Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T06:38:05.311Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Characterization, distribution, biology and impact on Italian walnut orchards of the invasive North-American leafminer Coptodisca lucifluella (Lepidoptera: Heliozelidae)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2015

U. Bernardo*
Affiliation:
CNR, Institute for Sustainable Plant Protection, UOS of Portici, Via Università, 133-80055- Portici (NA), Italy
E.J. van Nieukerken
Affiliation:
Naturalis Biodiversity Center, PO Box 9557, NL-2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands
R. Sasso
Affiliation:
ENEA C.R. Casaccia, Laboratory Sustainable Management of Agro-ecosystems (UTAGRI-ECO), Roma, Italy
M. Gebiola
Affiliation:
CNR, Institute for Sustainable Plant Protection, UOS of Portici, Via Università, 133-80055- Portici (NA), Italy
L. Gualtieri
Affiliation:
CNR, Institute for Sustainable Plant Protection, UOS of Portici, Via Università, 133-80055- Portici (NA), Italy
G. Viggiani
Affiliation:
CNR, Institute for Sustainable Plant Protection, UOS of Portici, Via Università, 133-80055- Portici (NA), Italy
*
*Author for correspondence e-mail: bernardo@ipp.cnr.it

Abstract

The leafminer Coptodisca sp. (Lepidoptera: Heliozelidae), recently recorded for the first time in Europe on Italian black and common walnut trees, is shown to be the North-American Coptodisca lucifluella (Clemens) based on morphological (forewing pattern) and molecular (cytochrome oxidase c subunit I sequence) evidence. The phylogenetic relatedness of three species feeding on Juglandaceae suggests that C. lucifluella has likely shifted, within the same host plant family, from its original North-American hosts Carya spp. to Juglans spp. Over the few years since its detection, it has established in many regions in Italy and has become a widespread and dominant invasive species. The leafminer completes three to four generations per year, with the first adults emerging in April–May and mature larvae of the last generation starting hibernation in September–October. Although a high larval mortality was recorded in field observations (up to 74%), the impact of the pest was substantial with all leaves infested at the end of the last generation in all 3 years tested. The distribution of the leafminer in the canopy was homogeneous. The species is redescribed and illustrated, a lectotype is designated and a new synonymy is established.

