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Vol 97, No 2 (2017)

Article

Seasonal cycles of noctuid moths of the subfamily Plusiinae (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae) of the Palaearctic: Diversity and environmental control

Saulich A.K., Sokolova I.V., Musolin D.L.

Abstract

Analysis of data on seasonal development of noctuid moths of the subfamily Plusiinae shows that the control of their seasonal cycles is poorly understood. At the same time, the available data demonstrate considerable diversity of the seasonal patterns of Plusiinae species from different regions. The homodynamic type of seasonal development has been found in Trichoplusia ni and Ctenoplusia agnata of the tribe Argyrogrammatini and in Autographa gamma of the Plusiini. The seasonal development of these southern noctuids is accompanied by regular interzonal migrations of flying adults. When spreading northwards, they can produce a different number of annual generations, depending on the local climatic conditions, and establish temporary local populations whose longevity is limited by the available thermal resources. Adults of some species may fly back southwards, but it is more likely that individuals from temporary local populations cannot survive long winters and are destined to die. The heterodynamic type of seasonal cycles allows insects to survive in the regions with pronounced seasonality of climate. This type of seasonal development includes univoltine, multivoltine, and semivoltine seasonal cycles. Univoltine seasonal cycles with obligate diapause are known in Autographa buraetica, A. excelsa, and Syngrapha ain (Plusiini). Diapause provides tolerance to both low temperatures and a prolonged period when food is unavailable. In Syngrapha ottolenguii (Plusiini), the same result is achieved by inclusion of two photoperiodically controlled diapauses (winter larval and summer adult ones) into the life cycle. The semivoltine seasonal cycle has been reported in only one species of Plusiinae, namely Syngrapha devergens. Larvae of this moth overwinter twice before pupation. Multivoltinism is common in the tribe Plusiini. Depending on the latitude, different species of this tribe can produce up to four generations per year and overwinter as middle-instar larvae in the state of facultative diapause. However, the characteristics of diapause vary substantially between the species: diapause can be deep and stable (as in Diachrysia chrysitis, Plusiini) or unstable and thus not ensuring successful overwintering and steady population growth (as in Macdunnoughia confusa, Plusiini). The seasonal adaptations known in Plusiinae include migrations, winter and summer diapauses, photoperiodic control of larval growth rates, and seasonal polyphenism of larval body coloration. In general, seasonal adaptations of Plusiinae are determined by local environmental conditions and only loosely associated with the systematic position of particular taxa. Only the tribe Abrostolini stands apart from other taxa of Plusiinae: moths of this tribe differ not only in morphology but also in peculiarities of their seasonal development, because all the species of this tribe overwinter as pupae and their seasonal cycles are therefore different from those of the rest of Plusiinae.

Entomological Review. 2017;97(2):143-157
pages 143-157 views

Combined action of the entomopathogenic fungus Metarhizium robertsii and avermectins on the larvae of the colorado potato beetle Leptinotarsa decemlineata (Say) (Coleoptera, Chrysomelidae)

Akhanaev Y.B., Tomilova O.G., Yaroslavtseva O.N., Duisembekov B.A., Kryukov V.Y., Glupov V.V.

Abstract

Synergy between the entomopathogenic fungus Metarhizium robertsii J.F. Bisch., S.A. Rehner et Humber and a complex of natural avermectins was observed after combined treatment of the Leptinotarsa decemlineata (Say) larvae. This effect was also recorded at the larval stage most resistant to fungi (5 days after molting to the IV instar). Intoxication with avermectins led to a 2.7-fold decrease in food consumption and arrest of larval development. Synergy between the fungus and avermectins was revealed in field experiments conducted in the steppe zone of Western Siberia under strong fluctuations of temperature and humidity. In particular, the median lethal time (LT50) decreased 2.8-fold after combined treatment as compared to treatment with M. robertsii alone. The mechanisms of synergy and the prospects of using the combined treatment for Colorado potato beetle control are discussed.

