''Diorhabda sublineata'' is a
leaf beetle
The insects of the beetle family Chrysomelidae are commonly known as leaf beetles, and include over 37,000 (and probably at least 50,000) species in more than 2,500 genera, making up one of the largest and most commonly encountered of all beetle ...
known as the subtropical tamarisk beetle (STB). The species was
first described by
Hippolyte Lucas
Pierre-Hippolyte Lucas (17 January 1814 – 5 July 1899) was a French entomologist.
Lucas was an assistant-natural history, naturalist at the Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle. From 1839 to 1842 he studied fauna as part of the scientific com ...
in 1849. It feeds on tamarisk trees from Portugal, Spain and France to Morocco, Senegal, Algeria, Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen, and Iraq.
[Tracy and Robbins (2009) provide a detailed review of the distribution, biogeography, biology, and taxonomy of ''D. sublineata'' that is a general source for most of this article.] It is used in North America as a
biological pest control
Biological control or biocontrol is a method of controlling pests, such as insects, mites, weeds, and plant diseases, using other organisms. It relies on predation, parasitism, herbivory, or other natural mechanisms, but typically also invo ...
agent against saltcedar or tamarisk (''
Tamarix
The genus ''Tamarix'' (tamarisk, salt cedar, taray) is composed of about 50–60 species of flowering plants in the family Tamaricaceae, native to drier areas of Eurasia and Africa. The generic name originated in Latin and may refer to the Tam ...
'' spp.), an
invasive species
An invasive species otherwise known as an alien is an introduced organism that becomes overpopulated and harms its new environment. Although most introduced species are neutral or beneficial with respect to other species, invasive species ad ...
in arid and semi-arid ecosystems (where the STB and its closely related
sibling species
In biology, a species complex is a group of closely related organisms that are so similar in appearance and other features that the boundaries between them are often unclear. The taxa in the complex may be able to hybridize readily with each oth ...
also may be less accurately referred to as the 'saltcedar beetle', 'saltcedar leaf beetle', 'salt cedar leaf beetle', or 'tamarisk leaf beetle') (Tracy and Robbins 2009).
Taxonomy
The STB was first described from Annaba, Algeria as ''Galeruca sublineata'' H. Lucas (1849). Reiche and Saulcy (1858) erroneously placed ''G. sublineata'' as a junior synonym to the sibling species ''G. elongata'' Brullé (the
Mediterranean tamarisk beetle
''Diorhabda elongata'' is a species of leaf beetle known as the Mediterranean tamarisk beetle (MTB) which feeds on tamarisk trees from Portugal and Algeria east to southern Russia.Tracy and Robbins (2009) provide a detailed review of the distribu ...
, ''
Diorhabda elongata''). Weise (1893) created the genus ''Diorhabda'' and proposed the variety ''Diorhaba elongata'' var. ''sublineata'' (H. Lucas). Gressitt and Kimoto (1963) proposed the subspecies ''D. e. sublineata''. Tracy and Robbins (2009) restored ''D. sublineata'' (H. Lucas) as a valid species based on comparisons of the male and female genitalia, and provided illustrated taxonomic keys separating the STB from the four other sibling species of the ''D. elongata'' (Brullé) species group: ''
Diorhabda elongata'', ''
Diorhabda carinata'' (Faldermann), ''
Diorhabda carinulata
''Diorhabda carinulata'' is a species of leaf beetle known as the northern tamarisk beetle, which feeds on tamarisk trees from southern Russia and Iran to Mongolia and western China.Tracy and Robbins (2009) provide a detailed review of the distr ...
'' (Desbrochers), and ''
Diorhabda meridionalis'' Berti and Rapilly. In literature prior to 2009, ''D. sublineata'' was usually also referred to as ''D. elongata'', or as a subspecies or color variant of ''D. elongata''.
Host plants
Field collections in Spain and north Africa reveal that the STB feeds on at least five species of tamarisks, including ''Tamarix gallica'' which hybridizes with the widely invasive ''T. ramosisima'' in western North America. The STB can become numerous in Egypt and Senegal, but reports on defoliation of tamarisk are lacking (Tracy and Robbins 2009). Extensive laboratory host range studies verified that STB is a specialist feeder on tamarisks, feeding only on plants of the tamarisk family,
Tamaricaceae
The Tamaricaceae, the tamarisk family, are a family of plants native to drier areas of Europe, Asia, and Africa. It contains four genera: ''Tamarix'' (with 73 species), ''Reaumuria'' (25 species), ''Myricaria'' (13 species), and '' Myrtama'' (a s ...