Type
Research Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2015 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Baldessari, M., Angeli, G., Girolami, V., Mazzon, L., van Nieukerken, E.J. van & Duso, C. (2009) Antispila sp. minatore fogliare segnalato in Italia su vite. L'Informatore Agrario 15, 6870.Google Scholar
Benchi, D., Conelli, L. & Bernardo, U. (2010) La mosca delle noci minaccia le produzioni campane. L'Informatore Agrario 49, 7475.Google Scholar
Bernardo, U., Monti, M.M., Nappo, A.G., Gebiola, M., Russo, A., Pedata, P. & Viggiani, G. (2008) Species status of two populations of Pnigalio soemius (Hymenoptera: Eulophidae) reared from two different hosts: an integrative approach. Biological Control 46, 393403.Google Scholar
Bernardo, U., Sasso, R., Gebiola, M. & Viggiani, G. (2011) Minatrice fogliare segnalata in Italia su noce. L'Informatore agrario 46, 6465.Google Scholar
Bernardo, U., Sasso, R., Gebiola, M. & Viggiani, G. (2012) First record of a walnut shield bearer Coptodisca (Lepidoptera: Heliozelidae) in Europe. Journal of Applied Entomology 136, 638640. Bold site: http://www.barcodinglife.com Google Scholar
Braun, A. (1916) New species of Microlepidoptera. The Canadian Entomologist 48, 138141.Google Scholar
Braun, A. (1927) Descriptions of new Microlepidoptera. Transaction of the American Entomological Society 53, 191199.Google Scholar
Brown, L. & Eads, C. (1969) Unnamed and little-known insects attacking cottonwood in Southern California. Journal of Economic Entomology 62, 667674.Google Scholar
Busck, A. (1878) A new species of moths of the superfamily Tineina from Florida. Proceeding of the United States National Museum 23, 225254.Google Scholar
Chambers, V.T. (1871) Micro-Lepidoptera. The Canadian Entomologist 3, 221224.Google Scholar
Chambers, V.T. (1874) Micro-Lepidoptera. The Canadian Entomologist 6, 149153.Google Scholar
Ciampolini, M. & Trematerra, P. (1992) Diffusa presenza di mosca delle noci (Rhagoletis completa Cresson) nel Nord Italia. L'Informatore agrario 48, 5256.Google Scholar
Cifuentes, D., Chynoweth, R. & Bielza, P. (2011) Genetic study of Mediterranean and South American populations of tomato leafminer Tuta absoluta (Povolny, 1994) (Lepidoptera: Gelechiidae) using ribosomal and mitochondrial markers. Pest Management Science 67, 11551162.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Clemens, B. (1860) Contributions to American Lepidopterology. No. 3. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 12, 448.Google Scholar
Colautti, R.I. & MacIsaac, H.J. (2004) A neutral terminology to define “invasive” species. Diversity and Distributions 10, 135141.Google Scholar
Davis, D.R. (1983) Heliozelidae. p 4 in Hodges, R.W., Dominick, T., Davis, D.R., Ferguson, D.C., Franclemont, J.G., Munroe, E.G. & Powell, J.A. (Eds) Check list of the Lepidoptera of America north of Mexico, including Greenland. London, Classey.Google Scholar
Davis, D.R. (1998) The monotrysian Heteroneura. pp 6590 in Kristensen, N.P. (Ed.) Lepidoptera, Moths and Butterflies, 1. Evolution, systematics and biogeography, vol 4. Handbuch der Zoologie/ Handbook of Zoology, vol 35. Berlin, New York, De Gruyter.Google Scholar
De Tomaso, B., Romito, A., Nicoli Aldini, R. & Cravedi, P. (2008) Minatrice fogliare della vite segnalata in Puglia. L'Informatore agrario 31, 5961.Google Scholar
Dietz, W. (1921) A new species of Coptodisca (Lepid.). The Canadian Entomologist 53, 44.Google Scholar
Duso, C. (1991) Sulla comparsa in Italia di un Tefritide neartico del noce Rhagoletis completa Cresson (Diptera: Tephritidae). Bollettino di zoologia agraria e bachicoltura 23, 203209.Google Scholar
Ellis, W.N. (2014) Bladmineerders van Europa/Leafminers of Europe. http://www.bladmineerders.nl/index.htm Google Scholar
Eppo/Cabi (1997) Data Sheet on Rhagoletis completa . pp. 475479 in Smith, I.M., McNamara, D.G., Scott, P.R., Holderness, M. (Eds) Quarantine Pests for Europe. 2nd edition. Wallingford, UK, CABI International.Google Scholar
Felt, E.P. (1906) Insects Affecting Park and Woodland Trees, vol 8. Memoir – New York State Museum. Albany, New York State Museum.Google Scholar
Folmer, O., Black, M., Hoeh, W., Lutz, R. & Vrijenhoek, R. (1994) DNA primers for amplification of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I from diverse metazoan invertebrates. Molecular Marine Biology and Biotechnology 3, 294299.Google Scholar
