14 research outputs found
Early invaders - Farmers, the granary weevil and other uninvited guests in the Neolithic
The Neolithic and the spread of agriculture saw several introductions of insect species associated with the environments and activities of the first farmers. Fossil insect research from the Neolithic lake settlement of Dispilio in Macedonia, northern Greece, provides evidence for the early European introduction of a flightless weevil, the granary weevil, Sitophilus granarius, which has since become cosmopolitan and one of the most important pests of stored cereals. The records of the granary weevil from the Middle Neolithic in northern Greece illuminate the significance of surplus storage for the spread of agriculture. The granary weevil and the house fly, Musca domestica were also introduced in the Neolithic of central Europe, with the expansion of Linear Band Keramik (LBK) culture groups. This paper reviews Neolithic insect introductions in Europe, including storage pests, discusses their distribution during different periods and the reasons behind the trends observed. Storage farming may be differentiated from pastoral farming on the basis of insect introductions arriving with incoming agricultural groups
Unusual behavior of oviposition and development of Sitophilus zeamais (Coleoptera: Curculionidae) in peach and apple fruits
Behavioral interactions between Sitophilus zeamais and Tribolium castaneum: the first colonizer matters
There is lack of knowledge on the interactions between kernel aging and the simultaneous infestation by insects, both internal and external feeders. In the present paper, we report results obtained in arena-olfactometer assays in which we studied possible preference and behavioral relationships between the primary colonizer Sitophilus zeamais Motschulsky (Coleoptera: Curculionidae) and the secondary colonizer Tribolium castaneum (Herbst) (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae). For this purpose, three experiments were conducted. The experiment I examined the response of S. zeamais adults at the fresh or stored kernels damaged by T. castaneum adults, compared to the control and the response of T. castaneum adults at the fresh or stored kernels damaged by S. zeamais adults, compared to the control. The experiment II examined the response of S. zeamais adults at the intact fresh or stored kernels conditioned at different conditioning intervals (1, 7, and 14 days) with kernels damaged by T. castaneum, compared to the control and the response of T. castaneum adults at the intact fresh or stored kernels conditioned at different conditioning intervals (1, 7 and 14 days) with kernels damaged by S. zeamais, compared to the control. The experiment III examined the response of S. zeamais adults at kernels contaminated at different contamination intervals by larvae or adults of T. castaneum, and the response of T. castaneum adults at kernels contaminated by larvae or adults of S. zeamais. In experiment I, significantly more S. zeamais adults were found in traps containing fresh or stored kernels damaged by T. castaneum than in the controls. Significantly more T. castaneum adults were found in traps containing fresh or stored kernels damaged by S. zeamais than in the controls. In experiment II, at 7 days of conditioning, significantly more adults of S. zeamais were captured in the traps used as control than in the traps containing either fresh conditioned kernels or stored conditioned kernels. At 1 and 14 days of conditioning, significantly more adults of T. castaneum were captured in the traps that contained stored conditioned kernels damaged by S. zeamais than in the controls. In experiment III, at 1, 7, and 14 days of contamination, significantly more adults of S. zeamais were captured in traps with kernels contaminated by larvae of T. castaneum or in the traps with kernels contaminated by adult females of T. castaneum than in the controls. Significantly more S. zeamais adults were found in traps containing kernels contaminated by T. castaneum adult males than in control kernels at the 7 and 14 days of contamination. At 1 day of contamination, significantly more adults of T. castaneum were captured in traps with kernels contaminated by larvae of S. zeamais than in the controls. The results of the present study suggest that kernels which were previously infested by S. zeamais were more prone to be selected by T. castaneum adults and kernels that were previously infested by T. castaneum were more prone to be selected by S. zeamais. Thus, the first colonizer can serve as the primary colonizer of stored grains, even if this first colonizer cannot infest sound kernels. The kernel age was also a crucial issue for the attraction of S. zeamais and T. castaneum. Stored kernels exhibited a stronger influence on the attraction of T. castaneum than for S. zeamais
Effects of Cleistopholis patens (Benth) extracts on cowpea seed beetle, Callosobruchus maculatus (Fab.) (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) infesting cowpea seeds in storage
Biological Strategies of Dermestes maculatus DeGeer (Coleoptera: Dermestidae) at Larval Stages in Different Temperatures
Does natal habitat preference modulate cereal kernel preferences in the rice weevil?
The influence of larval diet source in Sitophilus oryzae (L.), a primary grain feeder, on the choice of a new cereal host by young adult was investigated through a multiple choice comparative bioassay. For this purpose, virgin male and female adults, which had been reared as immatures in different grain commodities, were monitored according to their food preference in cylindrical arenas containing whole kernels of maize, rice, barley and wheat. The adults showed a clear individual preference for maize kernels, regardless of the previous food experience, sex and also the interval on which the adults are exposed to food. Males were much more mobile than females and visited more vigorously different commodities before the final choice. Female response was found to be related with male response to specific food sources. Hence, our results indicate that there was no natal habitat preference induction, since maize was, in most cases, the final commodity choice
