Cydalima perspectalis

Cydalima perspectalis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Lepidoptera
Family: Crambidae
Genus: Cydalima
Species: C. perspectalis
Binomial name
Cydalima perspectalis
(Walker, 1859)
Synonyms
  • Phakellura perspectalis Walker, 1859
  • Glyphodes perspectalis
  • Diaphania perspectalis
  • Palpita perspectalis
  • Neoglyphodes perspectalis
  • Glyphodes albifuscalis Hampson, 1899
  • Phacellura advenalis Lederer, 1863

Cydalima perspectalis or the box tree moth is a species of moth of the family Crambidae. It is native to eastern Asia (Japan, China, Taiwan, Korea, the Russian Far East and India).[1] It is an introduced species in Europe, first recorded in Germany in 2006, and subsequently in Switzerland and the Netherlands in 2007, Great Britain in 2008, France and Austria in 2009,[2][3][4][5] Hungary in 2011,[6] Romania[7] and Turkey.[8] It is also known from Slovakia, Belgium[9] and Croatia.[10] During the preparation to the 2014 Olympics in 2012 it was introduced from Italy to Sochi with the planting stock of Buxus sempervirens and in the next year it began to defoliate Buxus colchica in large quantities.[11] In 2013 it was found new to Denmark at several sites in the island of Sjælland.

Larva
Pupa
Brown color variant

Biology

first description WALKER 1859

The species was first described by Walker, 1859.

Description

Eggs are 1 mm in diameter, located under green unattacked leaves. First larvae just coming out from the egg are about 1–2 mm long. Larvae development brings them in four weeks to about 35–40 mm at maximum. There is some shrinkage at the beginning of the nymphosis, pupae are 25–30 mm long, first green with browning longitudinal lines, then more and more brownish. The wingspan of the adult form is 40–45 mm. Two variants are observed, the most common one is mostly white while the other is most entirely light brown.

Cycle

There are two or three generations per year with adults on the wing from April/May to September.. In the warmest parts of the European importation area, with cold conditions coming late in the year, there might be sometimes four generations per years. The species overwinters as a juvenile cocooned larva (about 5–10 mm long), protected in an hibernarium made of two leaving buxus leaves solidly joined by silk.

Host plant

The larvae feed on the leaves and shoots of Buxus species.[12] Young larvae only eat the upper part of the leaf, leaving the hardest inside structure. The leaves are not destroyed completely but appear as "pealed" in small parallel beats lines, or almost completely. These pealed leaves will eventually die. Old larvae are the most damaging: they massively and completely eat the leaves, sometimes leaving however a thin part at the contour and center of the leaf. Green ball-shaped frass can usually be seen on host plants.

Natural regulation or predation

Vespa velutina (Asian predatory wasp) in active search of Cydalima perspectalis larvae on an infested box-tree bush.

In the area of origin (Asia) natural regulation occurs, as witnessed by the non-destructive behavior of Cydalima perspectalis. In the area of Europe where the moth has been artificially introduced, the damage is very serious because natural regulation does not occur at a significant level. However, in European areas where the Asian hornet (Vespa velutina) is present prior to Cydalima perspectalis, some degreel of predation by this latter species is observed. This is namely the case in South-West of France, the first place where Vespa Velutina was introduced in Europe in 2004 (Cydalima perspectalis invaded this area in 2012 only). Vespa velutina is able to capture small larvae and larvae preparing for the nymphosis in their cocoon. Where vespa velutina has been introduced this causes other problems as preys on honey bees and European honey bees are more vulnerable than their Asian counterparts.

Ways of control and fight

Synthetic insecticides (cypermethrin, deltamethrin) are efficient but must be carefully pulverisated also inside the bush, and under leaves. Similar natural pyrethroid insecticides, extracted from Chrysanthemus and mixed with colza oil can be used also. In spite of their natural origin, their toxicity is similar to synthetic ones; a serious contact and breath protection is therefore necessary during the treatment. The application of these insecticides must be done in evening in areas where domestic bees or useful insects are present, to minimize the negative impact.

Bacillus thuringiensis is a bacterium which produces an insect-specific endotoxin which perforates the caterpillars' gut lining, leading to paralysis and death.

Nematodes also have an action on the digestive system of larvae.

Pheromone traps (attracting adult males) are able to prevent impregnation of adult females and therefore control the severity of the damages. A more important proportion of sterile eggs is deposited by adult females . The selectivity of the pheromone is very good and useful indigenous species are not attracted.

Insecticide, Bacillus and nematode treatments must be repeated three times at an interval of about ten days, because they mostly affect young larvae.

Pheromone traps must be in place from March–April till October–November.

References

  1. "Buchsbaumzünsler (Cydalima perspectalis (Walker, 1859))" (in German). insekten-sachsen.de. Retrieved 28 December 2013.
  2. "Box tree caterpillar". Royal Horticultural Society. Retrieved 26 August 2015.
  3. Landwirtschaftskammer Vorarlberg: Buchsbaumzünsler wieder Aktiv. In: Obst- und Gartenkultur Vorarlberg.
  4. Fauna Europaea
  5. Mally, R. & M. Nuss (2010): Phylogeny and nomenclature of the box tree moth, Cydalima perspectalis (Walker, 1859) comb. n., which was recently introduced into Europe (Lepidoptera: Pyraloidea: Crambidae: Spilomelinae). – European journal of Entomology 107 (3): 393–400.
  6. Sáfián, Sz. & B. Horváth (2011): Box Tree Moth – Cydalima perspectalis (Walker, 1859), new member in the Lepidoptera fauna of Hungary (Lepidoptera: Crambidae). – Natura Somogyiensis 19: 245–246.
  7. Székely, L., V. Dinca & C. Mihai (2012): Cydalima perspectalis (Walker, 1859), a new species for the Romanian fauna (Lepidoptera: Crambidae: Spilomelinae). – Buletin de Informare Entomologica 22 (3–4): 73–77
  8. Hizal, E., M. Kose, C. Yesiland & D. Kaynar (2011): The New Pest Cydalima perspectalis (Walker, 1859) (Lepidoptera: Crambidae) in Turkey. – Journal of Animal and Veterinary Advances 11 (3): 400–403.
  9. Lepidoptera of Belgium
  10. Box tree moth (Cydalima perspectalis, Lepidoptera; Crambidae), new invasive insect pest in Croatia
  11. http://www.dendrarium.ru/news-dendrariy/160-2013-10-17-11-38-53 (Russian)
  12. Invasive caterpillar 'could spread in UK'

External links

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