Entomological Review. 2017;97(2):158-165
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Acridid communities (Orthoptera: Acrididae, pyrgomorphidae, pamphagidae, tetrigidae) of dominant plant associations in the Kopet Dagh foothills and plain

Kokanova E.O.

Abstract

Acridid communities of the dominant plant associations on the Kopet Dagh northern foothills and foothill plain are described for the first time. The structure of the communities is determined by the plant cover and soil conditions. Acridid communities of natural plant associations are characterized by high species and ecological diversity (at least 13 species and subspecies, 11 types of life forms), high abundance (about 1000 ind./h), and polydominant structure.

Entomological Review. 2017;97(2):166-170
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Structure of cephalic ganglia and their changes in the post-embryonic development of Calliphora vomitoria (L.) (Diptera, Calliphoridae)

Shirokov V.N., Chaika S.Y.

Abstract

The central nervous system of Calliphora vomitoria larvae is situated in the metathoracic and the first abdominal segments and is characterized by a high degree of oligomerization. It consists of only two ganglia: the supraoesophageal ganglion, or brain, and one large synganglion, a product of fusion of the suboesophageal ganglion, three thoracic, and all the abdominal ganglia. Weak development of the neuropil of the larval optic and olfactory lobes in the supraoesophageal ganglion is the result of a significant reduction of the head capsule and sensory organs in the larvae. The formation of the imaginal optic lobes begins at the III larval instar. The commissure of the future central body is present in the I instar larva, but formation of the imaginal structure of the central complex proceeds in the 3-day pupae and ends at the late pupal stage. The mushroom bodies are represented in the I instar larvae only by the pedunculi; the calyces can be distinguished in the II instar larvae but the final formation of their structure and the lobes of the imaginal type occurs at the pupal stage. The glomeruli in the deutocerebrum are also formed at a late stage of pupal development. Based on the degree of development of ganglia of the central nervous system, we can conclude that individual development of higher Diptera is characterized by deep de-embryonization.

Entomological Review. 2017;97(2):171-182
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Diversity and distribution of leaf mining insects on birches (Betula spp.) in Siberia

Kirichenko N.I., Petko V.M., Magnoux E., Lopez-Vaamonde C.

Abstract

The diversity and distribution of leaf mining insects developing on birches (Betula spp.) in Siberia were reviewed based on published records and our observations. Analysis of the literature revealed 52 species of leaf miners recorded as feeding on different Betula species in Siberia. Among them, three species were listed under different names and six species were erroneously recorded as birch consumers. Thus, the revised list of birch leaf miners contains 44 species. Five moth and four sawfly species are mentioned in the literature as pests of Betula. Four sawflies are known to be invasive in North America. Our collections comprised 25 species, including the micro-moth Stigmella continuella (Lepidoptera, Nepticulidae), a new species for Siberia found in Novosibirsk. Immature stages of 15 species were identified using DNA barcoding. Twenty species were recorded from several regions of Siberia for the first time. The dominant group is Lepidoptera (31 species), followed by Coleoptera (7), Hymenoptera (5), and Diptera (1). Two-thirds of all the known leaf miners develop exclusively on birches; the remaining species also colonize alders (Alnus, Betulaceae), some Rosaceae, Salicaceae, and Ulmaceae. In our observations, the majority of insects (96%) developed on B. pendula. About half of them were also observed on the East Asian birches B. dahurica, B. divaricata, B. costata, B. ermanii, and B. gmelinii; five species were found on the North American birches B. occidentalis and B. papyrifera. All the leaf mining species listed in our paper for Siberia also occur in Europe. The similarity between the miner faunas of these regions is discussed and it is warned about possible errors in diagnostics of the Siberian species using the keys and catalogues for the European fauna. The importance of DNA barcoding in the study of the local insect faunas of poorly explored regions is also emphasized.

Entomological Review. 2017;97(2):183-198
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New records of the heteroptera from the Middle Urals

Zinovyeva A.N., Vinokurov N.N., Ermakov A.I.

