21 research outputs found
Corymbia Species and Hybrids: Chemical and Physical Foliar Attributes and Implications for Herbivory
How do soil nutrients affect within-plant patterns of herbivory in seedlings of Eucalyptus nitens?
Effects of non-native Spartina patens on plant and sediment organic matter carbon incorporation into the local invertebrate community
Plant species diversity for sustainable management of crop pests and diseases in agroecosystems: a review
Primeiro registro do besouro-amarelo-do-eucalipto em plantio de eucalipto no Estado do Acre
Day-degree development and phenology modelling of the immature stages of Chrysophtharta agricola (Chapuis) (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae), a pest of eucalypt plantations
Behavioral plasticity of a grass-feeding caterpillar in response to spiny- or smooth-edged leaf blades
Native Phloem and Wood Borers in Australian Mediterranean Forest Trees
Native Mediterranean forests in Australia are dominated by two tree genera, Eucalyptus and Acacia, while Pinus and Eucalyptus dominate plantation forestry. In native forests, there is a high diversity of phloem and wood borers across several families in the Coleoptera and Lepidoptera. In the Coleoptera, cerambycid beetles (Cerambycidae), jewel beetles (Buprestidae), bark, ambrosia and pinhole beetles (Curculionidae) and pinworms (Lymexelidae) are some of the most commonly found beetles attacking eucalypts and acacias. In the Lepidoptera, wood moths (Cossidae), ghost moths (Hepialidae) and borers in the Xyloryctidae (subfamily Xyloryctinae) are most common. In contrast to native forests, there is a much more limited range of native insects present in Australian plantations, particularly in exotic Pinus spp. plantations, although eucalypt plantations do share some borers in common with native forests. This chapter reviews the importance of these borers in Australian forests primarily from an economic perspective (i.e. those species that cause damage to commercial tree species) and highlights a paucity of native forest species that commonly kill trees relative to the large scales regularly seen in North America and Europe