Biology and host range of Phytomyza vitalbae and its establishment for thebiological control of Clematis vitalba in New Zealand

Citation
Rl. Hill et al., Biology and host range of Phytomyza vitalbae and its establishment for thebiological control of Clematis vitalba in New Zealand, BIO SCI TEC, 11(4), 2001, pp. 459-473
Citations number
26
Categorie Soggetti
Entomology/Pest Control
Journal title
BIOCONTROL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
ISSN journal
09583157 → ACNP
Volume
11
Issue
4
Year of publication
2001
Pages
459 - 473
Database
ISI
SICI code
0958-3157(200108)11:4<459:BAHROP>2.0.ZU;2-7
Abstract
Phytomyza vitalbae Kaltenbach (Diptera: Agromyzidae) creates mines in leave s of Clematis vitalba, a significant environmental weed in New Zealand. Stu dies in Europe found that most leaves had one mine, but some had many; heav y mining deformed leaves and reduced photosynthetic area.; P. vitalbae was multi-voltine; fecundity averaged 521 eggs per female; and larval parasitis m was high. Together, these biological characteristics suggested it had the capacity to produce large populations in the absence of parasitism. P. vit albae has been recorded on other Clematis species in Europe, and experiment al determination of host range confirmed this species was narrowly oligopha gous, but posed no significant risk to New Zealand native plants. Results s uggested mines might be produced in some exotic Clematis species growing in New Zealand, but only where flies fed on C. vitalba before ovipositing. P. vitalbae was released from quarantine in New Zealand in 1996. It is consid ered to be established at 20 of the 29 release sites, and populations have grown rapidly at those sites. The fly spread 5 km within 15 months at one s ite. Three parasitoids have been reared from P. vitalbae mines since its re lease in New Zealand, but it is uncertain whether parasitism will adversely affect leaf-miner populations.