Forbes, W.T.M. (1923) The Lepidoptera of New York and neighboring states. Primitive forms Microlepidoptera, Pyraloids, Bombyces. Memoir by Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station 68, 1792.Google Scholar
Gates, M., Heraty, J., Schauff, M., Schauff, M.E., Wagner, D.L., Whitfield, J.B., Wahlet, D.B. (2002) Survey of the parasitic Hymenoptera on leafminers in California. Journal of Hymenoptera Research 11, 213270.Google Scholar
Gebiola, M., Bernardo, U., Monti, M.M., Navone, P. & Viggiani, G. (2009) Pnigalio agraules (Walker) and Pnigalio mediterraneus Ferrière and Delucchi (Hymenoptera: Eulophidae): two closely related valid species. Journal of Natural History 43, 24652480. Geneious R6: http://www.geneious.com Google Scholar
Gillespie, R.G. & Roderick, G.K. (2014) Evolution: geology and climate drive diversification. Nature 509, 297298.Google Scholar
Hajibabaei, M., Smith, M.A., Janzen, D.H., Rodriguez, J.J., Whitfield, J.B. & Hebert, P.D.N. (2006) A minimalist barcode can identify a specimen whose DNA is degraded. Molecular Ecology Notes 6, 959964.Google Scholar
Hall, T.A. (1999) BioEdit: a user-friendly biological sequence alignment editor and analysis program for Windows 95/98/NT. 41, 95–98.Google Scholar
Hebert, P.D.N., Penton, E.H., Burns, J.M., Janzen, D.H. & Hallwachs, W. (2004) Ten species in one: DNA barcoding reveals cryptic species in the neotropical skipper butterfly Astraptes fulgerator . Proceeding of National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 101, 1481214817.Google Scholar
Hespenheide, H. (1991) Bionomics of leaf-mining insects. Annual Review of Entomology 36, 535560.Google Scholar
Heyerdahl, R. & Dutcher, J. (1985) Hymenopterous parasitoids of pecan leafminers. Journal of Entomological Science 20, 411421.Google Scholar
Heyerdahl, R. & Dutcher, J. (1990) Seasonal abundance and overwintering mortality in populations of lepidopterous leafminers of Pecan. Journal of Entomological Science 25, 394408.Google Scholar
Hileman, D.R. & Lieto, L.F. (1981) Mortality and area reduction in leaves of the Bog Shrub Chamaedaphne calyculata (Ericaceae) caused by the leaf miner Coptodisca kalmiella (Lepidoptera: Heliozelidae). American Midland Naturalist 106, 180188.Google Scholar
Kenis, M., Auger-Rozenberg, M., Roques, A., Timms, L., Péré, C., Cock, M., Settele, J., Augustin, S. & Lopez-Vaamonde, C. (2009) Ecological effects of invasive alien insects. Biological Invasions 11, 2145.Google Scholar
Knölke, S., Erlacher, S., Hausmann, A., Miller, M.A.& Segerer, A.H. (2005) A procedure for combined genitalia dissection and DNA extraction in Lepidoptera. Insect Systematics and Evolution 35, 401409.Google Scholar
Lafontaine, J.D. (1974) A new species of Coptodisca (Heliozelidae) from Mississippi on farkleberry (Vaccinium arboreum). Journal of the Lepidopterists Society 28, 126130.Google Scholar
Lopez-Vaamonde, C., Agassiz, D., Augustin, S., De Prins, J., De Prins, W., Gomboc, S., Ivinskis, P., Karsholt, O., Koutroumpas, A., Koutroumpa, F., Laštůvka, Z., Marabuto, E., Olivella, E., Przybylowicz, L., Roques, A., Ryrholm, N., Sefrova, H., Sima, P., Sims, I., Sinev, S., Skulev, B., Tomov, R., Zilli, A. & Leeset, D. (2010) Lepidoptera. Chapter 11. BIORISK – Biodiversity and Ecosystem Risk Assessment 4, 603668.Google Scholar
Maier, C. (1989) Accelerated abscission of cranberry leaves damaged by the leafminer, Coptodisca negligens (Lepidoptera: Heliozelidae). Environmental Entomology 18, 773777.Google Scholar
Maier, C.T. (1988) Life cycle of Coptodisca negligens (Lepidoptera: Heliozelidae) on Cranberry. Journal of Economic Entomology 81, 497500.Google Scholar
Menken, S.B.J., Boomsma, J.J. & Nieukerken, E.J. van (2010) Large-scale evolutionary patterns of host plant associations in the Lepidoptera. Evolution 64, 10981119.Google Scholar
Montecchio, L. & Faccoli, M. (2014) First record of thousand cankers disease Geosmithia morbida and walnut twig beetle Pityophthorus juglandis on Juglans nigra in Europe. Plant Disease 98, 696696.Google Scholar
Nentwig, W. & Josefsson, M. (2010) Introduction. Chapter 1. In: Roques, A. et al., (Eds) Alien terrestrial arthropods of Europe. Biorisk 4, 59.Google Scholar
Newton, P.J. & Wilkinson, C. (1982) A taxonomic revision of the North American species of Stigmella (Lepidoptera: Nepticulidae). Systematic Entomology 7, 367463.Google Scholar
Nieukerken, E.J. van (2013). Fauna Europaea: Heliozelidae. in Karsholt, O. & Nieukerken, E.J. van (Eds) Lepidoptera. Fauna Europaea version 2.6.2. http://www.faunaeur.org/ Google Scholar
