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Superfamily Chrysomeloidea - Longhorn and Leaf Beetles

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Introduced leaf beetles of the Maritime Provinces, 4: Chrysolina staphylaea (Linnaeus) (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae)
By Majka, C.G., and L. Lesage
Proc. Entomol. Soc. Wash. 110(1): 79–86c, 2008

A newly introduced Chrysolina Motschulsky, 1860, to California (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae: Chrysomelinae)
By Gilbert, A.J., et al.
The Pan-Pacific Entomologist 83(4):363-365, 2007

Distributional records and remarks on Megaderus bifasciatus Dupont, 1836 (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Cerambycinae).
By Heffern, D., L.G. Bezark, R. Androw.
The Pan-Pacific Entomologist, 94(3): 151-162., 2018
BioOne

Heffern, D., L.G. Bezark, R. Androw. 2018. Distributional records and remarks on Megaderus bifasciatus Dupont, 1836 (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Cerambycinae). The Pan-Pacific Entomologist, 94(3): 151-162.

Abstract

Distributional information is presented for Megaderus bifasciatus Dupont, 1836, a rare species of longhorned beetle in the cerambycid tribe Trachyderini. Valid occurrence records from Mexico and Central America are listed, and enigmatic historical records for the southwestern United States are examined to attempt to determine their veracity. An inventory of specimens found in museum collections is documented. The records for Texas and Arizona are examined, and the likelihood that the species is, or ever was, present in the United States is discussed.

What limits predation rates by the specialist seed‐feeder Penthobruchus germaini on an invasive shrub?
By van Klinken, R.D. and L.K. Flack.
Journal of Applied Ecology 45(6): 1600-1611., 2008
JSTOR

van Klinken, R.D. and L.K. Flack. 2008. What limits predation rates by the specialist seed‐feeder Penthobruchus germaini on an invasive shrub? Journal of Applied Ecology 45(6): 1600-1611.

Abstract

1. Specialist seed-feeders are widely used in weed biological control, but seed predation rates are frequently insufficient to cause the required impacts. Understanding the underlying reasons is prerequisite to predicting efficacy.

2. We conducted continental-scale surveys of an introduced, multi-voltine seed-feeder [Bruchidae: Penthobruchus germaini (Pic.)] on an invasive legume (Caesalpinaceae: Parkinsonia aculeata L.). We tested three hypotheses as to what limits seed predation; namely, seed escape through egg aggregation, mortality of immature beetle stages, and failure to track temporal fluctuations in resource availability. We also tested how these factors interacted with the environment and each other.

¿De dónde son? Provenance of a South American species of seed beetle new to California.
By Trujillo, S., J.B. Deas, G.E. Morse.
Conference: Entomological Society of America Annual Meeting 2014., 2014
ResearchGate

Trujillo, S., J.B. Deas, G.E. Morse. 2014. ¿De dónde son? Provenance of a South American species of seed beetle new to California. Conference: Entomological Society of America Annual Meeting 2014.

Abstract

In 2012 an infestation of unfamiliar seed beetles was discovered in eastern California feeding within the seeds of Mexican palo verde (Parkinsonia aculeata). These turned out to be a species native to South America, Penthobruchus germaini (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae: Bruchinae).

Biology and field observations of Penthobruchus germaini (Coleoptera: Bruchidae), biological control [of] Parkinsonia aculeata
By Briano, J.A. H.A. Cordo, and C.J. Deloach.
Biological Control 24: 292-299., 2002
Full PDF

Briano, J.A. H.A. Cordo, and C.J. Deloach. 2002. Biology and field observations of Penthobruchus germaini (Coleoptera: Bruchidae), a biological control agent for Parkinsonia aculeata (Caesalpiniaceae). Biological Control 24: 292-299.

Abstract

The life cycle of the bruchid beetle Penthobruchus germaini (Pic) was studied in the laboratory and some field observations were recorded. Most adults (90.5%) emerged from the seeds of Parkinsonia aculeata L. by making an exit hole at the end of the seed opposite the radicle. Adult longevity with different food types ranged from 11.2 to 59 days and oviposition from 22 to 348 eggs per female. Females laid an average of 2 eggs per day during their life span. The life cycle (oviposition to adult emergence) was completed in 38.7 days at 30C in the laboratory, including 8.6 days for the egg stage, 21.8 for the larval stage, and 8.3 for the pupal stage. The larval stage had four instars. Larvae destroyed the seeds by consuming 90–100% of the cotyledons, preventing germination. They pupated inside the seeds, and only one adult emerged per seed. At three field sites, 48% of the pods were found to have eggs; the mean number of eggs per seed was 0.37 and per pod was 0.98. Females preferred the swelling of the pod as oviposition site. Mature (purple) and larger pods contained more eggs than immature (green) and smaller pods. Larvae overwintered in the seeds on the ground, began pupating in late winter, and adults emerged in the spring. Depending on plant phenology, two generations per year are possible. Natural parasitism of P. germaini was

Geographic variability in Calligrapha verrucosa (Suffrian 1858), a willow-feeding leaf beetle from western North America
By Goodman M.H., Clark S.M.
Insecta Mundi 0092: 1-11, 2009

Diagnosing an overlooked North American taxon: biological observations and mitochondrial insights on Calligrapha suturella...
By J. Gómez-Zurita, A.P. Vogler & D.J. Funk
Annals of the Entomological Society of America 97(1): 28-36, 2004
Abstract

Full title: Diagnosing an overlooked North American taxon: biological observations and mitochondrial insights on Calligrapha suturella Schaeffer, 1933 new status (Coleoptera, Chrysomelidae)

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