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أنواع البق الدقيقى املنتشرة على العوائل النباتية املختلفة في مصر Types of mealybugs deployed on different plant hosts in Egypt Presented by, Mohamed Abd El Wanis Outline of presentation Introduction )1(Classification (2)What do mealybugs look like? (3)Mode of transport The economic importance of mealybugs Life cycle Case study Families of mealybugs LET’S GO TO CLASSIFICAION PHYLUM Arthropoda CLASS Insect ORDER Hemiptera - True Bugs, Cicadas, Hoppers, Aphids and Allies SUBORDER Sternorrhyncha (12500 species) SUPERFAMILY Coccoidea - Scales and Mealybugs )approx. 8000 species( FAMILY(1) Pseudococcidae Pseudococcus citri (Risso) Pseudococcus sacchari (Ckli) Phenococcus hirsutus (Green) Planococcus longispinus (Targioni) Ferrisia vergata )Cockerell) FAMILY(2) Monophlebidae Icerya purchasi (Mask) Icerya aegyptiaca (Douglas) Icerya seychellarum (Westwood) FAMILY(3) Ortheziidae Orthezia insignis ( Browne ) Orthezia urticae (Linnaeus) Phylogeny and higher classification of the scale insects (Hemiptera: Sternorrhyncha: Coccoidea)* P.J. GULLAN AND L.G. COOK 1 2 Department of Entomology, University of California, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, U.S.A. E-mail: [email protected] 2School of Integrative Biology, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland 4072, Australia. Email: [email protected] 1 *In: Zhang, Z.-Q. & Shear, W.A. (Eds) (2007) Linnaeus Tercentenary: Progress in Invertebrate Taxonomy. Zootaxa, The Coccoidea is one of the four superfamilies of suborder Sternorrhyncha within the Hemiptera (Schaefer, 1996; Bourgoin & Campbell, 2002; Gullan & Martin, 2003). 66 Accepted by C. Hodgson: 11 Jan. 2010; published: 16 Mar. 2010 ISSN 1175-5326 (print edition) Copyright © 2010 · Magnolia Press ISSN 1175-5334 (online edition) Zootaxa 2400: 66–68 (2010) www.mapress.com/zootaxa/ Family-group names proposed in the family Pseudococcidae (Hemiptera: Sternorrhyncha: Coccoidea) D.J. WILLIAMS & P.J. GULLAN 1 2,3 Department of Entomology, The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, U.K 1 Subfamily Pseudococcinae Antonina Signoret, 1875 Dysmicoccus Ferris, 1950 Humococcus Ferris, 1953 Mirococcopsis Borchsenius, 1948 Paraputo Laing, 1929 Planococcus Ferris, 1950 Pseudococcus Westwood, 1840 Subfamily Phenacoccinae Geococcus Green, 1902 Heterococcus Ferris,1923 Phenacoccus Cockerell, 1893 Rhizoecus Künckel d’Herculais, 1878 Ripersiella Tinsley, 1899 Ritsemia Lichtenstein, 1879 Xenococcus Silvestri, 1924 (Chun et all.2000) These small insects are 1- 4 millimeters long. The females are covered with a white, cottony or mealy wax secretion and look like tiny cotton balls on plants, taking away a plant’s aesthetic value. They’ve got an oval body outline, and functional legs allow them to be mobile in their immature stage. Some mealybugs are more ornate than others, having filaments around the edge of their bodies or even “tails.” Immature males and females look similar, but they’re very different as adults: The adult male looks like a gnat with one pair of wings. (Only the adult males fly.) Female crawlers go though four developmental stages until they reach maturity. The male goes through five The mealybug is found on stems, leaves, buds, fruit and roots of many plants Crawlers crawl from an infected to healthy plant. Small crawlers are readily transported by wind, rain, birds, clothing on new plants The waxy coating facilitates passive transport of the insect by their sticking/clinging to equipments, animals or people moving during field operations. Long-distance movement is through transport of infested cotton sticks or seed cotton. Crawlers are also carried through irrigated water, when the mealy bug infested plants are thrown in water channel. Ants, attracted by the honeydew, carry crawlers of mealy bugs from plant to plant. The economic importance of mealybugs (Williams.2000) Mealybugs rarely attack annuals but are important pests on perennials. They attack roots, stems and leaves. Woody trees, shrubs