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A Comparative Study of the Soil Conditions favoured by certain Melolonthid and Tenebrioned Pests of Tobacco in Southern Rhodesia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

Extract

An investigation was made to determine the factors governing the distribution pattern of the larvae of certain species of Melolonthids and Tenebrionids; these are known to be serious pests of tobacco plants in Southern Rhodesia.

Observations were made on mixed populations of the white grubs, larvae of Anomala exitialis Pér. and Schizonycha profuga Pér. (MELOLONTHINAE), on the one hand, and on those of the false wireworms, larvae of Psammodes similis Pér. and P. scrobicollis (Fhs.) (TENEBRIONIDAE), on the other.

It was found that the habitats favoured by white grubs had a higher clay, silt and organic matter content than those favoured by false wireworms. This was indicated by the darker brown colour of the soil; the clay ratio of the soils of the two types of habitat was as 1 to 0·725 and the nitrogen ratio as 1 to 0·524, respectively.

Heavy infestations of tobacco fields are associated with 60,000 white grubs or 1,500 false wireworms per acre. The white grubs complete their life-cycle in one year, the larvae obtaining the food requirements necessary for their develop ment in the 4 to 5 months of the wet season. The false wireworms have a two-year life-cycle, the active feeding stages of the larvae being spread over 18 to 21 months, comprising both wet and dry seasons.

The infestations by the two classes of insect do not overlap in space to any great extent but are governed by the nature of the soil, the white grubs favouring areas in which the soil has a higher nutrient value and the false wireworms areas where the soil is poorer.

Reference is made to parasitisation of white-grub larvae in two areas, where the soil had an abnormally high nitrogen content, by a species of Tiphia in the one area and by entomogenous fungi in the other.

False wireworms have not been found to be similarly attacked under field conditions.

Type
Research Paper
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1959

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References

Bünzli, G. H. & Büttiker, W. W. (1959). Fungous diseases of lamellicorn larvae in Southern Rhodesia.—Bull. ent. Res. 50 pp. 8996.CrossRefGoogle Scholar