Nieukerken, E.J. van, Wagner, D.L., Baldessari, M., Mazzon, L., Angeli, G., Girolami, V. & Doorenweerd, C.D.C. (2012) Antispila oinophylla new species (Lepidoptera, Heliozelidae), a new North American grapevine leafminer invading Italian vineyards: taxonomy, DNA barcodes and life cycle. ZooKeys 170, 2977.Google Scholar
Opler, P.A. (1971) Seven new Lepidopterous leafminers associated with Quercus agrifolia (Heliozelidae, Gracillariidae). Journal of the Lepidopterists Society 25, 194211.Google Scholar
Payne, J., Tedders, W., Cosgrove, G. & Foard, D. (1972) Larval mine characteristics of four species of leaf-mining Lepidoptera in Pecan. Annals of the Entomological Society of America 65, 7481.Google Scholar
Patocka, J. & Zach, P. (1995) The pupae of the central European Caloptilia (Lepidoptera: Gracillariidae). European Journal of Entomology 92, 483496.Google Scholar
Pellmyr, O. & Leebens-Mack, J. (1999) Forty million years of mutualism: evidence for Eocene origin of the yucca–yucca moth association. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 96, 91789183.Google Scholar
Regier, J.C. & Shi, D. (2005) Increased yield of PCR product from degenerate primers with nondegenerate, nonhomologous 5′ tails. Biotechniques 38, 3438.Google Scholar
Rickman, J. & Connor, E. (2003) The effect of urbanization on the quality of remnant habitats for leaf-mining Lepidoptera on Quercus agrifolia . Ecography 26, 777787.Google Scholar
Rubinoff, D., Holland, B.S., Shibata, A., Messing, R.H. & Wright, M.G. (2010) Rapid invasion despite lack of genetic variation in the erythrina gall wasp (Quadrastichus erythrinae Kim). Pacific Science 64, 2331.Google Scholar
Slingerland, M.V. & Crosby, C. (1914) Manual of Fruits Insects. p. 503. New York, The Macmillan Company.Google Scholar
Sokal, R.R. & Rohlf, F.J. (1995) Biometry: The Principles and Practice of Statistics in Biological Research. (3rd edn. New York, USA, W.H. Freeman and Company.Google Scholar
Stamatakis, A. (2006) RAxML-VI-HPC: maximum likelihood-based phylogenetic analyses with thousands of taxa and mixed models. Bioinformatics 22, 26882690.Google Scholar
Sutherland, C. (2011) Potential Pecan Pests to Ponder-Leafminers and Hickory Shuckworm. (pp. 8–12). Presented at the WPGA Pecan Show Pecan Food Fantasy and Pecan Trade and Equipment Show.Google Scholar
Tamura, K., Dudley, J., Nei, M. & Kumar, S. (2007) MEGA4: Molecular Evolutionary Genetics Analysis (MEGA) software version 4.0. Molecular Biology and Evolution 24, 15961599.Google Scholar
Tomov, R., Trencheva, K., Trenchev, G., Cota, E., Ramadhi, A., Ivanov, B., Naceski, S., Papazova-Anakleva, I. & Kenis, M. (2009) Non-Indigenous Insects and their Threat to Biodiversity and Economy in Albania, Bulgaria and Republic of Macedonia. pp. 157. Sofia–Moscow, Pensoft Publishers.Google Scholar
Weiss, H.B. & Beckwith, C.S. (1921) Notes on Coptodisca kalmiella Dietz, a leaf miner of Kalmia angustifolia . The Canadian Entomologist 53, 4445.Google Scholar
Wiegmann, B.M., Regier, J.C. & Mitter, C. (2002) Combined molecular and morphological evidence on phylogeny of the earliest lepidopteran lineages. Zoologica Scripta 31, 6781.Google Scholar
Yamasaki, A., Shimizu, K. & Eujisaki, K. (2009) Effect of host plant part on larval body-color polymorphism in Helicoverpa armigera (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae). Annals of the Entomological Society of America 102, 7684.Google Scholar
Yoshimoto, C. (1973) Review of North American Chrysocharis (Kratochviliana) (Eulophidae: Chalcidoidea) North of Mexico, especially species attacking birch casebearer (Lepidoptera: Coleophoridae) and birch leafminer (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae). The Canadian Entomologist 105, 13091349.Google Scholar
Supplementary material: File

Bernardo supplementary material

Bernardo Supplementary material 1

Download Bernardo supplementary material(File)
File 78.8 KB
Supplementary material: PDF

Bernardo supplementary material

Bernardo Supplementary material 2

Download Bernardo supplementary material(PDF)
PDF 97.7 KB
Supplementary material: PDF

Bernardo supplementary material

Bernardo Supplementary material 3

Download Bernardo supplementary material(PDF)
PDF 3.7 MB
Supplementary material: PDF

Bernardo supplementary material

Bernardo Supplementary material 4

Download Bernardo supplementary material(PDF)
PDF 70 KB