and , grasses are the most important plants infested. Mealybugs prefer plants with a high nitrogen content.Trees grown in the shade and those that received nitrogenous fertiliser have been observed to have significantly heavier populations of mealybugs. Nutritional differences may explain why some plants are infected with mealybugs while other plants remain free from attack. Even differences in the chemical composition between parts of any one plant could affect the choice of feeding site. The economic importance of mealybugs (Kosztarab.1990) found that the damage caused by scale insects is not primarily due to plant-sap ingestion itself but more often to the toxic substances in the saliva which are injected into the plant tissue during the feeding process. Enzymatic activity then causes a reaction by the host plant that is manifested in different ways (a) On leaves chlorosis (normally appears as a general or spottily yellowing) (b) On fruits reddish discoloration encircles the insects while underneath the scale the surface remains green (c) Shoot and leaf petiol deformation (d) Twig and branches deformations usually as depressions on the barks (e) Shallow often inconspicuous open-top pit galls or blister-like galls are produced (f) Rarely pouch-like galls are produced on host twigs and leaves (g) A witches-broom type of deformation caused (h) Necrosis of cambial tissues and stopping of the sap transportation in the phloem is caused in cases of heavy infestation (i) Abortion of fruits due to feeding on the fruit pedicel is often observed (j)Yellowish-brown discoloration as well as depression and cracking of the fruit skin has been noted on orange fruits (k) Distortion of young fruits like vine is often indicated (L) produce honeydew and infested plants may also exhibit sooty mold fungi ON ROOT On leaves ON BRANCHES On fruits Life cycle Adult male Life cycle Adult female Eggs hatch in 3 to 9 days into nymphs called (crawlers) ovisac 1-Scale insects are notorious pests on perennial plants as well as fruit and nut trees. These pests belong to super family Coccoidae that contained twelve families; three of them belong to genus Icerya: I. aegyptiaca (Douglas), I. Purchasi Maskell and I. seychellarum (Westwood). (Ezzat et all,1986) 2- the family Margarodidae is represented by six species of the mealybug (Mohammad ,1998) 3- the family Diaspididae (the armored scales) represents the largest family of the super family belonging to which includes major pests in Egypt. 72 species were listed of this family in Egypt. The second largest family is Pseudococcidae that have 47 species of the mealybug belong to 28 genera )Ghabbour et all,1996) 4-studied the distribution of the margarodid I.seychellarum on apple trees where 61.9% of the margarodid where concentrated old branches,4.2% on old leaves and 2.2% on new Leaves (Mangoud,2000) 5- Scale insects were present in different parts of the world and they fall within 23 families. Out of them 12 families are found in Egypt and the most important families were: the armored scale insects (Diaspididae), the mealybugs (Morgarodidae and Pseudococcidae) and the soft scales (Coccidae). All important families contain dangerous species that attack different important economic crops in Egypt (Abd-Rabou, 2003 (John.1990) Mealy bug provide ants with their sugary secretion (honeydew) as food and in retur ants help in spreading of mealy bug Ants provide protection to mealy bug from predatory ladybird beetles, parasites and other natural enemies . Ants keep mealy bug colony clean from detritus that accumulate in the secreted honeydew, which may be harmful to the colony PR . H: A REOVCIE W A WNAITISANA N E P DN T . S OIMNEOAL P P LOEC M. ( 2 0 0 3 ) 3 6 W:9 – 2 8 9 E A L Y B U G I L T A Review of the Association of Ants with Mealybug Wilt Disease of Pineapple Gary C. Jahn , John W. Beardsley , and Hector González-Hernández 1 2 Department of Entomology, University of Hawaii, Honolulu, Hawaii 96822 USA. 1Current address: International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), DAPO 7777, Metro Manila, Philippines. 