTH, ZEIRAPHERA-DINIANA GN (LEP, TORTRICIDAE) ON AN EVERGREEN CONIFER HOST (PINUS-PUMILA [PALL] REGEL) IN NORTH-EASTERN ASIA
Pa. Khomentovsky et al., THE FIRST RECORD OF AN OUTBREAK OF THE LARCH BUD MOTH, ZEIRAPHERA-DINIANA GN (LEP, TORTRICIDAE) ON AN EVERGREEN CONIFER HOST (PINUS-PUMILA [PALL] REGEL) IN NORTH-EASTERN ASIA, Journal of applied entomology, 121(1), 1997, pp. 1-7
An outbreak of the larch bud moth (Zeiraphera diniana Guenee) occurred
from 1988 to 1993 on Pinus pumila [(Pall.) Regel] on Kamchatka Penins
ula while the sympatric Larix gmelinii [(Rupr.) Litv.] remained unatta
cked. This first major outbreak of Z. diniana ever observed and report
ed on an evergreen host in Siberia and North Fast Asia is discussed in
the larger context of its population dynamics throughout the Palaearc
tic. The complex interactions between site-, host plant- and insect-ch
aracteristics in conjunction with climatic release allows us to explai
n this unique event in a conventional manner: the eggs survive the ext
remely cold winter temperatures on dwarf pines underneath the snow the
slow developing light colour morph, which is adapted to the phenology
of evergreens, benefits from the mesoclimate close to the ground it w
as temporarily favoured by the significantly warmer spring and summer
seasons during the outbreak 1988-1991. The occurrence of the pine-feed
ing Z. diniana in North East Asia supports the hypothesis that the hos
t-associated genetic divergence might have evolved sympatrically.