Oidaematophorus monodactylus (L.) and Bedellia somnulentella (Zeller): two potential biological control agents of hedge bindweed in southwestern Virginia

Oidaematophorus monodactylus (L.) is a plume moth commonly found feeding on hedge bindweed (Convolvulus sepium L.) in southwestern Virginia. Females maintained at 23.9 + 1°C laid an average of 173 eggs, 61% viable, during a 10-day oviposition period. Average larval leaf consumption was 13 cm² at 18....

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Main Author: Parrella, Michael P.
Other Authors: Entomology
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/65066
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-650662021-05-05T05:40:43Z Oidaematophorus monodactylus (L.) and Bedellia somnulentella (Zeller): two potential biological control agents of hedge bindweed in southwestern Virginia Parrella, Michael P. Entomology LD5655.V855 1977.P37 Oidaematophorus monodactylus (L.) is a plume moth commonly found feeding on hedge bindweed (Convolvulus sepium L.) in southwestern Virginia. Females maintained at 23.9 + 1°C laid an average of 173 eggs, 61% viable, during a 10-day oviposition period. Average larval leaf consumption was 13 cm² at 18.3°C, increasing to 16 cm² at 29.4°C; over 60% was consumed by the last instar. Mean development period from egg to adult was 28.3 days at 23.9°C. O. monodactylus completely defoliated a hedge bindweed plant which was infested at the rate of 5 larvae per leaf in greenhouse cage experiments, and caused a significant decrease in the mean percentage of leaf and shoot production as well as total plant length with infestations of 3 larvae per leaf in field cages. This indicated that inundative releases of late instars in early June could reduce the growth rate and seed production of hedge bindweed plants. An estimate of the initial direct cost of rearing 10,000 third instars for a June release totaled a little less than $8,000; of which 30% are non-recurring costs. A second insect feeding on hedge bindweed is the leaf miner, Bedellia somnulentella (Zeller), which can be found in southwestern Virginia from September through October. Females maintained at 23.9 ± 2°C laid an average of 169 eggs, most of them within the first 8 days of oviposition. The highest rate of pupation was at 23.9°C (98.0), but only 4.6% pupated at 29.4°C. Less than 5% of field collected larvae were parasitized by Apanteles bedelliae Vier. Master of Science 2016-04-07T15:31:16Z 2016-04-07T15:31:16Z 1977 Thesis Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/65066 en OCLC# 39849979 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ x 92 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V855 1977.P37
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1977.P37
Parrella, Michael P.
Oidaematophorus monodactylus (L.) and Bedellia somnulentella (Zeller): two potential biological control agents of hedge bindweed in southwestern Virginia
description Oidaematophorus monodactylus (L.) is a plume moth commonly found feeding on hedge bindweed (Convolvulus sepium L.) in southwestern Virginia. Females maintained at 23.9 + 1°C laid an average of 173 eggs, 61% viable, during a 10-day oviposition period. Average larval leaf consumption was 13 cm² at 18.3°C, increasing to 16 cm² at 29.4°C; over 60% was consumed by the last instar. Mean development period from egg to adult was 28.3 days at 23.9°C. O. monodactylus completely defoliated a hedge bindweed plant which was infested at the rate of 5 larvae per leaf in greenhouse cage experiments, and caused a significant decrease in the mean percentage of leaf and shoot production as well as total plant length with infestations of 3 larvae per leaf in field cages. This indicated that inundative releases of late instars in early June could reduce the growth rate and seed production of hedge bindweed plants. An estimate of the initial direct cost of rearing 10,000 third instars for a June release totaled a little less than $8,000; of which 30% are non-recurring costs. A second insect feeding on hedge bindweed is the leaf miner, Bedellia somnulentella (Zeller), which can be found in southwestern Virginia from September through October. Females maintained at 23.9 ± 2°C laid an average of 169 eggs, most of them within the first 8 days of oviposition. The highest rate of pupation was at 23.9°C (98.0), but only 4.6% pupated at 29.4°C. Less than 5% of field collected larvae were parasitized by Apanteles bedelliae Vier. === Master of Science
author2 Entomology
author_facet Entomology
Parrella, Michael P.
author Parrella, Michael P.
author_sort Parrella, Michael P.
title Oidaematophorus monodactylus (L.) and Bedellia somnulentella (Zeller): two potential biological control agents of hedge bindweed in southwestern Virginia
title_short Oidaematophorus monodactylus (L.) and Bedellia somnulentella (Zeller): two potential biological control agents of hedge bindweed in southwestern Virginia
title_full Oidaematophorus monodactylus (L.) and Bedellia somnulentella (Zeller): two potential biological control agents of hedge bindweed in southwestern Virginia
title_fullStr Oidaematophorus monodactylus (L.) and Bedellia somnulentella (Zeller): two potential biological control agents of hedge bindweed in southwestern Virginia
title_full_unstemmed Oidaematophorus monodactylus (L.) and Bedellia somnulentella (Zeller): two potential biological control agents of hedge bindweed in southwestern Virginia
title_sort oidaematophorus monodactylus (l.) and bedellia somnulentella (zeller): two potential biological control agents of hedge bindweed in southwestern virginia
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/65066
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