2Passed away on February 5, 2001. 3Current address: Instituto de Fitosanidad, Colegio de Postgraduados, Montecillo, Texcoco, Edo. De México 56230 Mexico 1, 2, 3 3 Ants Associated with Mealybug Wilt Disease of Pineapple In the 1920s, pineapple growers in Hawaii noticed that ants were common in the wilted areas of pineapple fields. They assumed that ants were causing wilt disease and took mea- sures to destroy and prevent ant infestations. Based on observations, rather than experimen- tation, Illingworth (1926a,b) concluded that ants did not cause wilt disease. He recognized the importance of mealybugs as pineapple pests and that ants appeared to benefit mealy- bugs by deterring natural enemies, but thought that, overall, the predatory nature of ants made them beneficial to pineapple growers. Therefore, he did not recommend ant control. A series of experiments led him to change his mind. Illingworth (1931) demonstrated that ants themselves did not cause wilt disease, but that mealybugs did. He noted that without ants, the natural enemies already present in the field might keep mealybugs under control. In light of this, he suggested that poisoning ants might be an effective means of preventing mealybug wilt disease of pineapple. Since then, mealybug wilt disease has been controlled primarily through ant control. Experiments confirm that ant control reduces mealybug popu- lations and prevents mealybug wilt disease (Beardsley et al. 1982; Carter 1933a, 1960; GonzálezHernández et al. 1999a,b; Jahn 1990). While a number of ant species have been found in Hawaiian pineapple fields, the most pestiferous species in pineapple are Pheidole megacephala (Fabricius), Solenopsis geminata (Fabricius), and Linepithema humile (Mayr). P. megacephala, the big-headed ant, is the dominant ant species below 600 m elevation, where most Hawaiian pineapple fields are located (Fluker & Beardsley 1970, Reimer et al. 1990a). P. megacephala was already com- mon on the Hawaiian island of Oahu in 1879 (Blackburn and Kirby 1880). The ants most commonly associated with pineapple mealybugs throughout the world are species of Pheidole and Solenopsis (Table 1). The Role of Ants in Mealybug Wilt Disease of Pineapple Phillips (1934) hypothesized that mealybugs were associated with ants in pineapple fields because: 1) ants protected mealybugs from natural enemies; 2) ants protected mealybugs from adverse weather by building earthen shelters around them and moving them to pro- tected places; 3) ants transported mealybugs from plant to plant between and within fields, thus facilitating mealybug dispersal; 4) ants stimulated increased feeding by mealybugs; and 5) ants removed honeydew from mealybugs, thereby preventing fungi from attacking mealybugs. Rohrbach et al. (1988) hypothesized that honeydew feeding by ants could ben- efit mealybugs by preventing the accumulation of honeydew on the mealybugs themselves. Presumably, immature mealybugs get stuck in honeydew and die if ants do not remove it. Protection from natural enemies. Saying that ants “protect” mealybugs from natural enemies does not necessarily mean that ants are attacking the natural enemies to save hon- eydew as a food resource. Possibly, ants are consuming the natural enemies as food and mealybugs benefit by happenstance (Jahn and Beardsley 1994). There are numerous ex- amples of ants deterring the predators and parasites of scales, mealybugs, and aphids (e.g., Van der Goot 1916; Way 1954, 1963; Wimp and Whitham 2001). For instance, in the ab- sence of Argentine ants, L. humile, parasites suppress populations of lecaniine scale insects (Bartlett 1961). Ants also reduce parasitism of the cassava mealybug, Phenacoccus manihoti MatileFerrero (Cudjoe et al. 1993). Larval coccinellids eliminate green scales (Coccus viridis (Green)) from coffee trees in Hawaii unless P. megacephala is present (Reimer et al. 1993). Green scales in Sri Lanka also cannot survive without ants (Oecophylla