Publication | Open Access
Biology of Parasitoids (Hymenoptera) Attacking <I>Dasineura oxycoccana</I> and <I>Prodiplosis vaccinii</I> (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) in Cultivated Blueberries
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2006
Year
Insect ConservationGeneticsEntomologyPlant PathologyBlueberry Gall MidgeHost SpecificityArthropod TaxonomyDasineura OxycoccanaPublic HealthMidge PrepupaeParasitologyCultivated BlueberriesProdiplosis VacciniiPest ManagementTip MidgeBiologyNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyPest Control
The blueberry gall midge, Dasineura oxycoccana (Johnson), and blueberry tip midge, Prodiplosis vaccinii (Felt) (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae), are recurring cecidomyiid pests of cultivated blueberries in the southern United States and Mediterranean Europe. Insecticides can give short-term control, but overlap in parasitoid phenologies indicates the potential for natural control of midge populations. Using a combination of laboratory rearing and mitochondrial DNA analysis of field samples, we identified five species of solitary endoparasitoids that killed 30–40% of midges. These species include at least three undescribed platygastrids in the genera Synopeas, Platygaster, and Inostemma. An undescribed prepupal idiobiont, Aprostocetus sp. (Eulophidae: Tetrastichinae) was the only midge parasitoid that was consistently active when rabbiteye blueberries, Vaccinium ashei Reade, were in flower. Six percent of midge prepupae, half of which already contained platygastrid larvae, were parasitized by Aprostocetus.
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