. In laboratory and field cage studies, the STB will also feed and complete development on ''Frankenia'' shrubs, distant relatives of tamarisks in the same plant order
Caryophyllales
Caryophyllales ( ) is a diverse and heterogeneous order of flowering plants that includes the cacti, carnations, amaranths, ice plants, beets, and many carnivorous plants. Many members are succulent, having fleshy stems or leaves. The betalai ...
, but STB greatly prefer to lay eggs upon tamarisk (Milbrath and DeLoach 2006).
Life cycle
The STB overwinters as adults on the ground. Adults become active and begin feeding and mating in the early spring when tamarisk leaves are budding. Eggs are laid on tamarisk leaves and bark and hatch in about a week in warm weather. Three larval stages feed on tamarisk leaves for about two and a half weeks when they crawl to the ground and spend about 5 days as a "C"-shaped inactive prepupa before pupating about one week. Adults emerge from pupae to complete the life cycle in about 4–5 weeks in the summer. (For images of various life stages of a related species, see
''Diorhabda carinulata'' at Commons.) Five generations of STB occur through spring and fall in central Texas (Milbrath et al. 2007). Similar to the
northern tamarisk beetle, adults begin to enter diapause in the late summer and early fall, ceasing reproduction and feeding to build fat bodies before seeking a protected place to overwinter (Lewis et al. 2003). Larvae and adults are sensitive to shorter daylengths as the summer progresses that signal the coming of winter and induce diapause (Bean et al. in prep.). Robert Bartelt and Allard Cossé (USDA-ARS, Peoria, Illinois) found that male STB emit a putative aggregation
pheromone
A pheromone () is a secreted or excreted chemical factor that triggers a social response in members of the same species. Pheromones are chemicals capable of acting like hormones outside the body of the secreting individual, to affect the behavio ...
, similar to that found in ''Diorhabda carinulata'' (Cossé et al. 2005), that could serve to attract both males and females to certain tamarisk trees.
Biological control agent
Establishment of the STB as a biological control agent for tamarisk along the
Rio Grande
The Rio Grande ( and ), known in Mexico as the Río Bravo del Norte or simply the Río Bravo, is one of the principal rivers (along with the Colorado River) in the southwestern United States and in northern Mexico.
The length of the Rio G ...
in West Texas was confirmed in 2010 (Knutson 2010). Populations of STB from around 35°N latitude near Sfax, Tunisia were initially released by the USDA
Agricultural Research Service
The Agricultural Research Service (ARS) is the principal in-house research agency of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). ARS is one of four agencies in USDA's Research, Education and Economics mission area. ARS is charged with ext ...
in south Texas in 2005, but failed to establish. During the spring and summer of 2009, populations from around 34° latitude near Marith, Tunisia were released in south and west Texas (Tracy and Robbins 2009). These populations were showing promising signs of establishment on the Rio Grande, such as near Presidio, Texas at Alamito Marsh, by the fall of 2009 (MacCormack 2009). By August 2010, the STB had defoliated about 23 miles of tamarisk along the Rio Grande near Presidio, but it was causing concern by also defoliating the related but non-target athel tamarisk (''
Tamarix aphylla
''Tamarix aphylla'' is the largest known species of ''Tamarix'', with heights up to . The species has a variety of common names, including Athel tamarisk, Athel tree, and Athel pine. It is an evergreen tree, native across North, East, and Centra ...
'') trees, a taller species of tamarisk used around Presidio and neighboring Mexican communities for shade (Haines 2010). The STB may be better adapted to subtropical interior desert habitats and subtropical Mediterranean habitats than other Old World tamarisk beetles that are being introduced, such as the
Mediterranean tamarisk beetle
''Diorhabda elongata'' is a species of leaf beetle known as the Mediterranean tamarisk beetle (MTB) which feeds on tamarisk trees from Portugal and Algeria east to southern Russia.Tracy and Robbins (2009) provide a detailed review of the distribu ...