smaragdina Fabricius), but the ants apparently do not reduce parasite and predator attacks on the scales (Bess 1958). A wide variety of natural enemies prey on pineapple mealybugs (Table 2). Ants protect mealybugs from their natural enemies (GonzálezHernández et al. 1999a,b). In laboratory experiments with coccinellids, D. neobrevipes did not thrive on pineapples, unless ants were present (Illingworth 1931). In the absence of natural enemies, laboratory populations of D. neobrevipes were not significantly different on pineapples with and without ants (Jahn and Beardsley 1996). In the field, P. megacephala had a positive association with D. neobrevipes and a negative association with the predators of mealybugs (Jahn and Beardsley Conclusions The available evidence suggests that mealybug wilt disease of pineapple is a viral disease, though it is possible that wilt is a toxemia induced by a virus that affects the mealybug itself. The disease is managed primarily by controlling ants. In the absence of ants, natural enemies suppress mealybug populations on pineapple. Chemical control of ants allows bio- logical control of mealybugs to occur. Table 1. Ants associated with pineapple mealybugs in various parts of the world. References Ants Region Carter 1939 Pheidole sp. Australia Brachymyrmex admotus Mayr, Camponotus cingulatus Mayr, Crematogaster quadriformis Roger, Odontomachus haematoda (L.), Paratrechina fulva Mayr, Prenolepis sp., Solenopsis saevissima (F. Smith)1, Wasmannia auropunctata (Rogers) Brazil de Bartoli 1982, Carter 1949 Nickel 1979 Tapinoma melanocephalum (Fabricius) Cambodia Carter 1935 Solenopsis sp. Central America Cuba Ministerio de Agricultura 1989 Camponotus sp., Pheidole sp., Solenopsis sp. Cuba Carter 1939, 1942 Pheidole megacephala (Fabricius) Fiji Duodo and Thompson 1992 Araucomyrmex sp., Solenopsis sp.1 Guyana Beardsley et al. 1982; Carter 1932, 1967; Fluker and Beardsley 1970; Phillips 1934; Jahn 1992a Linepithema humile (Mayr), Ochetellus glaber (Mayr), Pheidole megacephala1, Hawaii, U.S.A. Plagiolepis alluaudi Forel, Paratrechina bourbonica Forel, Paratrechina longicornis (Latreille), Solenopsis geminata Jordon, Tapinoma melanocephalum, Tetramorium bicarinatum (Nylander), Tetramorium simillimum (Smith) Carter 1935 Solenopsis sp. Jamaica Carter 1939 Pheidole sp. Kenya Carter 1939 Solenopsis geminata (Fabricius) Malaysia Zarate 1987, Garcia 1987 Brachymyrmex sp., Monomorium sp., Pheidole sp., Solenopsis sp. Mexico Serrano 1934 Pheidole megacephala; Solenopsis geminata Philippines Table 1. Ants associated with mealybugs in various parts of the world References Ants Region Brachymyrmex heeri var. obscurior Forel, Cardiocondyla emeryi Forel, Puerto Rico Crematogaster steiheili Forel, Monomorium floricola (Jerdon), Monomorium carbonarium ,ebenimum Forel, Paratrechina sp., Paratrechina fulva (Mayr), Paratrechina longicornis, Pheidole megacephala, Solenopsis sp., Solenopsis geminata, Plank and Smith 1940 Petty 1985, 1990 Tapinoma melanocephalum, Tetramorium sp., Wasmannia auropunctata South Africa Pheidole megacephala, Technomyrmex albipes (Fr. Smith) Réal 1959 Camponotus sp., Crematogaster sp., and Pheidole sp. North Africa Families of mealybugs (Moursi et all.2009) mealybugs belong to more than family most prominent in Egypt, three families Fam / Pseudococcidae عائلة البق الدقيقى SPECIES Pseudococcus citri Pseudococcus sacchari Phenococcus hirsutus Planococcus longispinus Ferrisia vergata Pseudococcus citri (Risso) بق الموالح الدقيق Saccharicoccus sacchari (Ckli( بق القصب الدقيقى Phenococcus hirsutus (Green) بق الهبسكس الدقيقى Planococcus longispinus (Targioni) البق ذو الذيل الطويل Ferrisia virgata )Cockerell) البق الدقيقى األبيض Fam / Monophlebidae SPECIES Icerya purchasi (Mask) Icerya aegyptiaca (Douglas) Icerya seychellarum (Westwood) البق الدقيقى اإلسترالى )Icerya purchasi (Mask Icerya aegyptiaca (Douglas) البق الدقيقى المصرى )عائلة اإلعالم القشرية (الصوب الزجاجية Ortheziidae SPECIES Orthezia insignis ( Browne ) Orthezia urticae (Linnaeus) QUESTIONS??