Abstract

71 heteropteran species belonging to 57 genera of 17 families are recorded for the first time for Sverdlovsk Province (the Middle Urals). Among them, the flower bug Temnostethus longirostris (Horváth, {dy1907}) is new to the Russian fauna; the families Microphysidae, Plataspidae, and Thyreocoridae are recorded for the first time from the Middle Urals.

Entomological Review. 2017;97(2):199-206
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New species of the bristletail family machilidae (insecta, microcoryphia) from Abkhazia

Kaplin V.G.

Abstract

Six new species are described from Abkhazia: Charimachilis abchasica sp. n., Lepismachilis abchasica sp. n., Trigoniophthalmus longitarsus sp. n., T. nematocerus sp. n., T. abchasicus sp. n., and T. subalpinus sp. n. Species of the genus Lepismachilis and the subgenus Trigoniophthalmus s. str. (T. longitarsus sp. n.) are described from the Caucasus for the first time. A key to the species of the genus Trigoniophthalmus from the Caucasus is given.

Entomological Review. 2017;97(2):207-229
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Notes on the fauna and taxonomy of the click beetles (Coleoptera, Elateridae) of Russia and neighboring countries

Prosvirov A.S.

Abstract

New data on the distribution and taxonomy of some species of click-beetles in Russia and adjacent countries are given. Several species are recorded for the first time for the following territories: Brachygonus bouyoni (Chass.), B. dubius (Plat. et Cate) and Zorochros lewisi (Schw.), for Russia; Sericus sulcipennis (Baudi), for Ukraine; Berninelsonius hyperboreus (Gyll.), Cidnopus parallelus (Motsch.), and Limonius poneli Les. et Mertl., for Kazakhstan. New interesting findings of Sericus sulcipennis and Selatosomus songoricus (Kr.) are reported. Comments on some erroneous faunistic records of several elaterids, including some species from Middle Asia, are made. The following new synonymy is established: Haterumelater fulvago (Marseul, {dy1868}) = Elater tauricola Gurjeva, 1957, syn. n. Notes on the variability of Selatosomus latus (F.) are given, and its conspecificity with S. corpulentus (Cand.) is confirmed. The external morphology and genitalia of the little known Selatosomus nanus Gur. are studied, and the systematic position of this species is discussed.

Entomological Review. 2017;97(2):230-246
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A new genus and a new species of the weevil subfamily Hyperinae (Coleoptera, Curculionidae) from Western Tien Shan, Uzbekistan

Korotyaev B.A.

Abstract

A new monotypical genus Basilypera gen. n. with the type species B. tatyanae sp. n. is described from Angren Plateau in Western Tien Shan, Uzbekistan.

Entomological Review. 2017;97(2):247-250
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Exoskeleton anomalies in taiga tick males from populations of the Asian part of Russia

Nikitin A.Y., Morozov I.M.

Abstract

Variation of the exoskeleton is described for 2630 males of the taiga tick Ixodes persulcatus Schulze, 1930 collected by flagging from vegetation in the Far Eastern, Siberian, and Ural Federal Districts of Russia. Two types of conscutum anomalies were found to be prevalent in all the samples. Exoskeleton anomalies were less frequently recorded in the Far Eastern Federal District than in the Siberian and Ural Federal Districts: 6.5 ± 1.05, 29.7 ± 1.03, and 25.8 ± 3.93%, respectively. The observed phenotypic variation seems to be unrelated to anthropogenic impact. In the meridional direction, the taiga tick samples with different frequencies of exoskeleton anomalies correspond to two races of the species.

Entomological Review. 2017;97(2):251-254
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History of the species range of ixodid ticks, vectors of pathogens with natural nidality (Acari, Ixodidae), as a prerequisite of their intraspecific biodiversity

Filippova N.A.

Abstract

Morphological, taxonomic, and some ecological aspects of intraspecific biodiversity of five ixodid species transmitting pathogens with natural nidality, with extensive ranges of different types are examined. Causal relations of ixodid intraspecific biodiversity with the origin of the species ranges are considered.

Entomological Review. 2017;97(2):255-275
pages 255-275 views