, ''
Diorhabda elongata''. The
northern tamarisk beetle, ''
Diorhabda carinulata
''Diorhabda carinulata'' is a species of leaf beetle known as the northern tamarisk beetle, which feeds on tamarisk trees from southern Russia and Iran to Mongolia and western China.Tracy and Robbins (2009) provide a detailed review of the distr ...
'', is probably better adapted to northern cold deserts in North America where it is widely established, and the
larger tamarisk beetle
''Diorhabda carinata'' is a species of leaf beetle known as the larger tamarisk beetle (larger tamarisk beetle) which feeds on tamarisk trees from Ukraine, eastern Turkey and Syria east to northwest China, Kyrgyzstan and Pakistan, extending as fa ...
, ''
Diorhabda carinata'', is probably better adapted to warm temperate grasslands and deserts (Tracy and Robbins 2009).
Tamarisk does not usually die from a single defoliation from tamarisk beetles, and it can resprout within several weeks of defoliation. Repeated defoliation of individual tamarisk trees can lead to severe dieback the next season and death of the tree within several years (DeLoach and Carruthers 2004). Tamarisk beetle defoliation over the course of at least one to several years can severely reduce the nonstructural carbohydrate reserves in the root crowns of tamarisk (Hudgeons et al. 2007). Biological control of tamarisk by the STB will not eradicate tamarisk but it has the potential to suppress tamarisk populations by 75–85%, after which both STB and tamarisk populations should reach equilibrium at lower levels (DeLoach and Carruthers 2004, Tracy and DeLoach 1999).
A primary objective of tamarisk biological control with the STB is to reduce competition by exotic tamarisk with a variety of native riparian flora, including trees (willows, cottonwoods, and honey mesquite), shrubs (wolfberry, saltbush, and baccharis), and grasses (alkali sacaton, saltgrass, and vinemesquite). Unlike expensive chemical and mechanical controls of tamarisk that often must be repeated, tamarisk biological control does not harm native flora and is self-sustaining in the environment. Recovery of native riparian grasses can be quite rapid under the once closed canopy of repeatedly defoliated tamarisk. However, tamarisk beetle defoliation can locally reduce nesting habitat for riparian woodland birds until native woodland flora are able to return. In some areas, tamarisk may be replaced by grasslands or shrublands, resulting in losses of riparian forest habitats for birds (Tracy and DeLoach 1999). Releases of tamarisk beetles in southern California, Arizona, and along the Rio Grande in western New Mexico, are currently delayed until concerns can be resolved regarding safety of tamarisk biological control to nesting habitats of the federally endangered southwestern willow flycatcher, ''
Empidonax traillii
The willow flycatcher (''Empidonax traillii'') is a small insect-eating, neotropical migrant bird of the tyrant flycatcher family. There are four subspecies of the willow flycatcher currently recognized, all of which breed in North America (inc ...
'' Audubon subspecies ''extimus'' Phillips, which will nest in tamarisk (see DeLoach et al. 2000, Dudley and DeLoach 2004).
References
* ; in prep.: Characteristics of diapause induction in populations of ''Diorhabda elongata'' collected from sites in Europe, Africa and Asia: Implications for tamarisk (''Tamarix'' spp) biocontrol in North America. For publication in ''Biological Control''.
* ; ; ; ; 2005: The aggregation pheromone of ''Diorhabda elongata'', a biological control agent of saltcedar (''Tamarix'' sp.): Identification of two behaviorally active components. ''Journal of Chemical Ecology'', 31(3): 657–670
PDF* ; 2004: Biological control programs for integrated invasive plant management. In: ''Proceedings of Weed Science Society of America Meeting, Kansas City, MO.
Weed Science Society of America
The Weed Science Society of America (WSSA) is a nonprofit, learned society focused on weed science. It was founded in 1956. The organization promotes research, education, and extension outreach, provides science-based information to the public and ...
