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New Zealand Journal of Zoology abstracts


British-based search for natural enemies of the clover root weevil, Sitona lepidus in Europe

Stephen L. Goldson1
Mark R. McNeill1
Philippa J. Gerard2
John R. Proffitt1*
Craig B. Phillips1
Rachel P. Cane
Philip J. Murray3

1AgResearch Limited
P.O. Box 60
Lincoln
Canterbury, New Zealand
2AgResearch Limited
Private Bag 3123
Hamilton, New Zealand
3Institute of Grassland and Environmental Research
North Wyke
Okehampton, United Kingdom
*Author for correspondence. Email: john.proffitt@agresearch.co.nz

Abstract   Since the discovery of the clover pest Sitona lepidus (Coleoptera: Curculionidae) in New Zealand in 1996, substantial effort has been made to find suitable biological control agents. In the summer of 2000 about 8600 Sitona lepidus were collected from 15 locations in 11 European countries. The most common parasitoid recovered was Microctonus aethiopoides (Hymenoptera: Braconidae). These parasitoids were used to infect S. lepidus populations that were then forwarded to a quarantine facility in New Zealand. All European-derived populations of this parasitoid were found to develop readily in both British and New Zealand populations of S. lepidus. This contrasted with the New Zealand ecotype of M. aethiopoides which was unable to develop in S. lepidus. The S. lepidus population obtained from Caen, France was also parasitised by a Perilitus sp. (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) along with Microsoma exiguum (Diptera: Tachinidae). Microsoma exiguum was also reared from weevils collected in Devon along with a single female specimen of Allurus lituratus (Hymenoptera: Braconidae). Of all the species reared out however, only M. aethiopoides could be induced to parasitise S. lepidus in the laboratory. Thirty-four different isolates of Beauveria bassiana (Balsamo) Vuillemin (Deuteromycotina: Hyphomycetes) strains were collected, some of which were more virulent than New Zealand isolates already tested against adult S. lepidus. Fifteen isolates of the facultative pathogen Serratia Bizio spp. (Enterobacteriaceae) were also collected.

Keywords  biological control; clover; ecotypes; Microctonus aethiopoides; Sitona lepidus

Z03035; Online publication date 23 August 2004 Received 15 September 2003; accepted 6 May 2004
New Zealand Journal of Zoology, 2004, Vol. 31: 233–240
0301–4223/04/3103–0233 © The Royal Society of New Zealand 2004

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