Identification, Images, & Information
For Insects, Spiders & Their Kin
For the United States & Canada

Species Trichobaris compacta


Trichobaris weevils distinguish amongst toxic host plants by sensing volatiles that do not affect larval performance.
By Lee et al.
Mol Ecol. 25(14): 3509–3519., 2016
Molecular Ecology

Lee G, Joo Y, Diezel C, Lee EJ, Baldwin IT, Kim S. (2016) Trichobaris weevils distinguish amongst toxic host plants by sensing volatiles that do not affect larval performance. Mol Ecol. 25(14): 3509–3519.

Abstract

Herbivorous insects use plant metabolites to inform their host plant selection for oviposition. These host-selection behaviours are often consistent with the preference-performance hypothesis; females oviposit on hosts that maximize the performance of their offspring. However, the metabolites used for these oviposition choices and those responsible for differences in offspring performance remain unknown for ecologically relevant interactions. Here, we examined the host-selection behaviours of two sympatric weevils, the Datura (Trichobaris compacta) and tobacco (T. mucorea) weevils in field and glasshouse experiments with transgenic host plants specifically altered in different components of their secondary metabolism. Adult females of both species strongly preferred to feed on D. wrightii rather than on N. attenuata leaves, but T. mucorea preferred to oviposit on N. attenuata, while T. compacta oviposited only on D. wrightii. These oviposition behaviours increased offspring performance: T. compacta larvae only survived in D. wrightii stems and T. mucorea larvae survived better in N. attenuata than in D. wrightii stems. Choice assays with nicotine-free, JA-impaired, and sesquiterpene-over-produced isogenic N. attenuata plants revealed that although half of the T. compacta larvae survived in nicotine-free N. attenuata lines, nicotine did not influence the oviposition behaviours of both the nicotine-adapted and nicotine-sensitive species. JA-induced sesquiterpene volatiles are key compounds influencing T. mucorea females' oviposition choices, but these sesquiterpenes had no effect on larval performance. We conclude that adult females are able to choose the best host plant for their offspring and use chemicals different from those that influence larval performance to inform their oviposition decisions.

First record of the Palearctic root weevil Otiorhynchus porcatus (Herbst) (Coleoptera: Curculionidae: Entiminae) in the US...
By Hoebeke E.R., Griffin S.R.
Col. Bull. 69: 679-687, 2015
Full title: First record of the Palearctic root weevil Otiorhynchus porcatus (Herbst) (Coleoptera: Curculionidae: Entiminae) in the United States and additional records of other adventive weevils occurring on the Isles of Shoals (Maine and New Hampshire)
Full text

New Rhynchophora III.
By Schaeffer, C.
Journal of the New York Entomological Society, 16: 213-222., 1908
Full Text

Schaeffer, C. 1908. New Rhynchophora III. Journal of the New York Entomological Society, 16: 213-222.

A Catalog of the Scolytidae and Playpodidae, Part 1 Bibliography
By Stephen L. Wood
Great Basin Naturalist Memoirs, No. 11, 1987
Full text

Part 2 is Taxonomic Index(1).

A Catalog of the Scolytidae and Playpodidae, Part 2 Taxonomic Index
By Stephen L. Wood
Great Basin Naturalist Memoirs, No. 13, 1992
In two volumes:
Volume A Full text
Volume B Full text

Part 1 is Bibiliography(1).

New Rhynchophora. I. (Coleoptera, Anthribidae and Curculionidae).
By Sleeper, E.L.
The Ohio Journal of Science, 54(2): 117-125., 1954
Full PDF

Sleeper, E.L. 1954. New Rhynchophora. I. (Coleoptera, Anthribidae and Curculionidae). The Ohio Journal of Science, 54(2): 117-125.

A review of New World weevils associated with Viscaceae (Mistletoes [in part])...
By Anderson R.S.
J. Nat. Hist. 28: 435-492, 1994
Full title: A review of New World weevils associated with Viscaceae (Mistletoes [in part]) including descriptions of new genera and new species (Coleoptera: Curculionidae)

Abstract

Revision of the weevil genera Magdalinops Dietz and Chelonychus Dietz (Coleoptera: Curculionidae, Anthonomini)
By Clark, W.E. and H.R. Burke
The Coleopterists Bulletin, 56: 107-122, 2002