(CD-ROM)''. 17 pp
PDF* ; ; ; ; 2000: Ecological interactions in the biological control of saltcedar (''Tamarix'' spp.) in the United States: toward a new understanding. In N. R. Spencer (ed.), ''Proceedings of the X International Symposium on Biological Control of Weeds, 4–14 July 1999, Montana State University.'' Bozeman, Montana, pp. 819–873
PDF* 2010: Tunisian beetle establishes on the Rio Grande river. ''Beetle-Mania; Biological Control of Saltcedar'', Spring, 2010: 2(1): 2
PDF* 2004: Saltcedar (''Tamarix'' spp.), endangered species, and biological weed control-can they mix? ''Weed Technology'', 18(5): 1542–1551.
tp://ftp.brc.tamus.edu/pub/outgoing/jtracy/Publications/Dudley%26DeLoach2004.pdf PDF* ; 1963: The Chrysomelidae (Coleopt.) of China and Korea, Part 2. ''Pacific Insects Monograph'', 1B: 301–1026.* 1849: Exploration scientifique de l'Algeria. ''Zoologie (Paris)'', 2: 542–546. (In French)
* 2010: Attack of the hungry salt cedar beetles. ''The International (Presidio, Presidio County, Texas)'', 26 August 2010: 24(3): 1,3
PDF* ; ; ; ; ; ; 2007: Defoliation by introduced ''Diorhabda elongata'' leaf beetles (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) reduces carbohydrate reserves and regrowth of ''Tamarix'' (Tamaricaceae). ''Biological Control'', 43: 213–221
PDF* ; ; ; ; 2003: Biology of ''Diorhabda elongata deserticola'' (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae), an Asian leaf beetle for biological control of saltcedars (''Tamarix'' spp.) in the United States. ''Biological Control'', 27: 101–116
PDF* 2009: Tiny bugs sent to devour trees that are big pests. ''San Antonio Express-News'', 3 November 2009: 1,6
PDF
* ; 2006: Host specificity of different populations of the leaf beetle ''Diorhabda elongata'' (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae), a biological control agent of saltcedar (''Tamarix'' spp.). ''Biological Control'', 36: 32–48
PDF
* ; ; ; 2007: Overwintering survival, phenology, voltinism, and reproduction among different populations of the leaf beetle ''Diorhabda elongata'' (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae). ''Environmental Entomology'', 36(6): 1356–1364
PDF
* ; 1858: Espèces nouvelles ou peu connues de Colèoptères, recueillies par M.F. de Saulcy, member de l’Institute, dans son voyage en Orient, et dècrites par M.M. L. Reiche et Fèlicien de Saulcy. ''Annales de la Société Entomologique de France, Sér.'', 3, 6: 5–60. (In French)
* ; 1999: Biological control of saltcedar in the United States: Progress and projected ecological effects. In: Bell, C.E. (Ed.), ''Arundo and Saltcedar: The Deadly Duo, Proceedings of the Arundo and Saltcedar Workshop, 17 June 1998. Ontario, California'', 111–154
PDF
* ; 2009: Taxonomic revision and biogeography of the ''Tamarix''-feeding ''Diorhabda elongata'' (Brullé, 1832) species group (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae: Galerucinae: Galerucini) and analysis of their potential in biological control of Tamarisk. ''Zootaxa'', 2101: 1–152
PDF
* 1893: Chrysomelidae. In: Erichson, W. (ED.), ''Naturgeschichte der Insecten Deutschlands'', 61 (73): 961–1161.
Notes
External links
*
*
* Texas Agri-Life Extension Leaflet; ''Biological Control of Saltcedar'' (Tunisia source population, not mentioned, is ''D. sublineata'')
PDF* Texas Agri-Life Extension Newsletter; ''Beetle-Mania; Biological Control of Saltcedar in Texas, Volume 1, No. 2, Summer 2009'
PDF* Texas Agri-Life Research and Extension Program; ''Biological Control of Saltcedar: Using Natural Enemies to Combat an Invasive Weed Competing with Texas' Water Resources'' (Tunisia source population, not mentioned, is ''D. sublineata'')
PDF* USDA Agricultural Research Service and Texas Agri-Life Research and Extension Service Report of Information to the Public; ''Progress on Biological Control of Saltcedar in the Western U.S.: Emphasis -- Texas 2004-2009.'
PDF
{{Taxonbar , from=Q5279481
Galerucinae
Biological pest control beetles
Insects used for control of invasive plants
Invertebrates of Egypt
Taxa named by Hippolyte Lucas