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The Karoo caterpillar Loxostege Frustalis Zeller (Lepidoptera : Pyralidae) in relation to its host plants and natural enemiesMöhr, Johann Diederich January 1982 (has links)
The Karoo is an arid inland plateau in the central and northeastern Cape Province of South Africa and is characterised by sparse, stunted vegetation. The vegetation is rich in species, and over large areas species of Pentzia, which are drought-resistant shrubs, are extremely abundant. These plants are food for stock (mainly sheep), and because the larvae of the Karoo caterpillar periodically occur in sufficient numbers to defoliate the plants, they assume pest status. Fully-fed Loxostege frustalis larvae construct cases in the soil beneath their food plants and they overwinter in these cases. A census of the numbers of larval cases accumulated in the soil, conducted from 1975 to 1980, showed that an expanded distribution of the pentzias is responsible for the periodic larval outbreaks. Further, alternate food plants are an important food supply for L. frustalis larvae when they disperse under crowded conditions The census data for L. frustalis were analysed by constructing partial life tables for the life-history period from case construction to moth emergence. The mortality of 'encased larvae' is useful for assessing the impact of the known L. frustalis natural enemies. The most important natural enemies were the braconids Chelonus curvimaculatus Cameron, Macrocentrus maraisi Nixon and the fungus Beauveria bassiana (Balsamo) Vuillemin. The collective responses of all the natural enemies to the density of L. frustalis encased larvae was direct, but undercompensating, so that areas with more pentzias produced more L. frustais. Strategies for immediate measures to alleviate the Karoo caterpillar problem, and for future research, are discussed. It is concluded that reduction of pentzia populations to acceptable levels and/or supplementing pastures with non-host plants of L. frustalis offer the only practical solutions to the Karoo caterpillar problem. Biological control of L. frustalis is dismissed as an option for reducing the pest status of the Karoo caterpillar
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Host-searching by Goniozus natalensis females elicited by a short- range kairomone in the frass of its natural host Eldana Saccharina.Smith, Gary Sean. January 1990 (has links)
Petri dish and olfactometer tests demonstrated that Goniozus natalensis (Gordh)
females exhibit a host-searching response upon contact and at a short distance by
olfaction, to a kairomone in the frass of its natural host Eldana saccharina (Walker).
The host-searching response was found to be elicited by E. saccharina frass from a
range of substrates, namely: two host plants of E. saccharina, papyrus and sugarcane,
and four media: sugarcane, papyrus, and cellulose based media and a synthetic
medium containing no plant material. The host-searching response was not elicited
by Sesamia calamistis (Hamps) sugarcane medium frass. The sexual state and age of
G. natalensis females were found to influence the host-searching behaviour. Mated
females showed the behaviour in the petri dish bioassays only after completing their
preoviposition time of two to three days, whilst virgin females took longer, even
though their preoviposition time was found to be the same. The response to male or
female produced E. saccharina sugarcane frass was not statistically different, nor was
there a statistically significant preference for either frass type, given the choice. Four
way olfactometer tests showed that an E. saccharina sugarcane frass odour elicited a
host-searching behaviour in mated two to three day old G. natalensis females. Various
solvents were tested for their ability to isolate the kairomone from E. saccharina
sugarcane frass. Chloroform proved to be the best solvent when tested in petri dish
and olfactometer bioassays. The preliminary results of the GC/MS analysis of the
chloroform extract of E. saccharina sugarcane frass are presented. The chemicals
identified are compared with chemicals identified as host location kairomones for
other insect parasitoid-host studies. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, 1990.
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Latitudinal patterns in butterfly life history and host plant choice /Nygren, Georg H., January 2005 (has links)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Stockholm : Univ., 2005. / Härtill 4 uppsatser.
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Lepidoptera stem borers on cultivated and wild host plants : implications of insect-plant interactions for pest managementRebe, Makhosandile 12 October 2005 (has links)
Please read the abstract in the section 00front of this document / Thesis (PhD (Entomology))--University of Pretoria, 2005. / Zoology and Entomology / unrestricted
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