Oviposition and Diapause Behavior in Colorado Potato Beetle (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) Populations from East Central Minnesota and the Valley of the Red River of the North
Abstract
Abstract Oviposition and diapause behavior were compared among populations of Colorado potato beetle, Leptinotarsa decemlineata (Say), from six locations in 1994 and 1995. Locations ranged from Winnipeg, Manitoba (49° 49′ N), to Rosemount in east central Minnesota (44° 44′ N). Newly emerged first summer generation adults were held in field cages at each location for 7–14 d, then observed for 7 d in the laboratory for frequency of oviposition and frequency of burrowing behavior associated with diapause. Females from the Red River Valley seldom oviposited and although frequency of burrowing varied among locations it was independent of field and laboratory conditions. Under long-day laboratory conditions, 9–15% of females from east central Minnesota oviposited with frequency dependent on photoperiod experienced in the field, the critical photoperiod was 15.8 h. Under long-day laboratory conditions, 18–52% of beetles from east central Minnesota burrowed with frequency dependent on cumulative temperatures experienced in the field. Cool conditions were associated with higher frequencies of burrowing. Beetles from Rosemount exhibited identical responses under short-day and long-day laboratory conditions. In contrast, under short-day conditions, beetles from Big Lake did not oviposit and frequency of burrowing was not dependent on field conditions. We concluded that there is local geographic variation in Colorado potato beetle populations not only between the Red River Valley and east central Minnesota, but also among the different locations within these two areas.
Local Knowledge Graph (3 entities)
Related Works
Items connected by shared entities, co-authorship, citations, or semantic similarity.
Control of Colorado Potato Beetle in the Red River Valley, Grand Forks, ND, 1994
Control of Colorado Potato Beetle with Natural Product Insecticides, Grand Forks, 1990
Nanda-Hamner Curves Show Huge Latitudinal Variation but No Circadian Components in <i> Drosophila Montana </i> Photoperiodism
An examination of synchrony between insect emergence and flowering in Rocky Mountain meadows.
Data from: Two-year bee, or not two-year bee? How voltinism is affected by temperature and season length in a high-elevation solitary bee
Data for 'Weak latitudinal gradients in insect herbivory for dominant rangeland grasses of North America'
Early Control of Alfalfa Weevil
Colorado's Natural Heritage: Rare and Imperiled Animals, Plants, and Plant Communities
“Corn Belt Wilts as Drought Persists”- 2000
Cited 19 times
References (21)
21 references to works outside the Knowledge Hub
